Joe Harvey
Analyst · Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. Your line is open
Thank you, Jon, and good morning. Today, I'll put a wrapper on 2023, review our business trends, then talk about priorities for 2024. The fourth quarter was dynamic. The majority of it steeped in the higher for longer interest rate psychology, which transitioned to anticipation of a peak in the interest rate cycle, driving appreciation into year-end. Our AUM ended 2023 at $83.1 billion compared with $75.2 billion in the prior quarter and $80.4 billion to begin the year. Reflected in our year-end AUM, both the listed real estate and listed infrastructure asset classes appreciated towards the end of the quarter, outperforming the S&P 500. Preferred's performed in line with treasuries and high yield. Our relative investment performance remained strong and business activity continues to improve. We feel good about the corporate infrastructure investments we made last year and look forward to helping clients navigate the next phase of macroeconomic regime change in 2024. Looking at firm-wide flows, we had net outflows of $935 million in the fourth quarter, bringing total 2023 net outflows to $2 billion and organic decay rate of 2.5% for the year. For the quarter and year, open-end funds drove the outflows with $504 million out in the fourth quarter and $1.7 billion out for the year. Tax loss harvesting drove redemptions in several strategies. Preferred strategies were the largest driver of outflows totaling $340 million in the quarter and $1.9 billion for the year and were mostly from open-end funds. The high interest rate environment throughout the year and the mini banking crisis in the first half of the year helped explain the preferred outflows, which have persisted for eight quarters. Another driver of Q4 outflows was global and international real estate with $384 million out. Recapping the client segment flows in Q4. In addition to open-end fund net outflows of $504 million, advisory had $30 million out, sub-advisory ex Japan had $220 million out and Japan sub-advisory had $169 million out. By strategy, the outflows were 41% attributable to global real estate 36% attributable to preferred and 19% attributable to US real estate. Delving a bit deeper into the sources of these flows, US open-end funds had $450 million out with our real estate securities fund CSI, accounting for $213 million and our low duration preferred fund, LPX, accounting for $106 million. While LPX's 2023 performance was strong, its flows continued to be challenged by the comparable yield of risk-free treasury bills in the low 5% zone. We also saw outflows from model-based portfolios and defined contribution or DCIO. Non-US funds had modest inflows of $26 million. Advisory had two new accounts fund totaling $183 million, offset by 7 terminated accounts totaling $190 million. All of the terminated accounts were due to strategic asset allocation eliminations by clients. In sub-advisory, we had one large outflow of $273 million from a global real estate client and a multi-strategy account, where a majority of the allocation will be maintained, but a portion will be replaced by a tactical portfolio overlay. Japan sub-advisory broke its positive trend over the past couple of quarters with $169 million in outflows due to profit taking and the delayed implementation of Japan's new retirement program called the new Nippon Individual Savings Account or NISA. In order to participate in the program, our partner, Iowa, has been adding baby fund vehicles attached to their existing funds we sub-advise. Our one unfunded pipeline increased to $1.2 billion at year-end compared with $784 million at the end of the third quarter. Tracking the changes from last quarter, $283 million funded into three accounts, $770 million was added to the pipeline from seven mandates and $60 million was removed from two mandates both in the EMEA and the region that have been on pause long enough for us to assume they will not fund. The seven new mandates are dispersed across five strategies with the majority in global and international real estate. Consistent with the trend in the back half of 2023, overall prospect activity continues to improve as expectations for a shift in Fed policy provide more confidence in asset allocation decisions. We continue to see adoption of listed real estate strategies, listed infrastructure and multi-strategy real asset portfolios. At the same time, certain clients are above their target allocations when looking at listed and private weightings combined and sometimes we'll trim listed to get back to target. Now I'd like to share some of the things we are focused on in 2024. First, and always, our investment performance is number one on the list. Our performance relative to our benchmarks remain strong and will enable us to compete well for mandates. Our percent of AUM outperforming at 96% for three years and 97% for five years supports my optimism. We can always be better, though, our average excess returns over three years has softened to 173 basis points, but our alpha for five years continues to be quite strong at 266 basis points. With Jon Cheigh, turning the leadership of listed real estate to Jason Yablon, Jon will be able to spend more time focusing on strategies where we need to bolster our excess returns. In global portfolios, which includes real estate, infrastructure and preferred strategies, we'll continue to expand our investment universes. This is especially important as the global geopolitical order shifts, and as companies seek equity from the public markets. We look forward to Elaine Zaharis-Nikas leadership of the preferred team and the team's continuation of our