Jon Winkelried
Analyst · Goldman Sachs
Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. TPG entered 2026 with strong momentum following a record year of capital formation and deployment. Our first quarter results reflect the continued acceleration of our growth objectives across the platform. Our fee-related earnings grew 36% year-over-year and exceeded $1 billion on an LTM basis for the first time in TBG's history. Our after-tax distributable earnings per share grew 46% compared to the first quarter of last year, and total AUM grew 22% to $306 billion. Our capital formation deployment and realization activity, each delivered a step function increase year-over-year, growing 75%, 96% and 103%, respectively. . Our performance this quarter is particularly notable given the complex macro backdrop. The convergence of AI disruption, private credit stress and geopolitical conflict has created significant market uncertainty. However, our business is intentionally built to be resilient through cycles. Our long-duration capital base provides earnings stability and embedded growth, and we've delivered some of our best-performing vintages during periods of dislocation. We view the current environment as an opportunity, and we've never felt more confident in the positioning of our franchise and our ability to successfully execute on our growth drivers. Our clients are leaning in and looking for additional ways to partner with us and the momentum across our business continues to accelerate. Before I review the quarter, I want to provide additional context on 2 areas that are top of mind for our investors. First, the AI transformation and its implications to our investing business; and second, the state of private credit through the lens of our portfolio. I'll start with AI. AI has created significant disruption as well as opportunity across sectors, particularly in software. As we assess the impact of AI, we continue to see meaningful value in certain enterprise software models and the strong performance across our software portfolio reinforces this view. We've evaluated each of our software companies through a framework based on offensive opportunity and defensive risk, and of high conviction that the vast majority are well positioned to benefit from AI. Our software portfolio today is relatively young with an average hold period of approximately 3 years. We are investing significant capital and specialized resources to ensure that these companies take full advantage of the opportunities that AI unlocks. Overall, our software companies continued to deliver strong results and are increasingly leveraging agenetic solutions. This momentum was clearly reflected in the first quarter with aggregate bookings in our TPG Capital and TPG Growth software portfolio growing more than 20% year-over-year. Looking ahead, the impact of AI remains dynamic across industries and will continue to be an important input into our disciplined investment approach. TPG's relationships and differentiated access to leading AI companies gives us real-time visibility into how business models are evolving. These insights directly inform our investment decisions and value creation plans, and we remain highly confident in our ability to continue delivering strong performance for our investors. Turning to private credit. While the asset class has been under heightened scrutiny more recently, our credit portfolios are healthy, and we have strong conviction in the long-term growth outlook for our business. Private credit has become an integral part of the global financing ecosystem, as borrowers with increasingly complex capital needs seek speed, flexibility and execution certainty. Although some retail-oriented credit vehicles are experiencing elevated redemptions in the current environment, Institutional demand for enhanced yield continues to increase. As we look across our credit business, we're seeing accelerating growth driven by several dynamics. First, our strong performance. During the quarter, each of our credit strategies outperformed their respective benchmarks. Our returns remain at or above our targeted ranges, and we continue to maintain very low and stable loss ratios. Additionally, given our de minimis software exposure and credit, our portfolios are well insulated from broader industry concerns. Second, our differentiated credit strategies are resonating with clients who are increasingly looking to diversify their private credit exposure. Our direct lending business, Twin Brook, operates in the lower middle market, which is characterized by strong lender protections and more favorable competitive dynamics. Twin Brooks strategy is built around rigorous underwriting and cash flow lending with no ARR loans or PIK at origination. Its portfolio largely consists of senior secured first lien loans with financial covenants. In addition, as the revolver lender, Twin Brook benefits from an embedded early warning system to proactively identify and manage company-level stress. Third, while private wealth represents a relatively small portion of our capital base today, we continue to experience strong demand for our products in this channel. In