Blackstone Private Real Estate Credit Fund Grows Portfolio To $1.96 Billion In Q1
The newly formed business development company posted $19.3 million in net investment income while expanding its loan book by nearly 44% in just three months.
May 13, 2026

Blackstone Private Real Estate Credit and Income Fund, known as BREC, reported substantial portfolio and balance-sheet growth in the first quarter of 2026, marking another step forward for one of the newer additions to Blackstone’s expanding credit platform. The Delaware-based business development company, which commenced operations on May 1, 2025, reported total investments at fair value of approximately $1.96 billion as of March 31, 2026, up from $1.53 billion at year-end 2025.
The fund’s net asset value climbed to approximately $917.7 million at quarter-end, compared with roughly $746.4 million at the close of 2025. NAV per share edged up modestly to $26.12 from $26.07, reflecting steady performance amid significant capital deployment. Shares outstanding rose to roughly 35.1 million from 28.6 million, driven by $170 million in new subscriptions during the quarter.
Originations and Investment Activity
BREC was an active investor across both private credit and securities markets during the quarter, originating or purchasing approximately $554.1 million in loans and other notes and acquiring roughly $84.4 million of debt securities. By quarter-end, the portfolio comprised 106 investments with a weighted-average coupon of approximately 6.8%.
The senior loan book grew to 27 positions with a fair value of approximately $1.31 billion and a weighted-average coupon of 6.1%. Notable new originations included the CBREIM Logistics Portfolio and the Ardan loan, both originated in late March at SOFR-based floating rates. Mezzanine loans and B-notes contributed an additional $307 million in fair value across nine positions, carrying a weighted-average coupon of 9.2%. The fund also added a credit-linked note tied to a UK mortgage portfolio carrying a coupon above 10%.
Portfolio Composition and Diversification
By property type, residential exposure dominated the loan portfolio at 41% of fair value. Industrial properties accounted for 26%, while retail and office made up 11% and 6%, respectively. The fund also disclosed exposure to a data center investment within its mezzanine portfolio.
Geographically, the U.S. Sunbelt region represented the largest concentration at 58% of the loan book, followed by the Northeast at 21%. International exposure made up roughly 4% of the loan portfolio. The debt securities portfolio was more granular, with 35 commercial mortgage-backed securities positions, 26 residential mortgage-backed securities positions, and additional exposure to corporate debt, term loans, interest-only securities, and a single CLO position.
Borrowings and Leverage
Total secured debt grew to approximately $1.08 billion, up from $820 million at year-end 2025. The capital structure included $729.8 million of secured credit facilities and $352.6 million of asset-specific debt, with a weighted-average borrowing rate of approximately 5.0%. Lender relationships span a broad roster of major institutions, including Wells Fargo, Barclays, Morgan Stanley, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Citigroup, Société Générale, Royal Bank of Canada, U.S. Bank, Standard Chartered, and HSBC.
The asset coverage ratio stood at 185% as of quarter-end, comfortably above the 150% threshold required under the Investment Company Act of 1940. The debt-to-equity ratio increased to 1.2 times from 1.0 times at year-end, with roughly $71.7 million remaining available to be drawn under existing facilities.
Operating Results
Total investment income for the quarter was $30.9 million, comprised entirely of interest income from non-controlled, non-affiliated investments. Interest expense totaled $10.8 million, reflecting average borrowings of $888.1 million at a weighted-average cost of 5.1%. After general and administrative expenses, amortization of offering costs, and $1.4 million of expense support provided by the Adviser, net investment income before taxes was $19.5 million. Net investment income after a modest excise tax expense came to $19.3 million.
The fund recorded a small net realized and unrealized gain of $26,000 for the quarter. Unrealized losses of $2.1 million on investments and $1.2 million on foreign currency translation were offset by a $2.5 million unrealized gain on derivative instruments. The total net increase in net assets resulting from operations was $19.3 million.
Distributions
BREC declared monthly distributions throughout the quarter totaling $0.5552 per share, or $18.0 million in aggregate. Distributions were fully funded from net investment income, with monthly amounts of $0.1847, $0.1853, and $0.1852 per share.
Derivatives and Risk Management
The fund actively used interest rate swaps to manage exposure on its fixed-rate liabilities. As of quarter-end, BREC held 15 interest rate swaps with Royal Bank of Canada totaling approximately $199 million in notional value, with a net fair value position of negative $109,000 — a substantial improvement from negative $1.3 million at year-end. Foreign currency forward contracts hedging non-dollar-denominated investments carried a positive fair value of $1.2 million.
The fund reported that 76% of its loans and debt securities by principal balance carried floating-rate interest. Based on its sensitivity analysis, a 100 basis point increase in rates would generate approximately $6.0 million in additional net interest income over the following twelve months.
Subsequent Events and Outlook
After quarter-end, BREC received an additional $40 million in subscription proceeds effective April 1, 2026, and another $10 million effective May 1. The Board declared an April distribution of $0.1850 per share, payable on or about May 27, 2026.
In a significant post-quarter development, on April 23, 2026, the fund and its subsidiary BREC Holdings entered into a new revolving credit facility with Wells Fargo as administrative agent. The facility provides up to $150 million in initial borrowing capacity with an accordion feature that could expand commitments to the greater of $160 million or 20% of NAV. The facility matures in April 2029 and includes letters of credit capacity of up to $25 million.
BREC’s first-quarter results demonstrate continued momentum for the Blackstone real estate credit platform, building on the broader Blackstone credit ecosystem that also includes Blackstone Secured Lending Fund and Blackstone Private Credit Fund. The fund’s inception-to-date total return of 12.1% since commencing operations in May 2025 underscores ongoing investor demand for private real estate credit strategies.