Goldman Sachs Private Credit Corp. just dodged a bullet.
The firm’s non-traded business development company (BDC) reported in a recent filing that redemption requests in the first quarter of 2026 came in at exactly 4.999% of outstanding shares.
It stopped a fraction of a percentage point below the industry-wide 5% quarterly cap that triggers mandatory withdrawal restrictions.
Had it crossed that threshold, the fund would have joined a growing list of private credit companies such as Blue Owl Capital that have been forced to cap redemptions and effectively lock investors in.
“We are the only non-traded BDC in the peer group whose repurchase requests came in below the standard 5% quarterly cap,” the fund said in a letter to shareholders according to Bloomberg.
But the redemptions were still higher than the 3.5% rate recorded in the fourth quarter of 2025.
Related: Blue Owl denies halting redemptions amid $1.4B asset sale
The traditional way companies borrow money is through banks. If a business needs $50 million to expand, it walks into a bank, applies for a loan, and if approved, gets the money.
But this system has limits. Banks are regulated, slow-moving, and risk-averse. Many mid-sized and smaller companies, especially private ones not listed on a stock exchange, either don’t qualify for traditional bank loans or find the terms too restrictive.
That’s where private credit steps in.
Private credit is lending done outside the traditional banking system. Instead of banks making loans to mid-sized companies, investment funds raise money from investors and lend it directly.
The companies also pay higher interest rates in exchange for that access. The funds that do this lending are often structured as business development companies, or BDCs.
A BDC pools investor capital, lends it out, and passes the interest income back to shareholders.
There are two different types of BDCs.
On one hand are the traded BDCs (also called Listed BDCs) that are listed on the NYSE or the Nasdaq. Their shares trade every day just like any other stock. If you want your money back, you simply sell your shares on the open market to another buyer. Examples include Ares Capital Corporation (Nasdaq: ARCC) and Prospect Capital Corporation (Nasdaq: PSEC).
Non-traded BDCs, on the other hand, are not listed on a stock exchange. This means investors can only get their money out through quarterly “repurchase” windows offered by the fund itself. Goldman Sachs Private Credit Corp., Blue Owl Credit Income Corp. (OCIC) and Blue Owl Technology Income Corp. (OTIC) are examples of non-traded BDCs.