the first quarter, TCAP our nontraded BDC reported gross inflows of $193 million and redemption requests of $31 million, representing just 1.3% of total shares outstanding, well below the industry average. TCAP ended the quarter with $4.7 billion of AUM, up 33% year-over-year. Additionally, given our attractive mix of credit strategies and strong performance our clients have expressed interest in a TPG multi-strategy credit interval fund, which we plan to launch next year. And finally, current market dynamics are creating a compelling deployment opportunity in private credit. Having successfully scaled our capital base through 2025, we're well positioned with $19 billion of credit dry powder to execute on a broad range of opportunities. Now I'll review our activity in the quarter. Coming off a record 2025, we raised more than $10 billion of capital in the first quarter, which increased 75% year-over-year. In credit, following last year's positive inflection point, our baseline capital formation has fundamentally re-rated higher, and we raised $4.4 billion in the quarter. Notably in February, we closed our long-term strategic partnership with Jackson Financial which is off to a strong start and tracking ahead of our plan. We received $2 billion of initial commitments into our asset-based finance business, which we've started to deploy. And last week, we closed the Jackson rated note feature in our middle-market direct lending business. Looking ahead, we're focused on continuing to expand our credit capabilities across the return spectrum to reserve our broader base of clients. In private equity, we raised $4.9 billion in the quarter, including $925 million towards a rolling first close for RISE for our Impact Fund. We also raised additional capital for TPG 10 and Healthcare Partners III, bringing total capital raised for these 2 funds to nearly $13 billion including commitments that are signed but not yet closed. In real estate, we recently began raising for our fifth trip opportunistic fund and second, Japan Value Fund and expect to launch our sixth Asia real estate fund in June. Additionally, in our net lease business, we established several new strategic partnerships, raising $1 billion for our fifth fund through April, and we expect to complete fundraising in the second quarter. Within the private wealth channel, in addition to TCAP, we continue to see strong inflows into TPOP, our perpetual private equity product. Across the TPOP strategy, monthly subscriptions increased throughout the first quarter, driving $545 million of inflows and bringing total AUM to $2.1 billion at the end of March, just 10 months after our initial launch. Overall, we remain on track to raise more than $50 billion this year, supported by the strength and stability of our institutional client relationships drives a wider dispersion of performance across the industry we believe we're well positioned to continue taking market share given the differentiated returns we've delivered for our clients. Moving to deployment. We continued our robust pace with more than $14 billion invested in the quarter which nearly doubled year-over-year. In credit, we deployed $5.7 billion of capital, up 42% year-over-year. This includes $2.5 billion in our asset-based finance business, where we continue to expand our market-leading position and home equity-related mortgage finance. We also completed several transactions in equipment finance receivables as well as a new or upsized flow arrangements in both consumer and home improvement lending. In middle market direct lending, despite the macro headwinds, Twin Brook generated $1.8 billion of gross originations in the quarter. Twin Brook's existing portfolio continues to be a powerful source of embedded origination with add-on acquisitions representing approximately 50% of deal flow in the quarter. We also added a dozen new borrowers, bringing our portfolio to more than 310 companies. In Credit Solutions, we're seeing a growing demand for flexible, customized capital solutions as borrowers are increasingly seeking execution certainty amid heightened volatility. Stresses in certain parts of the credit market are creating attractive opportunities to lend to high-quality companies facing balance sheet pressure. During the quarter, our credit solutions team led a $450 million financing for a new joint venture with Xerox to manage and unlock value from certain IP assets. This deal demonstrates TPG's ability to provide creative, liquidity-enhancing solutions to address long-term capital structure needs. Across our private equity strategies, we deployed nearly $7 billion of capital in the first quarter, which represents 2.5x the capital invested in the prior year period. As we've highlighted previously, our approach to investing and portfolio construction continues to be a differentiator for TPG by leveraging our proprietary sourcing engine, deep operational capabilities and extensive experience built a distinctive private equity portfolio. In our 2 most recent TPG Capital Funds, 9 and 10, approximately 2/3 of our investments have been corporate partnerships or carve-outs with meaningful downside