Connor Teskey
Analyst · Craig Siegenthaler with Bank of America
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. As Bruce mentioned, this past year was the most active period in our history across fundraising, deployment and monetizations. Our infrastructure and renewable power franchise is one example of this momentum, as over the past 12 months, we've raised $30 billion, deployed $30 billion and monetized over $10 billion at approximately 20% returns, demonstrating strength, scale, and consistency of our platform. Our franchise is the largest and most established globally, serving as a cornerstone of our business and a key driver of long-term growth. Deployment is centered around sizable investments across all sectors, geographies and positions in the capital structure, including by utilities, from a controlling equity investment for an industrial gas business in South Korea, and a minority equity investment in the United States for Duke Energy Florida, across transportation, via structured equity investment in a Danish port, across data with a mezzanine financing for a European stabilized data center portfolio, and across renewables, by an equity investment in a South American hydro platform, and to take private of a global renewable developer concentrated in France and Australia. And finally, across our first AI infrastructure deal with Bloom Energy, which we committed to this past quarter. AI promises unprecedented improvements in productivity but it is simultaneously driving an unprecedented demand for infrastructure, from data centers and power generation to compute capacity and cooling technologies. We estimate that AI-related infrastructure investments will exceed $7 trillion over the next decade. Brookfield's unique position, owning and operating across the full energy and digital infrastructure value chain gives us a tremendous advantage in capturing this opportunity. On the back of this generational investment opportunity, we are launching our AI infrastructure fund. A first-of-its-kind strategy that pulls together our global relationships with hyperscalers, our expertise in real estate, and our leading position in infrastructure and energy into one strategy. With the goal of being the partner of choice to leading corporates, governments and other stakeholders looking for integrated solutions that combine development capability, operating expertise and large-scale capital. We are also preparing to launch our flagship infrastructure fund, which is our largest strategy at Brookfield early next year. Looking ahead, we expect to have all of our infrastructure strategies in the market in 2026, including our flagship infrastructure fund, our AI infrastructure fund, our mezzanine debt strategy, our open-ended super core and private wealth strategies. And in the back half of the year, we expect to launch the second vintage of our Infrastructure Structured Solutions Fund. As a result, despite raising $30 billion over the last 12 months, we expect next year will be even bigger. Within renewable power, this quarter, we also held the final close of the second vintage of our global transition flagship at $20 billion, making it $5 billion larger than its predecessor and the largest private fund ever dedicated to the global energy transition. The success of this fund raise also reinforces the scale, credibility and momentum of our energy franchise. Since launching our first ever transition strategy less than 5 years ago, our platform now produces over $400 million of annual fee revenues. More important, we are investing into an environment that is highly attractive and increasingly constructive for us. Global demand for electricity is increasing at an unprecedented rate. This is the result of the ongoing trend of electrification as large sectors like industrials and transportation are increasingly electrifying. And this growth has now been supercharged in recent years by the surge in electricity demand from data centers to support cloud and AI growth around the world. Data centers are becoming some of the largest single consumers of electricity and the scale of new generation required to support them is immense. Each of these forces is contributing to a structural shortage of generation capacity. To put it plainly, the world needs more power, and it needs it faster than ever before. Our business is uniquely designed to meet this challenge. We are positioned to provide that any and all power solutions that will be necessary to meet this need. Our leading renewable power business can provide the low-cost wind and solar solutions needed to meet this increasing demand. Renewables continued to see significant growth due to their low-cost position, but also their ability to win on speed of deployment and energy security, as they do not rely on imported fuels. And in a world where baseload power and grid stability are increasingly important, in addition to renewables, we have leading platforms in hydro, nuclear and energy storage, all of which play a critical and growing role for electricity grids, both independently and as complement alongside natural gas and renewables in the energy mix. In this regard, we are very pleased to announce, last week, a landmark partnership with the U.S. government to construct $80 billion of new nuclear power reactors using Westinghouse technology. The agreement reestablishes the United States as a global leader in nuclear energy and positions Brookfield at the center of a historic build-out of clean baseload power, creating one of the most compelling growth opportunities across our transition platform, and potentially one of the most successful investments in Brookfield's history. Within our private equity business, we recently launched the seventh vintage of our flagship private equity strategy, which focuses on essential service businesses that form the backbone of the global economy. These include industrial, business services and infrastructure adjacent companies where we can apply our operational expertise to drive efficiency, productivity and scale. Early investor feedback for this strategy reflects a growing recognition that value creation in the current environment is driven less by multiple expansion or financial engineering, and more by hands-on operational improvement, an approach that has long defined Brookfield's success. While many traditional buyout strategies are navigating slower fundraising cycles, we continue to be differentiated. We have consistently returned capital at strong returns from preceding vintages, and are seeing strong demand for our differentiated, operationally focused model. We expect this next vintage to be our largest private equity fund ever. We are also bringing our private equity strategy to the private wealth channel with the recent launch of a new fund structured for individuals. Similar to how we structured our successful private wealth infrastructure fund, this new private equities fund will be able to invest alongside all of our private equity strategies. This means that targeting individual investors in the retirement market does not require us to invest differently, but rather simply package our current investment activity in a different way to meet the growing demand from a new set of clients. Within real estate, we continue to see strong momentum across our property business. Market conditions have improved meaningfully. Transaction volumes are rising, capital markets are robust and valuations for high-quality assets are firming. We are actively monetizing stabilized assets, selling approximately $23 billion of properties, representing $10 billion of equity value over the past 12 months. At the same time, it is an excellent point in the cycle to be deploying capital into certain segments of the market, and we have significant dry powder to put to work following the successful close of our latest flagship real estate fund, our largest real estate strategy ever. The combination of limited new supply, recapitalization needs and improving sentiment is creating one of the most attractive investment environments we've seen in years. We are also taking advantage of the constructive financing backdrop to strengthen our long-term holdings, including the $1.3 billion refinancing of 660 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, part of the over $35 billion of real estate financings we've closed year-to-date. And finally, on our credit business, we will make a few additional points. We continue to see a large opportunity set to invest in the areas that fit our core competencies. The themes driving our equity businesses will require significant debt capital investment and Brookfield is well suited with its expertise and capital to meet that need, whether it be in real asset, opportunistic or asset-backed finance. As we look ahead to the rest of the year and into 2026, we see the market continuing to be strong for our business. Capital markets remain healthy. Liquidity is abundant, and the opportunity set across our businesses continues to expand. The flagship strategies we are launching will continue to anchor our growth while our complementary products, including our AI infrastructure fund, and our rapidly scaling fundraising channels such as wealth and insurance, are diversifying our platform and driving our consistent high-teens growth rates. The secular forces shaping the global economy, digitalization, decarbonization and deglobalization are the same themes that have guided our strategy for many years. Today, they are accelerating. As these trends converge, Brookfield's global reach, operating depth and access to long-term capital position us well to continue leading the industry. With that, we'll turn the call over to Hadley to discuss our financial results, record quarterly fundraising and balance sheet positioning.