long-term performance. We believe that positive new return cycles have commenced for both listed real estate and preferreds. As such, we see alpha opportunities particularly as REITs begin to attract additional capital to acquire properties from sellers contending with tighter credit and refinancing conditions, and as potentially stiffer regulatory capital requirements could push banks to issue more preferreds. Another priority is to help our clients navigate the next phase of regime change with research and education. There is approximately $7.6 trillion sitting in money funds globally, of which $6 trillion is in the U.S. Once the Fed commences easing, more of that money will be looking for a new home. We continue to optimize our distribution resources and prioritize relationships with investors who are most inclined to allocate to our asset classes through active management. In the wealth channel, we will continue to shift resources to the independent registered investment adviser and family office markets, which have the highest growth rate in AUM and are more predisposed to using active management. With private real estate, we have a broader lineup of real estate strategies with which combined with our asset allocation and advisory capabilities, we believe will be interest -- of interest to the RIA and family office markets. In Japan, we are cautiously optimistic on the government's desire to upgrade the asset management industry to provide better strategies, vehicles and governance in order to increase the investment of cash sitting on the sidelines, especially in retirement accounts. Asia ex Japan is a priority, reflecting the emerging demand we see for our asset classes, and as reported last quarter, we have opened our Singapore office with institutional and wholesale sales professionals to capitalize on this opportunity. Our real estate franchise continues to get stronger. On the listed side, we continue to expand our capabilities and universe of investments, including private companies, CMBS and use of derivatives depending on the strategy. In private real estate, we recently announced our first investment for Cohen & Steers Income Opportunities REIT, also known as CNS REIT. The property is a Dallas shopping center named the Marketplace at Highland Village. Highland Village was identified through a programmatic joint venture with the Sterling organization and was acquired based upon an investment thesis that a lack of new construction is driving strong fundamentals for certain shopping centers, which we believe are mispriced. Partnering with best-in-class operators like Sterling, a national shopping center operator or, in other cases, a regional or local specialist is a key element of CNS REIT's portfolio construction strategy that we have seen work well with listed REITs over the long-term. We hope to announce more strategic partnerships for CNS REIT in the future. Another differentiating feature of CNS REIT is our focus on smaller to middle market properties. Now that CNS REIT is operational, we are transitioning from seed capital raising to engaging the RIA market and the gatekeepers at regional broker-dealers and wirehouses. On prior calls, we've said that we are waiting to deploy our seed capital for CNS REIT until private market prices correct to reflect the changes in the debt markets. Last quarter, we said we were about halfway through the process. With inflation declining, bond yields likely having peaked and with a bottoming signal from the REIT market, we believe this is an opportune time to initiate the investment phase for CNS REIT. It remains to be seen how long the repricing and debt refinancing process will take. Based on the magnitude of dollars and properties involved, it likely won't be on a short time line, and a longer process may extend the window for our private strategies as well as the listed REITs in our portfolios to make investments priced in the new regime. We also recently announced an asset allocation advisory capability for real assets, centered around an interactive allocation tool, we call the Real Estate Compass and supported by research and insights from our strategist, Jeff Palmer and multi-strategy investing and Rich Hill in private real estate. We believe these capabilities will support wealth firms as they seek to increase allocations to alternatives including real estate and client portfolios. Finally, we continue to work on strategies and research and development, which starts with a compelling investment idea but overlays the governance of commercialization within a reasonable time frame. We decided to liquidate a multi-strategy income fund with $35 million in AUM, after concluding that the target market would rather allocate directly to each of the underlying strategies. We continue to develop other strategies and explore what markets and vehicles would be attractive to investors. Favorites include the future of energy, global preferreds and opportunistic infrastructure strategy, natural resource equities and next-generation real estate, among others. We believe innovation is a critical element to maintaining and enhancing our listed real asset market position and brand. Some of these initiatives will require incremental headcount. On the whole, incremental headcount will be modest and any more would be driven by an improving organic growth environment. I will close by congratulating Bill Capell, the Head of our preferred team on his retirement later this year. Bill is a great investor and we've delivered strong results for clients over the years. We have high confidence in Lane in carrying his legacy forward. Thank you for listening. Julianne, could you please open the lines for questions?