A few charts worth discussing
“Capital spending beneficiaries in a capital boom adding $20 to $40 of market value for every $1 of incremental earnings...that will end well.”
“Venture capital now represents roughly the same amount of net asset value as the traditional buyout private equity industry.”
Other charts worth pointing out
U.S. after-tax wage and salary growth by household
U.S. GLP-1 therapy patients
Average U.S. grocery prices vs. Walmart
U.S. retail brokerages – average daily trades and trades per account
U.S. household net worth
Strait of Hormuz traffic levels
Inventory-to-sales ratios by seller
Effect of Strait of Hormuz closure on estimated working capital requirements by sector
YTD cross-asset global fund flows
Leveraged single-stock ETFs by AUM
Historical two-month S&P 500 Index changes since WWII
Blackstone caps withdrawals from flagship private credit fund
Blackstone has restricted withdrawals from its flagship private credit fund for the first time after redemption requests surged to $4.5bn in the second quarter, in a sign of the mounting pressure on the asset class.
The world’s largest private investment group said investors in the $45bn Blackstone Private Credit Fund, known as Bcred, attempted to withdraw 10 per cent of the fund’s net assets in the period. The fund granted redemption requests amounting to 5 per cent of its value.
For the first time, Blackstone relied on a mechanism that allows it to restrict investors from pulling their money, following rivals such as Apollo Global Management, BlackRock, KKR and Ares Management which capped redemptions earlier this year.
“Bcred remains well capitalised, and repayments and inflows have outpaced shares repurchased,” the fund said in a letter to investors. “In addition, Bcred maintains substantial available liquidity of over $15bn comprised of cash and undrawn borrowing capacity.”
The exodus from private credit has shaken the alternative investment industry, which had tethered its growth to a massive influx of capital from Main Street investors.
But wealth and retail investors have grown wary, fearful that credit losses will hit returns in the $2tn industry. Rapid advances in AI have raised questions over the prospects of private equity-backed enterprise software companies, many of which have been financed by private credit groups.
Blackstone’s decision to honour 100 per cent of investor redemption requests in the first quarter, even as withdrawals breached a 5 per cent threshold that would have allowed it to gate the fund, opened a rift in the investment industry.
Large rivals and wealth advisers were frustrated by the decision, concerned it would suggest to retail investors that the so-called semiliquid funds they had bought offered more liquidity than promised.
Blackstone executives signalled at the time that they had confidence in the fund’s ability to weather the storm engulfing the industry, given its low leverage and ample credit available to meet redemptions.
The outflows at Bcred have added pressure on Blackstone, given the significant revenues it generates for the firm. The fund accounted for more than a tenth of the management, advisory and performance fees Blackstone drew in last year.
Shares of the private investment group are down almost 30 per cent this year.
This week’s fun finds
When Dylan Sadiq was 21, he emptied his savings account on something his mother (perhaps understandably) considered a completely frivolous expense — not an Xbox or closet full of Nikes but rather 600 individually wrapped Rubik’s Cubes. “It was a few thousand dollars,” he recounted with a laugh on a recent call with Nice News.
Sadiq, now 26, was a college student at Rutgers University at the time, but his in-person education had been waylaid by the COVID-19 pandemic. Bored at home and itching to build — something the biomedical engineering major had been looking forward to in his university experience — he played around with a few different projects, like creating solar panel cars and 3D printing. But he yearned to do something a bit more creative.
Then, inspiration struck. He’d been solving Rubik’s Cubes since the age of 10, and one day he realized they had something in common with digital images. “Pixels are quite literally just tiny digital colored squares, and my Rubik’s Cubes are kind of like physical colored squares,” Sadiq explained, adding: “It seemed like in theory, if I had enough Rubik’s Cubes, I’d be able to make some really cool images.”
If that sounds like a wild leap to you, you’re probably not an engineer. “That’s, like, what engineers do,” Sadiq shared. “They just have crazy ideas, and then spend all their money and then hope that it works out in the end.”