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Blue Owl will reduce private credit exposure to software

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 11:24 AM

By Isla Binnie

NEW YORK, May 7 (Reuters) – Blue Owl’s biggest publicly traded private credit fund will look to reduce its exposure to software, the fund’s chief executive said, as uncertainty about the impact of artificial ​intelligence on the sector roils valuations.

The share of software assets in ‌Blue Owl Capital Corp declined to 16% from 19% in the first quarter of the year, Craig Packer told analysts on a conference call on Thursday.

This happened “naturally” as borrowers repaid loans, Packer said. “We’re going to continue to be, I think, very cautious in software, and as we ‌get repayments ​probably look to continue to take that down,” ⁠he added.

Private equity and credit ⁠firms invested heavily in enterprise software companies during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Investors have since become increasingly nervous about the high valuations assigned to some of those assets.

A smaller Blue Owl fund that was set up to ​focus on software, Blue Owl Technology Finance Corp, will continue to do so, but the “threshold for new investments has never been higher,” that fund’s president, Erik ⁠Bissonnette, said on a separate call.

“As we evaluate ⁠opportunities against a rapidly evolving AI landscape, we are increasingly ​selective, continuing to pass on legacy models,” Bissonnette said.

TOUGH ENVIRONMENT

Blue Owl has faced particular ​scrutiny as private credit came under an uncomfortable spotlight. Its stock has ‌started to recover from lows hit in March and April but is still trading 30% lower on the year.

OBDC marked down the value of its assets by 2.7% to $14.41 per share in the first quarter and cut its dividend to 31 ⁠cents per share from 36 cents per share. OTF cut its valuation by 4.8% to $16.49 per share.

Volatility in the publicly traded loan market has put pressure on the ⁠value of assets in ‌the funds, the executives said.

Packer said it had been tougher ⁠to deliver earnings due to reductions in both rates and ​risk ‌premiums, but said borrower performance was stable and he expected ​more demand ⁠for direct lending.

OBDC and OTF bought back a combined $85 million of their own stock in the first quarter.

OBDC’s shares were down 2.4% on the day and down 7.7% so far this year. OTF’s shares were down 5.5% on the day and down around 23.5% on the year.

(Reporting by Isla Binnie in New York; Editing by Chizu ​Nomiyama and Matthew Lewis)