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(Bloomberg) -- Blackstone Inc.’s protracted campaign to raise cash for its flagship buyout fund is finally grinding to a close, beyond schedule and billions of dollars short of initial expectations.
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The firm, which began seeking capital in 2022, told investors it will have wrapped up fundraising around the end of March with a little more than $21 billion, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing confidential details. Buyout funds that closed in the past year took about half as much time on average.
Blackstone declined to comment.
High borrowing costs have dented the confidence of pension funds and other big investors in private equity’s traditional playbook: buying companies with debt and cashing out at a profit. Industry fundraising declined in 2024 for the third straight year, according to a February report by McKinsey & Co. Blackstone, the world’s largest alternative-asset manager, wasn’t spared.
It began preparing for the fundraising shortly before the Federal Reserve began ratcheting up interest rates to combat surging inflation. The firm faced a crowded field just as institutions had less cash on hand. After telling investors that it planned to complete fundraising by the first half of 2023, Blackstone told them it needed more time and pushed back the schedule to the second half, and then kept the fund open for stragglers.
The firm also tempered expectations about how much it planned to raise. Bloomberg initially reported in late 2021 that the firm could seek as much as $30 billion. In 2023, Blackstone suggested it would collect about $25 billion, on par with its prior fund. By the start of last year, Blackstone said its target was at least $20 billion.
Blackstone, led Chief Executive Officer Steve Schwarzman and his heir-apparent, President Jon Gray, now has another challenge: showing that big buyouts can still deliver market-beating returns as elevated interest rates and President Donald Trump’s trade war threaten a deal revival. Private equity was Blackstone’s second-largest business by assets after credit and insurance at the end of last year.
In a recent change in the buyout team’s leadership, Joe Baratta ceded day-to-day management of the flagship vehicle to oversee all private equity strategies. That paved the way for Martin Brand to take over as the fund’s new chief.