Blue Owl Capital (NYSE:OWL) climbed 2% in Friday trading after reports indicated that the firm’s co-chief executives adjusted the arrangements on personal loans that had been a source of investor concern. The Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the situation, reported that Doug Ostrover and Marc Lipschultz removed their Blue Owl shares as collateral.
The reported revision addresses a market worry that the company’s falling share price could trigger margin calls tied to those pledges and create additional downward pressure. According to a February regulatory filing, each executive had previously pledged in excess of 130 million shares, which amounted to roughly two-thirds of their respective holdings. That filing did not specify how much had been drawn on the loans.
Sources told the Journal that an updated public filing could reflect the change as soon as Friday. Blue Owl shares were trading just under $10 in afternoon trading on Friday. The stock has declined nearly 40% year to date amid investor unease about private credit.
Context and market reaction
Investors had flagged the executives' use of company stock as loan collateral because a sustained price drop could have set off margin-related sales, exacerbating declines. Removing the shares as collateral is intended to reduce that specific channel of potential forced selling, and the market reaction on Friday reflected a modestly positive response.
What is known and what remains unclear
- Public filings from February show the scale of shares pledged by both co-CEOs, but they do not disclose the amount drawn on the loans.
- People familiar with the matter told the Wall Street Journal about the removal of the pledged shares; an updated filing may make the change official in public records.
- The precise timing and mechanics of the loan revisions beyond the removal of shares as collateral were not provided in the reporting cited.
Market implications
The immediate market response was limited to a modest price uptick. The episode highlights investor sensitivity to executive leverage and the potential for pledged stock to feed into broader price volatility, particularly in companies tied to private credit markets.