Stock Markets April 27, 2026 02:00 PM

Saba Capital Preparing New Vehicle to Expand BDC Investments

Weinstein’s firm moves to broaden activity in public and private business development companies following recent tender buys

By Derek Hwang
Saba Capital Preparing New Vehicle to Expand BDC Investments

Saba Capital, led by Boaz Weinstein, is planning a new investment vehicle focused on public and private business development companies (BDCs). The move follows recent tender offer activity in Starwood Real Estate Trust and Blue Owl Capital (Blue Owl II), where Saba acquired $10 million in aggregate face value across 190 trades, with most purchases tied to Starwood REIT. Sources say demand from wealth advisors seeking liquidity for clients in private BDCs and interval funds helped prompt the initiative.

Key Points

  • Saba Capital plans a new investment vehicle focused on public and private business development companies (BDCs).
  • Saba recently completed tender offers in Starwood Real Estate Trust and Blue Owl Capital (Blue Owl II), buying $10 million in aggregate face value across 190 trades, with most purchases tied to Starwood REIT.
  • Demand from wealth advisors seeking liquidity for clients invested in private BDCs and interval funds helped prompt the decision to raise the new vehicle.

Saba Capital, the firm controlled by Boaz Weinstein, is preparing to launch a new investment vehicle aimed at increasing its exposure to both public and private business development companies, sources familiar with the matter said.

The planned vehicle will target BDCs, a type of closed-end fund that typically invests in small- to mid-sized private companies, including those in distressed situations. The firm’s intention to broaden its BDC investment activity follows recent transactional moves that Saba completed in the public markets.

According to the sources, Saba recently executed tender offers tied to Starwood Real Estate Trust and to Blue Owl Capital (Blue Owl II). Across those transactions, the firm acquired $10 million in aggregate face value, spread across 190 separate trades. The sources indicated that substantially all of those purchases were in the Starwood REIT.

Those purchases and the planned new vehicle appear to be connected to demand emanating from wealth advisors. The sources said advisors whose clients are constrained in private BDCs and in interval funds - vehicles that typically limit liquidity - have been seeking ways to generate liquidity for their clients. That advisor-driven demand is cited as a motivating factor behind Weinstein’s decision to raise the new vehicle.

The new vehicle is intended to expand Saba’s activity in this segment of the market rather than to replace prior investments. The firm’s recent tender offer activity and the pattern of trades described by the sources are presented as part of a broader effort to provide capital solutions and to reposition exposures in BDCs and related closed-end funds.


Context and mechanics

  • The targeted investment types are public and private BDCs - closed-end funds that invest in small- and mid-sized private companies, including distressed businesses.
  • Recent tender offer activity involved Starwood Real Estate Trust and Blue Owl Capital (Blue Owl II), with $10 million acquired across 190 trades.
  • Sources reported that the bulk of those purchases were from Starwood REIT holdings.

Market signals

Sources attribute the fund-raising decision in part to sustained demand among wealth advisors seeking liquidity for clients holding private BDC positions and interval funds. Those advisors' requests for exit options or secondary liquidity are described as influencing Saba’s move to assemble a new vehicle focused on these assets.

Risks

  • Continued demand from wealth advisors for liquidity solutions is uncertain and could affect the success of the new vehicle - this impacts asset managers and financial advisors.
  • Concentrated recent purchases in a single issuer (substantially all from Starwood REIT) may signal portfolio concentration risk if similar patterns persist - this affects investors in closed-end funds and BDCs.
  • Investing in small- to mid-sized private companies, including distressed businesses, carries inherent credit and liquidity risks that can influence returns for funds focused on BDCs - this impacts credit markets and alternative asset managers.

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