Unlock the Editor’s Digest at no cost
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favorite tales on this weekly publication.
Carlyle Group has reported its finest quarterly outcomes since Harvey Schwartz was recruited in early 2023 to revive the personal fairness group after years of underperformance and inside turmoil.
The US buyout group earned document fee-based income within the third quarter and posted a pointy improve in working margins, signalling that Carlyle is beginning to get better as Schwartz approaches his third yr as chief government.
Carlyle’s higher than anticipated outcomes have been bolstered by resurgent exercise in monetary markets, which allowed the group to listing two massive investments — aviation group StandardAero and Japanese manufacturing firm Rigaku — and crystallise profitable efficiency charges.
Realised efficiency charges, which the agency earns from the sale of profitable investments, elevated 52 per cent to $276mn because it offered $6.8bn of belongings throughout its buyout, infrastructure, actual property and credit score operations.
The asset gross sales come as Carlyle’s dealmakers have centered on utilizing buoyant debt and fairness markets to return money to institutional buyers affected by an industry-wide drought of distributions lately.
Insiders at Carlyle consider the robust efficiency of the StandardAero itemizing, one of many largest preliminary public choices of 2024, units the stage for a wave of comparable public choices within the yr forward.
Carlyle hopes the asset gross sales will revive investor confidence within the agency, which, with $447bn in belongings, is broadly thought-about one of many pioneers of the personal fairness {industry}.
Earlier than Schwartz joined, nonetheless, the group had endured a bungled succession from its billionaire founders, lacklustre fundraising and a sluggish share value.
Schwartz, a former Goldman Sachs banker, has elevated a brand new technology of leaders throughout Carlyle’s funding operations, and the corporate’s flagship US buyout funds recorded massive mark-ups within the third quarter.
Nonetheless, its 2018-era European buyout fund continues to wrestle, producing a web annual return of simply 4 per cent, effectively under expectations for annual returns of not less than 15 per cent.
Massive pension and sovereign wealth funds have began to extend their investments with Carlyle, with fundraising reaching $26bn within the first 9 months of 2024, a determine the group believes places it on monitor to attain a $40bn annual fundraising goal set by Schwartz earlier this yr.
The outcomes got here as personal fairness teams’ shares on Wednesday soared due to investor optimism that US president-elect Donald Trump will minimise regulation and keep the tax cuts he launched throughout his first presidency.
Schwartz mentioned the outcomes “replicate the impression of strategic actions we have now taken over the previous 18 months”.
“These actions, mixed with a pick-up in funding exercise throughout our platform, helped generate among the best quarters of efficiency within the agency’s historical past,” he added.