protections, including several with put rights. These features provide increased transparency into exit timing, counterparty certainty, and, in some cases, minimum return thresholds, which are particularly compelling in the current environment. Complex corporate carve-outs are a core strength of our platform and have generated strong historical returns for us. Our corporate partners often retain an ongoing equity ownership stake, creating strong alignment and shared incentives around long-term value creation. In March alone, we closed 4 carve-out transactions in TBG Capital. Across our GB secondaries business, our investment pipelines are accelerating as sponsors increasingly use solutions-oriented capital to drive liquidity. We expect industry deal volumes this year to exceed 2025, which was a record year for single-asset CVs. During the quarter, our GP Solutions and Life Sciences funds partnered to close a $3.8 billion continuation vehicle for Curium Pharma, which is a global leader in nuclear medicine and diagnostics. Curium exemplifies the power of TPG's platform as 1 of the few scaled investors in GP-led secondaries with deep health care and life sciences expertise. The deal was sourced and completed through the close collaboration of our investment professionals across 4 platforms and 3 geographies. We believe this is the largest single asset CV ever completed in Europe. Within our Impact platform, the opportunity set continues to expand globally, driven by powerful and evolving market dynamics, rising residential and industrial electricity demand, together with rapid scaling of AI and data centers, is placing unprecedented strain on power systems around the world. At the same time, the ongoing disruption across global energy supply chains, driven by geopolitical conflict is accelerating the push for greater energy independence and security. Against this backdrop, we see a substantial and growing need to modernize and expand critical energy infrastructure and services, and TPG is playing a leading role in meeting these significant long-term capital requirements. In the first quarter, Rise Climate announced the acquisition of Sabre Industries, a leading infrastructure for power utilities, data centers and telecom. Sabre's mission-critical solutions are needed to support the modernization and reliability of Americas electrical grid and to meet the increasing demands of large-scale data center development. Turning to real estate. We had an active deployment quarter across our strategies with $1.8 billion invested. TPG Real Estate closed 6 investments in the quarter, including a high-quality senior housing portfolio as well as a scaled grocery-anchored retail platform. Both are in needs-based sectors benefiting from recession resiliency, and limited supply growth. Additionally, in Asia, we continue to capitalize on differentiated supply-demand dynamics and demographic shifts. We recently acquired a number of office assets in Japan where office fundamentals remain strong with low vacancy rates. We also initiated a multifamily development project in Seoul, and South Korea's rental housing market is undergoing a structural transformation driven by smaller households and rising homeownership prices. Finally, we're off to a strong start for monetizations in 2026 with nearly $9 billion realized in the first quarter, which doubled year-over-year. This included the sales of One Oncology to Syncora and TPG Capital and Intersect's digital power business to Google and Rise climate. These 2 strategic exits were both achieved less than 4 years after our initial investment, generating highly attractive returns and demonstrating the power of TPG's corporate relationships and innovative deal structuring. Before I hand it over to Jack, I want to highlight our continued momentum in launching and scaling new businesses. Organic innovation remains a core tenet of our growth as we strategically expanded into areas where we believe we have a right to win. Over the past 3 years, we've raised approximately $13 billion of capital across our new and emerging strategies, and we expect to meaningfully scale that over time. To share a few highlights. First, in TPG Sports, we raised $1.1 billion for our inaugural fund through the end of April and recently announced our first investment to acquire Learfield, a leading media and technology company powering college athletics. Second, Advantage Direct Lending, our new core middle market direct lending strategy has deployed nearly $600 million of capital across 16 investments through April, and we continue to receive strong investor interest. And lastly, Tika, our growth, our Asia growth equity strategy has built a compelling portfolio across health care and technology, capitalizing on the opportunity set across Australia and Southeast Asia. We expect to complete our inaugural fundraise over the summer. The success of these strategies and other new initiatives is a testament to our long-standing partnership approach and identifying and building next-generation investment opportunities with our largest institutional clients. I'll now turn the call over to Jack walk through our financials.