Key facts
- Private credit funds experienced $15.6 billion in redemption requests in the second quarter.
- Many investors in private credit funds received only partial payment due to capped redemptions.
- U.S.-listed spot bitcoin ETFs saw outflows of nearly $5 billion in the second quarter.
- Bitcoin's price dropped approximately 14% in the second quarter.
- The U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve has reached its lowest level since 1983.
The second quarter saw significant liquidity challenges for both private credit funds and spot bitcoin ETFs, signaling broader market risks. Private credit funds faced redemption requests totaling $15.6 billion, with many Business Development Companies (BDCs) exceeding their standard 5% quarterly caps, leaving investors partially unfunded. Simultaneously, U.S.-listed spot bitcoin ETFs experienced outflows of nearly $5 billion, contributing to a roughly 14% drop in bitcoin's price and its third consecutive quarterly loss.
Analysts suggest capital rotation into areas like AI and major IPOs, such as SpaceX, may have drawn funds away from these assets. Others view the bitcoin selloff as an early indicator of a macro fiat liquidity crunch, given bitcoin's historical sensitivity to money supply and financing conditions. The average redemption request for private credit funds rose, and with new inflows falling significantly, net outflows were observed across most funds, leading Fitch to anticipate continued redemptions.
The simultaneous demand for liquidity in these distinct asset classes, coupled with a depleted U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) to its lowest level since 1983, raises concerns about diminishing financial and physical buffers against market shocks. This environment suggests a tougher outlook for risk assets.
