Today: 26 April 2026
Blackstone stock (BX): FERC clears $11.5B TXNM deal as private-credit nerves hang over Monday

Blackstone stock (BX): FERC clears $11.5B TXNM deal as private-credit nerves hang over Monday

New York, Feb 22, 2026, 14:12 EST — The session wrapped up with the market now closed.

  • Blackstone finished Friday at $121.27, losing roughly 3.5%.
  • Blackstone Infrastructure’s $11.5 billion TXNM Energy acquisition picked up approval from a U.S. energy regulator, and the antitrust waiting period in the U.S. has now run out.
  • Private-credit mood and what regulators do next with the TXNM deal are front and center for investors as Monday gets underway.

Blackstone picked up a key regulatory approval Friday: TXNM Energy announced that FERC signed off on its sale to Blackstone Infrastructure, while the Hart-Scott-Rodino antitrust period also ran out. Shares of Blackstone didn’t catch a break, sliding $4.46, or 3.5%, to close at $121.27.

This clearance is important—big infrastructure projects often get stuck at the approval stage, so having a federal green light takes one delay off the table. Shares, though, have stayed in step with sector peers, and lately, investors are weighing a different set of factors for the group.

Pressure is mounting on listed alternative managers as investors question both liquidity and asset valuations in private markets. Private credit sits at the heart of this, driven by rapid growth, but selling these loans—typically issued by non-bank lenders—can be tricky.

Concerns resurfaced this week as Blue Owl’s move to tweak a retail-oriented debt fund sent shockwaves across the industry. “This is about the mismatch between the need for liquidity and what the managers can deliver,” said Steve Wyett, chief investment strategist at BOK Financial. Oppenheimer analyst Chris Kotowski pushed back, adding that “people have been jumping to unwanted conclusions.” Reuters

Albuquerque-based TXNM said the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission brushed aside concerns over Blackstone’s data-center and utility investments, relying on ring-fencing rules in Texas and New Mexico. TXNM noted it has secured the Federal Communications Commission’s blessing, plus a Texas Public Utility Commission settlement in its pocket. Still on the to-do list: approvals from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission.

Another SEC filing revealed director Ruth Porat picked up approximately 525 Blackstone shares on Feb. 17, paying between $130 and $131 each. That tally includes shares acquired through dividend reinvestment as well as a family partnership. Insider buying often flies under the radar, but stakes like this attract attention, especially if the stock’s struggling.

UBS dropped its price target for Blackstone on Friday, lowering it to $137 from $171 but sticking with a neutral rating, MT Newswires said. Shares of Blackstone have fallen around 6.6% in the last five sessions, MarketScreener data show.

Tone on private credit has grown noticeably sharper in recent days. Mohamed El-Erian, the former Pimco chief, posed the question: “Is this a ‘canary-in-the-coalmine’ moment, similar to August 2007?” Investopedia

Even with a regulatory green light, Blackstone isn’t shielded if private-credit troubles escalate—think higher defaults, fire sales, or investors pulling out quicker than assets can be sold. As for the TXNM deal, additional sign-offs might tack on new requirements or delays, which can take the shine off, positive headlines or not.

Macro takes a back seat for now. The BEA’s schedule lists March 13 for the next personal income and outlays report—the one that features the Fed’s go-to inflation metric, the PCE price index. That update lands the same day as the second reading on Q4 GDP. Eyes then turn to the Fed’s policy meeting, set for March 17-18.

Blackstone expects to wrap up the TXNM acquisition in the back half of 2026, pending sign-offs and standard closing steps. But for Blackstone shares, attention shifts to Monday’s open—traders are watching to see if private-credit jitters subside or ripple through the sector again.

Stock Market Today

  • FBI Investigates Disappearance of Crypto Investor Wen Hou's Father
    April 26, 2026, 12:13 AM EDT. The FBI is investigating the disappearance of Naiping Hou, father of cryptocurrency investor Wen Hou, amid suspicions of foul play. Naiping Hou, 74, vanished from Rancho Cucamonga, California, with his family suspecting a connection to their crypto business success. Authorities discovered that his cellphone was used to impersonate him for over a month, facilitating fraudulent bank transactions, including unusual online gold purchases. The family reported Naiping missing on May 4, 2025, after concerns over robotic text messages and uncharacteristic behavior. Wen Hou, chief investment officer at Coincident Capital, previously donated $1.1 million in cryptocurrency to the USC Keck School of Medicine. Investigators found his father's home cleared out, fueling further concerns about the disappearance.

Latest article

Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 26.04.2026

26 April 2026
LIVEMarkets rolling coverageStarted: April 26, 2026, 12:00 AM EDTUpdated: April 26, 2026, 12:38 AM EDT FBI Investigates Disappearance of Crypto Investor Wen Hou's Father April 26, 2026, 12:13 AM EDT. The FBI is investigating the disappearance of Naiping Hou, father of cryptocurrency investor Wen Hou, amid suspicions of foul play. Naiping Hou, 74, vanished from Rancho Cucamonga, California, with his family suspecting a connection to their crypto business success. Authorities discovered that his cellphone was used to impersonate him for over a month, facilitating fraudulent bank transactions, including unusual online gold purchases. The family reported Naiping missing on May 4,
Lockheed Martin Gets Golden Dome Opening as Profit Worries Bite

Lockheed Martin Gets Golden Dome Opening as Profit Worries Bite

26 April 2026
Lockheed Martin was named among firms awarded up to $3.2 billion for President Trump’s Golden Dome space-based missile interceptor plan, Space Systems Command said. The company reported weaker first-quarter results, with $18 billion in sales and negative free cash flow. Space Force aims to show initial interceptor capability in 2028. Golden Dome’s total cost is projected at $185 billion.
What to watch in Singapore stocks this week: One Raffles Place, CPI and earnings on the SGX radar
Previous Story

What to watch in Singapore stocks this week: One Raffles Place, CPI and earnings on the SGX radar

Shell stock price in focus: oil drops 1% ahead of London open, Iran talks loom
Next Story

Shell stock price in focus: oil drops 1% ahead of London open, Iran talks loom

Go toTop