Robert Lewin
Analyst · Bank of America
Thanks a lot, Craig, and thank you, everyone, for joining our call this morning. I'm going to cover 4 topics today. First, our continued momentum around capital raising; second, our monetization activity, which has been increasing at a healthy pace in spite of the recent market volatility. Third, we have been making some important decisions around capital allocation. And finally, I'm going to go through how we think about the earnings power of our business. So let me start with capital raising. We raised $28 billion of new capital in the quarter with demand really widespread across asset classes and geographies. A real bright spot for us this quarter was in credit where we raised $15 billion across our platform. That momentum was driven by our asset-based finance business, which represents over $90 billion of AUM today. Given the current sentiment around private credit, it may be surprising that when you look at new capital raised, so this is excluding GA, this was one of our larger credit fundraising quarters. Inflows here more than doubled quarter-over-quarter, and our capital raising pipelines remain strong. Most recently, over the last few weeks, we've received meaningful inbound interest from institutions around our direct lending business with several viewing the current dislocation as an interesting entry point, given the redemption activity that exists today in the private BDC space. Another milestone for us this quarter was the final closing of our North America 14 fund at $23 billion, eclipsing the prior $19 billion fund. Across the most recent vintages of KKR's flagship regional funds, so that's Americas, plus Europe, plus Asia, we have $46 billion of total capital to invest across this vintage. We are the clear market leader in private equity. And finally, in wealth, across all of our asset classes, our K-Series suite brought in $4 billion of capital in Q1. Redemptions totaled around $250 million and AUM now stands at over $38 billion. Our performance, deployment and capital raising continue to be in line or ahead of our expectations. Given all the market noise, we were candidly surprised by the strength of flows in Q1. But we also do expect a slowdown in Q2, consistent with what we saw after the tariff announcements last year. We're still operating off of a relatively low base of AUM. And we continue to believe that this channel will be a long-term source of meaningful growth for our industry and us. Turning now to monetizations. As we have explained on prior calls, we are very pleased with the performance of our portfolio, and we are seeing the benefits of our focus on linear deployment and portfolio construction. You can see our continued monetization activity in our financial results. As Craig noted, we generated around $880 million of monetization revenue in the quarter. Realized carried interest was $720 million. That is up 120% year-on-year, and we have a healthy pipeline of realizations across strategies and regions. Over the past month or so, we have announced several encouraging transactions including the closing of the sale of OneStream Software for 4.5x our cost and the sale of CoolIT Systems, a global leader in liquid data center cooling for almost 15x our cost. We have also agreed to sell 2 of our 2021 investments despite the more challenging vintage year, 1 in infrastructure, which would generate approximately 2x multiple of money and 1 in traditional private equity at nearly 3x our cost. And most recently, we completed a secondary of our remaining shares in Hyundai Marine Solution in Korea, resulting in a 7-plus x multiple of capital for the full life of that investment. I'd like to next shift to capital allocation. It is an area of critical importance to our long-term performance and we have been making some important and deliberate decisions. As a reminder, we have focused on 4 key tools available to us to allocate our cash flow. Strategic M&A, insurance, share buybacks and strategic holdings. Each of these tools takes full advantage of the KKR ecosystem, and as a result, have the potential for high ROEs. Importantly, we do not have a framework that assigns a specific amount of capital spend into any one of these areas. Our approach here is all about how we take our marginal dollar of cash flows and drive the most amount of recurring durable and growing earnings on a per share basis. That is the mindset we have consistently taken to capital allocation, and it is one that is highly aligned with our shareholders given employees here own roughly 30% of our stock. We believe that we have delivered a lot of value to our shareholders through strategic capital allocation, and we are very confident in our ability to continue to do so in the future. So starting here with strategic M&A. This morning, we announced the closing of our acquisition of Arctos. As a reminder, Arctos is the leading investor in professional sports franchise stakes and a leader in GP solutions with approximately $16 billion of AUM and $10 billion of fee-paying AUM. If we are able to achieve our objectives in partnership with the Arctos management team, and we are confident that we will, it is hard to find a better allocation of capital. Next, in insurance. In the first quarter, we continued to see increased levels of competition here, particularly in the retail channel. Given that backdrop, alongside tight spreads on the asset side, we were disciplined around pricing and a lot more selective in that channel. That said, as spreads have widened a bit more recently, we are starting to see a more attractive entry point. On the other hand, an area where we leaned in this quarter was share repurchases where we saw attractive risk-adjusted returns given the volatility across our sector. We repurchased or retired $317 million of stock this year through May 1 at an average price of approximately $91. And our Board recently authorized an increase to our share repurchase program by an additional $500 million. Taking a step back, there is clearly a lot of noise in some of the markets where we operate. But from our seats, there is a big disconnect between perception and our long-term prospects across our diversified business model. That's why we have been leaning into buying back our stock. And you would have also seen our co-CEOs and a number of our directors buying stock personally in the quarter. Whether it's our performance in Q1 or the long-term earnings power of our franchise, our positioning stands in contrast to some of that market noise. Looking at Q1 in particular, we've grown our headline profitability metrics FRE, total operating earnings and ANI, all on a per share basis, each around 20% year-on-year. It's actually the second highest quarter we have reported in our history for FRE and OE and the third highest for ANI. And we continue to feel great about the durability of our model and the earnings power that we continue to create, which provides us with significant visibility into future earnings growth. Over 90% of our capital is perpetual or committed for 8 years or more. Today, we have $125 billion of committed but uncalled capital, nearly as much as we've had at any point in our history. Looking at our management fees and fee-related earnings over the LTM, we've grown at a high teens CAGR over the last 3 years. Alongside this growth, the quality of these fees has significantly improved as we've diversified by strategy, and geography. And finally, our embedded gains, which Craig mentioned, stand at over $18 billion, one of the highest levels in our history, and they provide a lens into the strength of our portfolio, and our ability to create meaningful outcomes in the future. So we benefit from real stability and durability of our earnings and increased visibility on how they will grow. Finally, before I'm going to hand it over to Scott, I did want to provide an update on our 2026 guidance. First, based on the underlying momentum that we are seeing across the business, we continue to feel very confident in our ability to exceed our targets for fundraising, strategic holdings operating earnings and FRE on a per share basis. Turning to ANI. As we said last quarter, following our bottoms-up budgeting process, we entered the year expecting 2026 ANI to reach $7-plus per share, assuming a constructive and more normalized monetization environment. At that level, earnings growth would be approximately 45% year-over-year. So it's clearly an ambitious target, but one that we did have line of sight to achieving. That said, the operating environment 4 months into the year has, of course, bit more challenging than what was embedded in our plan. Importantly, we are still seeing healthy monetization activity. Gross monetization revenues in Q1 were up more than 50% year-on-year. And when we look at exit since March 31 as well as signed transactions expected to close in the coming quarters, that represents over $1.2 billion of gross monetization revenue for KKR. Notably, that is the largest forward monetization figure we've discussed on a call in our history. So while we continue to generate very strong outcomes, we do have modestly less visibility today than what our budget would have suggested at this point in the year. As a result, if you were handicapping our ability to reach $7 per share, we do think it is more likely that we land below that level. Importantly, if that were to happen, any delayed monetizations that impact 2026 would not be lost as we would expect them to shift to 2027 and beyond. And stepping back, the broader portfolio remains in very good shape. Embedded gains are at or near record levels. The earnings power of the firm continues to grow at an attractive rate, and we feel extremely well positioned for the future. With that, I'm going to hand the call off to Scott.