Eric Colson
Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead
Thank you, Makela. And thank you, everyone, for taking the time to listen or read the transcript. We appreciate and value your time. We know that we cover the same topics and themes over and over. It is important that our stakeholders understand who we are, and the fundamental principles that guide our decision-making. So, we think it’s worth the time to go back over these points: High-value-added investing, talent, and thoughtful growth. These are the most important things. That’s why we talk about them all the time. Our flywheel is simple, attract and partner with great investment talent; provide the talent with the resources, autonomy and time to generate and compound wealth for clients. Long-term growth for talent, the firm and shareholders follows. Executing is more complicated, especially because we operate at the intersection of people and markets, both of which are constantly changing, all the more reason to have an articulate approach and process that keeps us grounded and guides our actions. Slide 2 outlines our repeatable process for partnering with investment leaders to develop successful, sustainable investment franchises. And investment teams with the franchise traits listed on this slide is a powerful engine of value-creation for clients, talent and shareholders. Over our 25 years, we have developed this process and successfully executed with multiple investment leaders across numerous variables, including inception date, asset class, style, geography, resource model and culture. It starts with finding the right talent for Artisan. We seek unique and investment leaders who are passionate about their investment philosophy and who want to operate with an ownership mentality. We are extremely patient in both, identifying prospective new talent and the courtship process. The opportunity cost of moving forward with someone is high. We only move forward when we believe there is a high probability of long-term success. Once we bring on new investment leaders, we develop and resource a team, which includes people, research, data, technology, space and guidance. We focus on building a strong foundation, a cohesive team, repeatable investment process, and early results. We find the right business leader to find the right clients on the right terms. Generally, after team spends several years developing the foundation, a period of accelerated asset growth will follow. We seek to build businesses diversified by client type, vehicle and geographies. We focus on high-quality long-duration clients. Eventually organic growth moderates and the lion’s share of future growth comes from compounding wealth for clients. Teams broaden out their investment capabilities and add greater depth of talent. Distinctive and recognizable brands emerge. This is not a linear process. It plays out differently for each team. So, we always stack the deck in our favor. We design paths with high probabilities of long-term success. We are model and culture. We buy time, as duration extends, so too the probability of success. Some investment teams and strategies take more time due to a change in market environment, client preference or something specific to the team or strategy. Before leaving this slide, I want to emphasize that the growth portion of the curve does not mean organic growth or net flows. It means much more than that. It means growing as investors, growing as a team and further developing each of the franchise traits. It may mean AUM growth, but that growth will often be in the form of wealth-creation for existing clients. We don’t engineer products to feed a large sales force, see what hits or smooth flows. We are targeted in our approach based on who we are. We operate outside the influence of short-termism, expect lumpy outcomes, and compound long-term results for clients, associates and shareholders. The next slide summarizes two of our newest strategies, International Small Cap Value and China Post-Venture. In September 2020, Beini Zhou and Anand Vasagiri joined Artisan International Value franchise. Supported by founding Portfolio Manager David Samra, Beini and Anand launched the Artisan International Small Cap Value Strategy in October 2020. The strategy applies the value-oriented philosophy that David has been refining at Artisan for nearly 20 years to the large and inefficient international small cap space. Since inception, the strategy has returned 45.9% after fees, beating this benchmark index by more than 900 basis points. Also in 2020, Tiffany Hsiao and Yuanyuan Ji joined Artisan to build a new investment group within our global equity franchise. We have worked with Tiffany and Yuanyuan to build a team of five professionals, opening new office in Hong Kong, develop custom investment technology, access the China A share market and execute on early private transactions. As of the end of the quarter, since inception, the strategy had returned 11.2%, after fees, beating its benchmark index by more than 500 basis points. While each of these new groups sits within an established investment franchise, each is building the strong foundation I described on the prior slide. These strategies also represents the high value-added space, where we expect to continue to find opportunities for thoughtful growth, consistent with who we are, emerging and other less-efficient international markets, and private asset classes, especially as those that can be paired with public assets where we have a proven track record of success. Turning on to slide 4. On July 1st, our Sustainable Emerging Markets franchise marked its 15th anniversary at Artisan Partners. Including time at a prior firm for more than 20 years, Maria and her team have employed a consistent investment philosophy, identifying companies with sustainable competitive advantages and unique access to growth. Assessing sustainability has been part of the team’s process since inception, but they take a differentiated approach to the concept. They look for companies committed to profits and progress. They acknowledge the realities of emerging markets and evaluate companies individually with a focus on the long-term direction and degree of change. They dig deeper into ESG by assessing a company’s ability and commitment to bring continuity to shareholders, employees, customers and communities, what they call, the Capacity to Endure. They don’t use negative streams or exclusion lists, which overlook positive change and forward-looking management. As the quantity and quality of ESG information has improved, the team has evolved its sustainability assessment. They now combine quantitative incident-based reporting with their own qualitative assessment based on interviews, site visits, company files and other ESG sources. The team’s commitment to its core principle and dedication to continued improvement has paid off for clients and the firm. Over the trailing five years, the team has generated average annual returns of 14.8% after fees, beating the benchmark index by more than 175 basis points per year. The team is strong and the process is proven. The Artisan Sustainable Emerging Markets franchise is poised for future growth. Our aggregate growth outcome is on slide 5. Building and maintaining sustainable investment franchises results in long-term growth. Nearly all the growth shown on this slide has resulted from investment returns generated for clients. That’s what we expect, attract and retain great talent, develop investment franchises that compound wealth for clients. Long-term growth for the firm and shareholders will follow. Our purpose is to generate and compound wealth for our clients over the long-term. Our clients use the dollars we compound on their behalf to achieve their objectives and goals. Over nearly 25 years, our U.S. mid-cap growth strategy has compounded client assets at a rate of over 15% per year after fees, generating nearly 5% per year of alpha over the index. Those results over that time period and a daily liquidity strategy stack up well against any investment strategy or asset class. Most importantly, it has worked for clients. Since inception, net of contributions, clients have taken over $10 billion out of the strategy. That gets recorded as cumulative net outflows of over $10 billion. But, in fact, it represents considerable success in fulfilling our goal as an organization. Today, the mid-cap growth strategy has approximately $18 billion in AUM, with a strong track record, a stable investment team, and a proven investment process. This is a high-quality outcome for our clients, our people and our firm. And it is measured solely by net flows, a different conclusion maybe made. Our outcomes are not linear. They can’t be engineered on a quarterly basis. But, we have a repeatable process for developing investment franchises, compounding wealth for clients and generating successful outcome for shareholders. We will continue to apply that process with both, our existing investment franchises, and new talent and teams we add over time. I will now turn it over to C.J. to discuss our recent business and financial results.