Investors Face 'Painful' 18-24 Months, Soros CIO Says

Watch on YouTube ↗  |  March 03, 2026 at 16:51  |  2:10  |  Bloomberg Markets

Summary

  • Investors face a "painful 18-24 months" driven by liquidity crunches in private markets and a structural rerating in software.
  • A significant arbitrage opportunity exists in credit: Public Business Development Companies (BDCs) trade at a ~23% discount to Net Asset Value (NAV), while private credit funds are stuck at NAV with redemption queues.
  • There is an ongoing "shakeout" in the software sector, which is heavily intertwined with private credit portfolios; many funds have disproportionate exposure to software companies that are being repriced.
  • Large allocators (endowments, high net worth) are overallocated to illiquid private assets and cash-poor, forcing a rotation into liquid public markets.
Trade Ideas
Dawn Fitzpatrick Chief Investment Officer, Soros Fund Management 0:26
The speaker explicitly references "Blackstone headlines" regarding private credit and predicts "elevated redemptions" will continue. They state it will be a "painful 18-24 months" for these structures. Asset managers like Blackstone rely on management fees on AUM. If investors are redeeming capital to fix overallocation issues or chase liquidity, AUM drops. Furthermore, if funds hit redemption gates (limiting withdrawals), it damages sentiment and slows new capital raising. SHORT (or AVOID) the major alternative asset managers heavily exposed to private credit retail flows during this redemption cycle. Blackstone has a massive "dry powder" reserve and could use the downturn to acquire distressed assets cheaply, boosting long-term value.
Dawn Fitzpatrick Chief Investment Officer, Soros Fund Management
The speaker notes that publicly traded BDCs are trading at an average "23% discount" to NAV, whereas private BDCs/funds must return capital at par (NAV) but are facing "elevated redemptions." This creates a liquidity arbitrage. Investors seeking liquidity will redeem from private funds (selling at $1.00) and rotate into public BDCs (buying $1.00 of assets for ~$0.77). This rotation creates buying pressure for public BDCs while allowing investors to capture higher yields due to the discounted entry price. LONG public BDCs to capture the discount closure and yield spread as capital rotates out of private vehicles. Systemic credit defaults increase significantly, causing the actual NAV of the underlying loans to drop, justifying the current discount.
Dawn Fitzpatrick Chief Investment Officer, Soros Fund Management
The speaker discusses a "software shakeout" and states that for the software sector, "this is a structural rerating that is deserved." "Structural rerating" is a euphemism for valuation multiples compressing (prices going down relative to earnings). The speaker links this to private credit stress, implying that software companies fueled by cheap debt are now vulnerable. SHORT the broad software sector (via ETF) as the market adjusts to lower multiples and tighter credit conditions for tech borrowers. Interest rates drop sharply, which typically boosts high-duration assets like software stocks.
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