Larry Fink on why he won't cash out private-credit investors: 'Those are the rules, live with it.'

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MW Larry Fink on why he won't cash out private-credit investors: 'Those are the rules, live with it.'

By Steve Goldstein

Fink says $150 oil would likely lead to a sharp recession

CEO of BlackRock Larry Fink has a blunt message to private-credit investors trying to cash out.

BlackRock Chairman and CEO Larry Fink has an unforgiving message to private-credit investors who want to exit their funds.

BlackRock $(BLK)$ was one of several firms running funds that invest in private credit that received more redemption requests than the 5% per quarter that funds typically allow.

BlackRock's $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund received redemption requests worth 9.3% of the fund in the fourth quarter. BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, did not budge and only redeemed 5%, some $620 million in all, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

"If I allowed more people to redeem, I'm not a fiduciary to those who are staying in because the contract states on the front page, you know, we will allow up to 5% redemption every quarter," said Fink in an interview with the BBC. "Those are the rules, live with it."

"It's not like it's on page 92 of a prospectus. It's on page one," he continued.

Investors have rushed to exit what are called business development companies as worries mount about the value of the loans extended to software companies. Specialists in the space including Blue Owl Capital $(OWL)$ and Ares Management $(ARES)$ have seen their shares slump this year as a result.

In the BBC interview, Fink maintained that more investors, particularly institutions, are actually trying to invest in the fund than exit as he also brushed off worries about the financial stability from the roughly $2.2 trillion asset class.

"This is not a leveraged balance sheet problem, and it was a leverage that was the foundation of the fall of 2008," he said. Business development companies by law cannot exceed a 2-to-1 debt-to-equity ratio.

Fink also discussed the Iran war and its implications for markets.

"I could paint a scenario where I could see a year from now oil at $40 a barrel. I could see it above $150 a barrel," he said. Fink said it was the outcome rather than the duration of the war that is what is important.

"We have two very extreme outcomes. And in my conversations throughout the world with the U.S. government and all that, to me, everybody has to recognize it's there's not going to be an outcome that's somewhere in the middle."

And those extremes will have a big impact on the direction of the economy. "The $40 oil implication is one of abundance and growth," he said. "The other one is an outcome of a probably stark and steep recession."

-Steve Goldstein

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(END) Dow Jones Newswires

March 25, 2026 05:27 ET (09:27 GMT)

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