BlackRock Paused Fundraising for Latest Asia Private Credit Fund

BlackRock Inc. paused fundraising earlier this year for its latest Asian private credit strategy amid its merger with HPS Investment Partners, people familiar with the matter said, adding to uncertainties for the firm’s ambitions for the asset class in the region.

Fundraising for the firm’s third Asia-Pacific private credit fund came to a standstill earlier in 2025 following the announcement in December that BlackRock was buying private credit firm HPS, according to the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters. The New York-based firm completed its acquisition of HPS on July 1.

Most Read from Bloomberg

In Trump’s DC Crackdown, the National Park Service Leads Homeless Sweeps

Germany Revives a Building Style With a Bleak History: Prefab Housing

We Need a Reality Check on Crime, Safety and Transit

The pause adds to recent challenges. A key investor in BlackRock’s private funds, Arch Capital Group, is in talks to sell at least $350 million of certain stakes following disappointing performance in some of them and a series of senior departures, Bloomberg News reported last month. Moreover, BlackRock Asia-Pacific Private Credit Opp. Fund II had only secured less than half of its $1 billion target.

Meanwhile, BlackRock and Abu Dhabi state-owned wealth fund Mubadala Investment Co. mutually agreed to unwind their private credit partnership due to difficulty in sourcing deals, other people familiar with the matter said in June.

BlackRock was targeting to raise about $1 billion for the third Asia-Pacific private credit fund, and fundraising had started in the fourth quarter of 2023, the people said. Internal discussions with HPS executives on how to proceed are poised to take place but it’s unclear when, they added. BlackRock declined to comment.

BlackRock’s merger with HPS came as part of a larger push by its co-founder Larry Fink to cement the firm’s future in private markets. The asset manager also recently set its first-ever firmwide target for private market fundraising at $400 billion by 2030.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

Taco Bell’s Not-So-Secret Sauce: An Endless Stream of New Stuff

J.Crew Survived Bankruptcy. Next Up: Cultural Relevance?

Staff Cuts and Turmoil Hit the CFTC While the Crypto It Oversees Booms

Women’s Earnings Never Really Recover After They Have Children

Volkswagen EVs Outsell Tesla in Europe a Decade After Dieselgate

©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

Scroll to Top