There’s a specific kind of opportunity that most investors miss, and we have a textbook example.
The stock dropped 76% in a single year.
Zuckerberg had bet the company on the metaverse, burning $10+ billion a year on a product nobody wanted. Apple’s privacy changes hurt ad targeting, and TikTok was outcompeting with younger users.
Everyone was panicking, while Zuckerberg restructured, added short-form content, and pivoted to free speech to compete.
From late 2022 to 2024, Meta’s stock went up roughly 500%.
In hindsight, Meta was obvious.
To me, Blue Owl Capital is that obvious setup right now.
The stock is down roughly 50% from its peak. The headlines are brutal: locked funds, lawsuits, AI disruption fears. If you only read the headlines, you’d think this company was on the edge of collapse.
Then you look at Q1 2026 earnings: revenue up 10%, fee earnings up 14%, AUM up 15% to $315 billion, $57 billion raised in the last 12 months. This was their second-best fundraising year ever, in the middle of a so-called crisis.
The headlines and the fundamentals are describing two completely different companies — while the company is technically down 50%.
Why Doesn’t Blue Owl Collapse?
You cannot understand Blue Owl without understanding who built it.
Doug Ostrover co-founded GSO Capital Partners, which became Blackstone Credit, one of the largest credit platforms on earth.
Marc Lipschultz spent over two decades at Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR) & Co. as Global Head of Energy and Infrastructure. Ostrover’s net worth is $2.8 billion. Lipschultz sits at $1.6 billion.
These are not first-time founders — these are the type of people that run finance, and the world.
That network of relationships across every major pension fund, sovereign wealth fund, endowment, and corporation on the planet is not decoration.
They have every connection possible — a direct competitive advantage in a business where deal flow and access to capital are everything.
What’s crazy is we’re already starting to see it play out.
Nothing illustrates that better than the Meta deal.
The Meta Deal
Late 2025, Meta needed to finance a 5-gigawatt, 2,250-acre AI data centre in Louisiana (Hyperion) — scaling to 4 million square feet of buildings through 2030.
A $29 billion deal. The largest private capital deal on record.
They chose Blue Owl.
Blue Owl’s funds own 80% of the joint venture, while Meta retains 20% and handles construction.
When Zuckerberg needs capital at that scale and that speed, he doesn’t run a competitive RFP (Request for Proposal) and pick the cheapest option. He calls people he trusts — and Blue Owl, even though their stock is 50% down.
Meta’s currently working with Palantir, DHS, and the US military, and with contracts like that they can’t afford for Meta to not make money.
And this isn’t a one-off.
Blue Owl is financing Amazon data center infrastructure, and closed a $12 billion deal.
Their digital infrastructure pipeline now exceeds $100 billion. That segment is only 6% of current AUM — the growth runway is enormous.
What the Earnings Actually Said
The Q1 2026 earnings beat estimates on virtually every metric that matters for a permanent-capital asset manager:
Revenue hit $753.8 million — up 10% year-over-year and 9.3% ahead of consensus.
Fee-related earnings reached $393.6 million, up 14%.
Fee-Related Earnings (FRE) margins expanded to 58.4%, meaning nearly 60 cents of every fee dollar falls straight to operating earnings.
Distributable EPS of $0.19 beat the $0.18 estimate.
AUM grew to $314.9 billion, up 15% year-over-year.
Two numbers buried in the earnings deserve special attention.
First, $30 billion in cash sitting undeployed. Second, $29.9 billion in AUM that is already committed but not yet paying fees. Once deployed, that capital unlocks approximately $349 million in additional annualized management fees.
That revenue is essentially already contracted — it just hasn’t turned on yet.
The company also added 33 new institutional clients in a single quarter and deepened relationships with 14 existing ones.
SpaceX
Blue Owl put $27 million into SpaceX in 2021. It started as a loan, and the relationship deepened. They eventually converted that access into an equity stake — and in May 2026, sold roughly half of it at a $1.25 trillion valuation, realizing approximately a 10x return.
10x is insane, and that’s their GP Strategic Capital strategy in action.
Use the credit relationship as the door to equity upside, then realize the gains on your terms.
Blue Owl still holds the other half of its SpaceX position, and SpaceX is reportedly targeting the largest IPO in history.
The AI Play Nobody Is Talking About
The market is worried about Blue Owl’s loans to software companies that AI could disrupt. That concern is real and worth monitoring.
But Blue Owl also owns the physical infrastructure that AI runs on. They’re not betting on which AI model wins or which software company survives. They own the buildings where the servers live — and the hyperscalers (Meta, Amazon, and others) pay them rent.
Real assets AUM hit $85 billion in Q1, up 27% year-over-year, with net lease AUM up 38%. As those data center projects reach completion and begin generating fees, management is guiding for mid-single-digit quarterly growth in real assets revenue.
The more AI disrupts software, the more compute infrastructure gets built. Blue Owl is on the right side of that dynamic.
The Bigger Picture
Private credit still accounts for less than 25% of the overall leveraged credit market.
Three quarters of the market hasn’t shifted yet, and banks keep withdrawing from commercial lending.
Blue Owl raised $57 billion this year in the worst sentiment environment private credit has seen in a decade. The business is growing through the storm.
When perception catches up to fundamentals, the gap closes fast.
So while the stock lost 50%, it’s already growing in size and their earnings describe a compounder. That’s the opportunity.
