Eric Colson
Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead
Thank you, everyone, for joining the call or reading the transcript. Slide 1 summarizes our business philosophy and approach. Artisan Partners is a high value-added investment firm, designed for talent to thrive in a thoughtful growth environment. Thoughtful growth is core to who we are. Thoughtful growth is important for attracting new talent and retaining and stimulating existing talent. Investment degrees of freedom increase the probability that we can generate alpha and differentiated outcomes versus peers and indexes. In that way, Artisan's thoughtful growth directly benefits existing clients and existing strategies. Through thoughtful growth, we also grow and evolve our strategy lineup to align with evolving asset allocations. This allows us to reach new clients and increase our partnership with existing clients. Thoughtful growth is important to our stockholders. Through growth, we extend the duration of existing talent and expand the number of investment decision makers. We diversify our business and sources of alpha. We offset natural attrition that occurs over time as we compound capital for long periods. And by increasing our capabilities and offerings, we increase the number of embedded options for growth. Thoughtful growth is careful, incremental and disciplined. Growth that is consistent with who we are as a high value-added, talent-driven firm. Our commitment to thoughtful growth explains why we are not investing in passive investment strategies, a highly concentrated scale business or why we don't invest in a large sales force to transact directly with retail and wealth clients. We do not have an edge in those areas. Our edge is as a home for investment talent and as a manager of high value-added differentiated investment strategies. We invest behind that edge. We spend time and money on investment capabilities that enhance our high value-added strategies, differentiate them from passive and exposure products and evolve in the direction of alternative investment allocations. If we deliver, as we have in the past, there will be plenty of long-term demand for what we do and plenty of opportunity for top and bottom line growth. On last year's third quarter earnings call, I laid out long-term investments we are making in three areas to broaden into alternative-oriented strategies, differentiated credit, private investing and China. Over the last 12 months, we have continued to incrementally invest in each of these areas. This is most apparent in differentiated credit. Over the last 12 months, we have successfully launched the Artisan Floating Rate strategy, which invests in floating rate leverage loans, the Artisan Emerging Markets Debt opportunity strategy, a blended currency emerging markets debt strategy, the Artisan's Emerging Markets Local opportunity strategy, a local currency emerging market debt strategy, and the Artisan Global Unconstrained strategy, a global macro portfolio. As shown on Slide 2, we now offer clients six differentiated credit strategies. Consistent with who we are, we have focused on high value-added asset classes characterized by attractive absolute return potential, large investment opportunity sets allowing for alpha and differentiation, long-term demand from sophisticated asset allocators and attractive economics consistent with the value we can deliver. 2022 may appear to have been an inauspicious time to launch 4 fixed income-oriented strategies, but we have never attempted to time the market with new teams or new strategies. Our approach is thoughtful, methodical and long term. We start with the right talent, which is extremely rare, difficult to identify, and takes time to recruit. We identify long-term asset allocation trends that fit with our talent and high value-added approach. We get the people, resources and alignment in place. We launch when we are ready, not when we think a market is going to rip or client demand is going to soar. Once we launch, we are patient, maximizing the investment team's time spent investing, establishing a track record. We invest in dedicated distribution aligned with the investment team. Our long-term time horizon reduces the importance of short-term market and demand dynamics and places a premium on getting the foundation right. Slide three shows the outcome of our approach since Bryan Krug joined Artisan in 2013 and established our Denver-based credit team. The team's high income strategy has consistently outperformed the high-yield index and peers. For the trailing 5-year period, Lipper ranks the Artisan High Income Fund as the number 4 fund out of 338 high-yield funds. Bryan and his team have a differentiated philosophy and approach relative to rating agencies and other managers. The team focuses more on earnings and cash flow and less on the hard assets on borrowers' balance sheets. In addition, unlike many high-yield managers, the Artisan Credit team invest opportunistically and at times significantly in floating rate levered loans. The significant use of loans nearly doubles their opportunity set from approximately $1.5 trillion of face value debt to approximately $3 trillion. The Artisan Credit opportunity strategy, which now has a 5-year track record, provides the investment team additional degrees of freedom, greater concentration, more distressed and less liquid credits, shorting and private investments. The team has used that flexibility to generate average annual returns of more than 8% since inception in July of 2017 after fees. That's more than 6 percentage points per year greater than the high-yield index. As an additional reference point, since 2017, we calculate the middle markets private lending has generated an average annual return of approximately 8% before fees with less liquidity. In order to provide clients access to the investment team's credit picking skills with minimal duration risk, we launched the Artisan Floating Rate strategy at the end of last year. We also further developed the team's leadership, promoting Seth Yaeger to Co-Portfolio Manager of the floating rate strategy. Since establishing the Artisan Credit team 8 years ago, we have consistently grown the team's business over time, raising almost $7 billion in cumulative net flows. Early growth was almost entirely from the wealth channel. As the team became more established at Artisan and extended its track record, we have diversified the business with institutional allocators and separate accounts, which remains a focus. The weighted average fee across the team's AUM is 64 basis points, reflecting the team's value production for clients and demand for scarce