Blue Owl’s $1.4 Billion Loan Sale Tests Private Credit Valuations

The private credit market is facing a new pressure point as Blue Owl Capital (OWL) faces a surge in redemption requests and public scrutiny over loan valuations.

The recent scrutiny over SaaS exposure in large private lender portfolios has raised the question of whether it’s overvalued.

In response, Blue Owl announced structural changes to its retail fund strategy, as well as a sizable asset sale. The core of the debate is whether private credit managers are pricing loans higher than the market is willing to pay.

Recently, Blue Owl sold $1.4 billion of assets, including pension and insurance capital, to a group of institutional investors at 99.7% of par value.

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The significant pricing is a signal that buyers were willing to engage in a nearly face-value transaction despite concerns about private credit liquidity and tech exposure, and the sale provides the necessary liquidity amid elevated redemptions.

In January, Blue Owl Technology Income Corp (OTIC) saw a 15.4% surge in redemptions. Executing the sale very near to par provides the firm with a pushback against claims of inflated marks.

Photographer: Bing Guan/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Blue Owl unloads $1.4 billion in assets to quiet liquidity fears: liquidity & structural Changes.

In asset sales, Blue Owl is adjusting its plan for handling retail liquidity.

The firm’s OBDC II is shifting from traditional tender offers to more structured quarterly distributions.

In recent SEC filings, on February 15, 2026, COO Andrew Robert Polland and General Counsel Neena Reddy had shares withheld at $12.30 per share to cover tax obligations related to RSU vesting.

MoreEconomic Analysis:

On February 12, Co-CEO Marc Lipschultz exchanged incentive units for 878,709 Class C shares, increasing his indirect beneficial ownership to 6.1 million shares.

Executive

Role

Transaction Date

Shares Beneficially Owned

Marc Lipschultz

Co-CEO

2/12/2026

6,129,987 (Indirect)

Andrew Polland

COO

2/15/2026

502,724 (Direct)

Neena Reddy

General Counsel

2/15/2026

616,183 (Direct)

Former PIMCO CEO and Egyptian-American economist Mohamed El-Erian noted that private credit pressure reflects investor anxieties and opaque risks in non-bank lending.

In Blue Owl, the near-par asset sales and liquidity mechanics revisions combination signals a critical moment to steady investor confidence.

​According to Reuters, in an interview, Blue Owl Capital said it was not stopping access to cash or investor liquidity.

We are not halting investor liquidity in non-traded debt fund Blue Owl Capital Corp II,” Blue Owl said in a statement after a day, saying it would return 30% of the net asset value of the fund to investors, and stop quarterly redemptions.

Blue Owl’s asset sale: what’s next  for liquidity, valuations, and investors

Blue Owl sits squarely in the debate running about private credit.

On the one hand, Blue Owl Capital’s $1.4 billion asset sale at near-par, 99.7%, signals a clear valuation datapoint for institutional pension & insurance investors.

This specific niche of investors is considered “sophisticated,” capital allocators. The near-par transaction remains stable and provides Blue Owl with the support it needs for its internal loan marks.

Related: SaaS-pocalypse stresses $3 trillion private credit market

However, the structure within liquidity is still under scrutiny.

While Blue Owl denotes stopping withdrawals and access to cash, the recent decision to shift ODBC II from discretionary tender offers to a more structured capital distribution is interpreted by some investors as a tightening of liquidity access.

On February 19, Blue Owl Shares dropped 10% as expectations were shifted.

However, the context and bigger picture always matter.  As Mohamed El-Erian pointed out, the pressures in the private sector don’t really compare to those in 2008’s banking collapse.

Moreover, it signals the specific pressures on liquidity risks in SaaS-exposed portfolios.

By March 31, 2026, Blue Owl plans to provide about 30% net asset value to OBDC II shareholders utilizing the asset sale proceeds.

While liquidity efforts are being managed, whether that is enough to reduce market anxiety may depend more on demand across the broader private credit jungle than on Blue Owl Capital.

Related: This private credit fund just suspended withdrawals — is it a warning for the economy?