Connor Teskey
Analyst · S Sohrab Movahedi with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open
Thank you, Bruce, and good morning, everyone. We wanted to take some time today to spotlight our private credit business and capabilities. While we've talked about our private credit before on both our conference calls and at our Investor Day, we continue to believe that it is an underappreciated part of our story. Today, we have a total of approximately $150 billion of fee-bearing capital in credit funds across all of our businesses. This includes credit strategies within infrastructure, real estate and private equity, as well as credit strategies within our Oaktree and LCM platforms. Of this figure, $60 billion represents private credit in long-term funds, which excludes any of the liquid high-yield bond or credit strategies that Oaktree manages and pro forma, the AEL transaction, that $60 billion figure will increase to $140 billion, inclusive of our insurance assets under management. Together, this makes us one of the largest private credit managers today and gives us distinct and meaningful advantages in this space. In the areas of infrastructure, renewable power, transition and real estate, we have a vast footprint and extensive experience in relationships, enabling us to source proprietary deal flow and have better insights when underwriting. In addition, our partnership with Oaktree, the premier name in credit for over 30 years, gives us extremely valuable access to data and deal flow. We have been aggressively investing in our team and platform to ensure that we are well positioned to take advantage of what is a secular change in the role of private credit broadly within the capital markets. To capture this opportunity -- to capture the opportunity we see in private credit, we have bolstered our investment capabilities to support increased origination activity, we have expanded our geographic reach to gain local intelligence, and we have launched new product strategies. We are seeing the benefits of this in our fundraising figures. Over 40% of the capital we have raised year-to-date has been from private credit and insurance and looking ahead, we expect that credit and insurance will be the biggest contributors to our fee-bearing capital and our fee revenue growth over the next five years. In the current environment, our LPs are realizing that they can earn double digit returns investing in credit. In fact, as credit risk return profiles have become more attractive, we have seen traditional fixed income investors increase allocations to private credit, and we have even attracted interest from investors that have historically focused on equity investments. Turning to some of our platforms, within infrastructure and renewable power, the pullback among traditional lenders is happening during a period of unprecedented capital need to build out renewables, data centers and fiber infrastructure capacity. Last week, we announced the closing of our third infrastructure debt strategy at $6 billion, making it more than twice as large as the predecessor fund and the largest infrastructure debt fund ever raised. Few others can operate at the scale, breadth and credibility we can within the broad investment scope of this fund. That means our capital has less competition, enabling us to generate attractive risk premiums while being highly selective in maintaining robust covenant protections. This fund is already 50% deployed, as we've seen the cadence for deployment accelerate. Given this pace of deployment, we could be in a position to launch the next vintage as soon as next year. Now turning to real estate, within commercial real estate, securitization markets remain slow, though issuance has started to pick up in September and October. Nevertheless, the vast pools of commercial real estate loans that are maturing over the next 12 months to 24 months will face a thinner pool of capital available for refinancing. Real estate investors who lack deep relationships with large institutional investors will be looking for solutions. Combined with the broader trends around the availability of traditional lenders, the deficit of liquidity will create a very attractive lending environment for sponsors with significant dry powder like us. We are not the only one -- we are not only one of the most experienced real estate investors in the world, but we also have one of the longest running private debt platforms in commercial real estate, as we have been providing credit solutions for more than two decades. Our next CRE mezzanine debt fund, which will be our seventh vintage, should be larger than the sixth, which was $4 billion, but our ability to put capital to work at scale far exceeds the size of this fund. This year we committed to a $1 billion loan, sold off the senior mortgage, retained a portion of the MEZ, and utilized our strong relationships to manage the rest on behalf of co-investors. This is only the start of where this and our other lending businesses are heading, as a one-stop shop for credit. And lastly, turning to Oaktree and LCM, within our corporate lending and opportunistic debt strategies, the magnitude, quality and breadth of deployment opportunities are approaching past periods like those immediately following the GFC and the start of the coronavirus pandemic. We expect this trend to continue as rates remain elevated from where they were. We have raised $23 billion at Oaktree this year, and are seeing strong demand for both the Flagship Opportunity Fund and also their inaugural Lending Partners Fund, which focuses on large-scale direct origination. Size matters and the ability to provide sizable capital solutions, particularly where complexity is high, favors investors like us and Oaktree and we continue to see this across a wide set of opportunities. Within private assets, Oaktree's opportunistic pipeline is approximately $8 billion and the performing pipeline is approximately double that. At the same time, at LCM, our European consumer lending business, our latest $4 billion Flagship Credit Opportunity Fund has earned over 15% returns this year, and it should also be a record year for deployment. The team is preparing to launch the next vintage of the fund in the latter half of next year, and our initial estimate is expected to be meaningfully larger than the current vintage. LCM's specialty finance strategy is also seeing strong demand, and the team has plans to launch a number of complementary credit strategies over the next 12 to 18 months. We will conclude by saying that we are already one of the largest private credit investors today, and we have several powerful engines that will propel and accelerate this part of the business over the next five years to 10 years. The platform we have developed, combined with a significant pool of fresh capital to put to work, are significant advantages. Our team has never been broader, and our capability is never bigger. We expect to organically grow our credit platform fee-bearing capital by more than $150 billion to $300 billion over the next five years. In addition, we expect to grow our insurance solutions business by $200 billion over the same period, and we will direct a large part of that capital into private credit funds, further expanding our capabilities. With that, let us turn it over to Bahir to discuss our financial results.