alpha. Looking forward, we believe the Artisan Credit team has the leadership, breadth and depth of talent, resources and ambition to become a multidimensional credit franchise, managing an array of high value-added strategies, vehicles and investments. Future strategies may offer amplified participation in a particular theme or a subset of investments, such as a dedicated distressed or dislocation strategy or co-investment opportunities. The team also has the capability to expand further into private investing and to manage structured vehicles, which would expand their client base into insurance and bank balance sheets. We are pleased with how the Artisan Credit franchise has developed so far, but we believe we are still in the early stages of building out a premier credit platform. Slide four summarizes the three strategies managed by our second fixed income team, the EMsights Capital Group. Early performance has been strong. Since inception, on May 1, emerging market debt opportunities has outperformed its index by 735 basis points after fees. Since inception on April 1, Artisan Global Unconstrained has generated a 2.51% return after fees, a positive absolute return during a period in which most global markets have declined significantly. In addition to strong absolute and index relative performance, both strategies have performed well relative to peers. We expect to see demand for the EMsights Capital Group across all of our distribution channels, both in and outside the United States. The FT reports that $70 billion has flowed out of EM bond funds this year, the most ever on record. That creates opportunity for us. Money looking for a home with a proven manager in an asset class we believe has long-term staying power. We are excited by this opportunity and are in the late-stage discussions with early institutional capital. We are still very early with the EMsights Capital Group, but we believe this team has enormous potential to generate differentiated returns and build a high-quality, sizable business. Our build-out of differentiated credit capabilities is similar to the development of our global strategies and distribution between 2005 and 2013, and our high degree of freedom strategies beginning in 2014 and continuing to today. The strategies we launched during our globalization phase account for approximately $42 billion of our current AUM, and run rate revenues of approximately $234 million. The strategies we have launched since 2014 account for approximately $23 billion in AUM and run rate revenues of approximately $185 million. These are successful growth outcomes as a result of the methodical execution of our thoughtful growth approach. We believe we will see similar long-term outcomes with the differentiated credit businesses we are building today. Once we invest behind new talent and strategies, we are disciplined in seeing these investments through with operational and distribution alignment. As shown on Slide five, since 2012, we have grown from 5 to 10 investment teams, from 12 to 25 investment strategies. And from only public equity to now include long/short equity, high-yield credit, long-short credit, public private hybrid, emerging markets debt, and global macro. The investments we make in our business take time to pay off. Because of our build, not buy approach, all of our investments run through our income statement, reducing short-term profitability. The P&L impact of current investments has been amplified by the market drawdown, pushing our adjusted operating margin from 45% a year ago to 33% for the prior period. We are extremely mindful of the margin decline. 2022 has been a historically bad year in markets. Rarely have both equity and fixed income valuation declined to such an extent at the same time. Through the third quarter, the 60-40 portfolio was down 21%, the second worst performance since 1900. We feel the impact of these declines as do our clients and employees. We have built our business and financial model with these periods specifically in mind, to be a source of stability for talent, clients and stockholders, to allow us to capitalize on the investment and business opportunities that present themselves in periods of heightened volatility, uncertainty and fear. More than half our expenses automatically adjust down with AUM, including the vast majority of investment team compensation. This creates transparency, predictability and stability for our people. We also have experience. We have been through these periods before, our investment teams, our management team, our Board of Directors. We have a well-communicated long-term mindset and confidence in who we are and the investments we are making. Before turning it over to C.J., I want to spend a minute on Slide six, which is a slide we used last quarter as well. I think the perspective and history on Slide six warrants repeating. Sharp market sell-offs occur more frequently than many people think. And Artisan Partners has a history have taken advantage of these periods for the benefit of clients and ultimately stockholders. Since our founding in 1995, there have been 12 calendar quarters in which the indexes, to which our strategies are compared, have declined by more than 10%. In 8 of 11 12-month periods, following a 10% drawdown, our firm-wide asset-weighted performance has exceeded benchmark performance. Across the 11 periods, Alpha averages 297 basis points. The three periods in which we underperformed were particularly sharp recoveries with clients and our firm benefiting from absolute returns of 31%, 23% and 59%. Our underperformance across these three periods averaged approximately 380 basis points. If you extend the time horizon and look at the following 3-year periods, we have outperformed 8 of 10 times, with performance averaging 308 basis points. If you reduce the drawdown triggered to 5%, there have been 23 such quarters since our founding, including all three quarters of 2022. We have outperformed in 13 of 20 subsequent 12-month periods and in 16 of 19 subsequent 3-year periods with outperformance averaging 391 basis points. Our investment teams have been able to take advantage of selloffs in the past, and we believe they will have the ability to do so again. We are well positioned as a firm to take advantage of opportunities that present themselves in times like these, whether it be talent seeking a better home or clients seeking a more stable partner. Our business is resilient and working. We are confident in our ability to execute through this period, come out stronger and continue to thoughtfully grow the firm over the long term. I will now turn it to C.J. to discuss recent financial results.