AMG Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Record Flows and Earnings Accelerate Amid Volatility
Summary
AMG delivered record first-quarter results, driven by $22 billion in net client cash flows and 39% year-over-year growth in Adjusted EBITDA. The firm's diversified alternative strategy model, particularly in infrastructure, secondary solutions, and absolute return strategies, continues to attract institutional and wealth capital despite a volatile market backdrop. Management emphasized that these four key growth drivers are balanced, with no single trend dominating the firm's overall performance.
Capital allocation remains a central pillar of AMG's strategy, with the company repurchasing $186 million in shares during the quarter and projecting $500 million in buybacks for the full year. Management highlighted the company's strong balance sheet and $1 billion in annual after-tax cash flows, which will fuel both growth investments and shareholder returns. Looking ahead, AMG expects accelerating earnings growth, with economic earnings per share projected to grow over 30% in 2026, supported by its evolving business profile and disciplined capital deployment.
Key Takeaways
- Record Q1 2026 Adjusted EBITDA of $317 million, up 39% year-over-year, driven by strong fee-related earnings and margin expansion.
- Record net client cash flows of $22 billion in Q1, bringing 12-month net flows to $52 billion with a 7% organic growth rate.
- Assets under management hit a record $882 billion, supported by broad-based inflows across liquid alternatives and private markets.
- Four key growth drivers are balanced: infrastructure, secondary solutions, absolute return strategies, and tax-aware long-short strategies.
- Liquid alternatives generated $25 billion in net inflows, with institutional demand for absolute return strategies and wealth channel demand for tax-aware strategies leading growth.
- Private markets affiliates raised $4 billion in Q1, with Pantheon and infrastructure funds driving fundraising momentum.
- Equity strategies faced headwinds with $9 billion in net outflows, though long-only pockets like Artemis showed strength.
- Management repurchased $186 million in shares in Q1, bringing 12-month buybacks to over $700 million, reducing shares outstanding by 10%.
- Q2 2026 guidance projects Adjusted EBITDA of $290-$305 million, with economic EPS between $7.60 and $8.01, representing ~45% growth at the midpoint.
- Strong balance sheet and $1 billion in annual after-tax cash flows support $500 million in full-year share repurchases and continued growth investments.
Full Transcript
Operator: I’d now like to turn the call over to your host, Patricia Figueroa, Head of Investor Relations for AMG. Thank you. You may begin.
Patricia Figueroa, Head of Investor Relations, AMG: Good morning. Thank you for joining us today to discuss AMG’s results for the first quarter of 2026. Before we begin, I’d like to remind you that during this call, we may make a number of forward-looking statements which could differ from our actual results materially due to a number of factors, including those described in today’s earnings press release and our most recent Form 10-K and subsequent filings with the SEC. AMG assumes no obligation to update these statements. Also, please note that nothing on this call constitutes an offer of any products, investment vehicles, or services of any AMG affiliate. A replay of today’s call will be available on the investor relations section of our website, along with a copy of our earnings release and reconciliations for any non-GAAP financial measures, including any earnings guidance provided.
In addition, we have posted an updated investor presentation to our website and encourage investors to consult our site regularly for updated information. With us today to discuss the company’s results for the quarter are Jay C. Horgen, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Dava E. Ritchea, Chief Financial Officer. I’ll turn the call over to Jay.
Jay C. Horgen, President and Chief Executive Officer, AMG: Thanks, Patricia. Good morning, everyone. AMG reported record results for the first quarter, with Adjusted EBITDA of approximately $317 million and Economic earnings per share of $8.23, representing year-over-year growth of 39% and 58% respectively. Rising demand for liquid alternative strategies and ongoing strength in private markets fundraising generated record quarterly net client cash flows of more than $22 billion, bringing net flows over the last 12 months to $52 billion, an organic growth rate of 7% over the period. In the quarter, given our confidence in AMG’s business profile and growth prospects, we repurchased shares at an elevated pace, deploying approximately $186 million and bringing share buybacks over the past 12 months to more than $700 million, a reduction of 10% in our shares outstanding.
AMG generated these excellent first quarter results against a volatile market backdrop, highlighting the value of AMG’s differentiated model and the ongoing strength of our diverse business. As we have seen over AMG’s history, our business is resilient and well-positioned to navigate periods of uncertainty and dislocation. AMG’s highly diversified profile has once again demonstrated that resilience as we ended the first quarter in a position of even greater strength relative to the beginning of the year, with record assets under management and record fee-related EBITDA. We have continued to build on this momentum in April. With 40 affiliates managing a broad range of private markets, liquid alternatives, and differentiated long-only strategies, this is the type of environment where we expect AMG to not only weather a volatile environment well but outperform.
