Robert Steers
Analyst · Evercore ISI. You may proceed with your question
Thank you, Matt. Good morning, everyone. As you heard from Matt, this was another solid quarter of asset and earnings growth. The $1.4 billion of net inflows, as Matt said represented our 12th consecutive quarter of positive organic growth. Whereas in the past organic growth was driven mainly by two strategies U.S. real estate and preferred securities. Today we are also getting positive flow contributions from global real estate, global listed infrastructure, low-duration preferred securities, and multi-strap real assets. Investment performance in the quarter was good with five of 10 strategies beating their benchmarks and seven of 10 have outperformed on a year-to-date basis. Our wealth channel contributed another outstanding quarter of organic growth. Net inflows were $869 million or a 16% annualized growth rate. U.S. REITs preferred securities and low-duration preferred saw the biggest flows, but global real estate had $55 million of net flows which was a new quarterly high. During the quarter, we also had several different funds added to five recommended list at important distribution partners which reflects our continued strong performance. The institutional advisory channel had an exceptionally quarter as well, reflecting both the elevated interest in our strategies and our success rate in competing for these mandates. Net inflows exceeded $1 billion, which was the 41% organic growth rate and was also derived from a range of strategies including global listed infrastructure, preferred securities, U.S. real estate, and multi-strap real assets. Our pipeline of awarded, but unfunded mandates stands at $555 million, down from $903 million at the end of the second quarter. In the quarter, $729 million of the $903 million was funded and we added $385 million of new, but not yet funded mandates. Also during the quarter, we won and funded $228 million from two mandates, which as a result did not show up in the pipeline statistics. The vast majority of these new assets are investing in our global real estate strategies, adding to the number of different portfolios that our advisory clients are utilizing. We are currently awaiting the outcome of six undecided mandates totaling approximately $320 million and RFP activity remains strong. Outflows from our sub-advisory ex-Japan relationships total $221 million, primarily due to rebalancing out of our large cap value and global listed infrastructure strategies, which have experienced high absolute returns. As we noted in our last call, following the distribution cut in one of the Japanese U.S. refunds that we sub-advised, we expected that net inflows we have been reporting with shift to net outflows. And in the quarter, our Japanese sub-advisory business overall did experience total net outflows of $275 million. While we don't break outflows by fund or sub-advisory relationship, I can tell you that the outflows from the funding question, which accounts for approximately 43% of our Japanese U.S. REIT assets under management, are well below our competitors’ levels at this stage or and or in our declining trend. Before finishing up, I would like to share a couple of thoughts. First, I want to reiterate that our organic growth, which for years was powered primarily by U.S. real estate and preferred security strategies is now supported by four additional strategies all of which had net inflows in the quarter. Obviously, if these trends continue to sets the potential to improve our future organic growth prospects. Second, as you saw from our financial results in the quarter, our focus on managing controllable expenses continues to bear fruit. In addition, it appears that concerns regarding the prospect of increasing costs associated with accessing retail distribution have been unfounded. That said, it's very likely in the near future that there will be incremental costs to fully comply with various new regulatory rules such as MiFID II. We have been and continue to work on strategies designed to mitigate the potential financial impact of these and other regulatory changes. In the end, strong investment performance, select investments in performance and productivity enhancing opportunities and prudent management of regulatory requirements should enable us to continue to grow profitably for the foreseeable future. I will stop there and open the floor to questions.