The cash cushion meant to protect you went into the risky debt instead.
A retiree in Ohio didn't get her money back in February. She had invested in a private credit fund. She asked for her cash. Blue Owl said no. | That money was supposed to be hers. That's the whole pitch. Now I can't stop thinking about what happens when more people try to leave at the same time. | Blue Owl Capital runs one of the biggest retail private credit funds in the country. In February 2026, it limited how much investors could pull out. They call this a "gate." That's a polite word. What it really means is the door is locked and you don't have the key. | I get it. These funds invest in loans that take years to mature. You can't sell a private loan the way you sell a stock. So fund managers keep a cash cushion on the side. When someone wants out, they use the cushion. Problem solved. Except here's what worries me. Some managers quietly moved that cushion into syndicated debt instead of keeping it in cash. When investors came knocking, those managers had to sell that debt fast. They sold it for less than they paid. Ninety cents on the dollar. Eighty. Nobody knows the exact number. | Blackstone ran into this too. It had to raise its own withdrawal cap to cover nearly two billion dollars in redemptions. Two billion dollars of investors trying to get their money back at once. That's not a small panic. That's a signal. | Elon Musk's Crazy Prediction: 1,000X Your Money | | Elon Musk is predicting this investment could jump 1,000x higher from here. | That turns $100 into $100,000… | $500 into half a million dollars… | And a tiny stake of $1,000 into $1 million. | Click here to get the details because this could be the best investment opportunity of the decade. | | I don't think most people realize what's being built right now. Goldman Sachs puts $220 billion sitting in these retail-facing funds today. And in August 2025, a Trump executive order told regulators to clear a path for private credit to move into 401(k)s. New rules were due in February 2026. That's not a rumor. That is the plan. Your coworker's retirement account. Your neighbor's savings. Piped into loans with locked exit doors. | The pitch to retirees is simple. Higher yields. More income. Better returns than bonds. I understand the appeal. Rates aren't what they were. People are searching for income. But the fine print says something different. It says you may not be able to get your money out when you need it. A retirement account that you can't touch in retirement is not a retirement account. It is a trap with a nice name. | This $2 trillion market runs almost entirely outside the rules that govern banks. Banks have to keep capital on hand. Banks get examined. Banks answer to regulators with real teeth. This world doesn't work that way. Jamie Dimon said the cockroaches are starting to emerge from the walls. He wasn't talking about a minor inconvenience. He was talking about hidden risk that we built over years and buried inside products with calm, professional names. | The number I keep coming back to is $220 billion. That's how much is already in these funds. Before the 401(k) rules. Before the rollout. Before the next wave of retirees who've never heard of private credit and won't read the fine print. | We are not in a crisis today. I want to be honest about that. But I have watched enough of these stories to know what comes before one. It looks like liquidity. It looks like yield. It looks like innovation. And then one day the door is locked and someone in Ohio can't get her money back. | More on this tomorrow. | — Lauren Editor, American Ledger |
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