Private capital group has been recovering under chief Harvey Schwartz
Carlyle pulled in $13.4bn of new commitments in the second quarter, as its credit and second-hand private equity stake funds helped the investment group eclipse Wall Street expectations. The New York- and Washington-headquartered firm said its assets under management rose to $465bn. That pace of inflows slowed marginally from the first quarter, but comfortably exceeded forecasts of $10.5bn, according to analysts surveyed by Visible Alpha.
The group’s quarterly fee-based earnings also surpassed expectations, rising 18 per cent from a year before to $323mn. The improvement was driven by higher management fees across its credit and secondary stakes businesses, with the latter unit — known as AlpInvest — reporting a more than 50 per cent jump in revenues from last year. The results add to growing evidence that Carlyle’s business is finding its footing in the aftermath of a power struggle that led to the departure of former chief Kewsong Lee in 2022. Chief executive Harvey Schwartz, who joined the company in 2023 after a long tenure at Goldman Sachs, said the results underscored “the momentum” the firm was building.
Growth in the secondary stakes business was driven by “tremendous demand” and the fact there were “only a handful of large-scale players” in the market, chief financial officer John Redett said. “We are a long way off from this being a mature industry,” he added. Fees generated by the firm’s global private equity business slipped less than 1 per cent. Carlyle’s success in exiting several large investments bolstered the unit’s so-called distributable earnings, a measure of the profits that can be returned to shareholders. Those earnings increased by more than 16 per cent to $232mn.
The division generated $5.1bn of proceeds in the quarter as it sold off and exited investments, including stakes in aviation group StandardAero and aerospace parts maker Forgital. Those transactions helped lift total realisations from its private equity, real estate and infrastructure funds over the past year to $21bn. Schwartz said economic sentiment had “continued to pick up meaningfully” after the initial shock of Donald Trump’s tariff blitz. Markets had initially been caught off-guard. But now there was “a general acceptance that the administration is acting as everybody expected at the beginning of the year, which is very pro-growth”, he said.
While Carlyle’s shares still lag behind rivals including Blackstone and Apollo Global Management over the past five years, its stock performance has rebounded in the past 12 months as investors and analysts have become increasingly optimistic about the company’s outlook. More than half of the analysts who rate Carlyle shares now recommend the stock as a buy: the highest proportion since late-2023, according to data from FactSet. The group’s shares have returned more than 50 per cent over the past year, ahead of the S&P 500’s 23 per cent gain and above peers such as KKR.
Source: ft.com