Given that we have strategically evolved towards alternative strategies over the last several years, a number of important secular trends are driving our organic growth story today. In private markets, where our affiliates manage $148 billion in assets, we see opportunities for growth across all 11 affiliates, with the strongest momentum coming in 2 areas, infrastructure and real estate, where our affiliates manage more than $60 billion, and secondary solutions, where our affiliates manage approximately $50 billion. We expect rising demand for infrastructure strategies as infrastructure investment has become a global imperative due to population growth, the need to modernize aging assets, and an evolving economy shaped by energy security, supply chain realignment, and the rapid growth of digital infrastructure, all against the backdrop of rising inflation.
We also expect ongoing demand for secondary solutions across private equity, infrastructure, and credit, given the role such strategies play in underlying portfolio management for both GPs and LPs to address liquidity, manage duration, and adjust exposures, attributes that are even more important in the environment today given monetization headwinds in private equity. Together, infrastructure and secondary solutions have generated substantial organic growth from both institutional and individual investors over the past 12 months. In liquid alternatives, where our affiliates manage more than $261 billion in assets, we are benefiting most from growth in 2 trends. Institutional demand for absolute return strategies and the growing focus on after-tax compounding in the wealth channel.
Absolute return strategies, which account for approximately $180 billion in assets, include multi-strategy, global macro, relative value fixed income, and trend following, and are designed to generate returns that have low or no correlation to broader markets. They provide AMG’s business with ballast relative to pro-cyclical strategies in private markets and differentiated equities, enhancing the stability of our earnings over time. For the same reasons, clients globally are increasingly attracted to these absolute return strategies, especially as the outlook for the macro environment has become more uncertain. As a result, we had a meaningful uptick in flows in the quarter, driven by institutional demand for absolute return strategies, with contributions from nearly all of our affiliates in liquid alternatives. We expect continued organic growth momentum in these strategies. In addition, within liquid alternatives, we are benefiting from significant client demand for tax-aware long-short strategies.
These strategies account for approximately $69 billion of our AUM in liquid alternative strategies, or about 8% of AMG’s business. While tax-loss harvesting has been a secular trend for decades, clients and advisors are increasingly attuned to the impact of their portfolio allocation decisions on compounding returns after tax. AMG has benefited from this underlying secular trend through ongoing organic growth, which has been significant over the past year. As I mentioned, these 4 growth areas, infrastructure, secondary solutions, absolute return strategies, and beta-sensitive long-short strategies, have driven organic growth in the quarter and over the past 12 months. Looking ahead, given the continued tailwinds in these areas and our affiliates’ excellent long-term track records, AMG is well-positioned for further growth. As demonstrated over the past 5 years, our business is strong, diversified, and dynamic.
Through our ability to shape AMG’s business profile and scale our earnings power by allocating our capital to investments in new and existing affiliates, we will further evolve our business towards areas of growth and return. Our unique approach and track record as a partner are continuing to resonate with the highest quality independent firms. We have had an active start to 2026 in this area. In January, we completed our investment in BBH Credit Partners, a leading taxable fixed income and credit franchise. In February, we announced a new partnership with HighBrook Investors, a private markets manager operating in the real estate sector. We also announced an incremental minority investment in Garda Capital Partners, an existing highly successful affiliate operating in liquid alternatives. Stepping back from the quarter and to take a longer term view of our business and our strategy.
Over the past five years, we have transformed AMG and evolved our business profile in a way that we believe will benefit shareholders for years to come. During this period, our business generated more than $5 billion in capital, all of which, through our disciplined capital allocation strategy, we have reallocated to both high conviction growth investments and meaningful return of capital to shareholders, demonstrating our commitment to long-term value creation. Together, these strategic actions have resulted in exceptional earnings growth, generating mid-teens compound annual growth rate and economic earnings per share over the past five years. This growth is accelerating. In 2025, economic earnings per share grew by more than 20%, and we expect that growth rate to increase to more than 30% this year. As we look ahead, our capital allocation decision-making will continue to be the most impactful element of our strategy.
We anticipate our business will generate significantly higher levels of capital cumulatively over the next five years, and we expect the impact of deploying it towards growth investments and capital return will further shape and diversify our business profile and fuel our earnings growth. With our unique partnership-centric, cash-generative, return-focused model, we will continue to press our advantages, executing the same proven strategy with the same level of discipline that brought us here. Today, AMG’s reputation, value proposition, and capital flexibility have never been stronger. A powerful combination for our firm and for our shareholders. With that, I’ll turn it over to Dava.
Dava E. Ritchea, Chief Financial Officer, AMG: Thank you, Jay, and good morning, everyone. AMG entered 2026 with significant momentum. Our first quarter results reinforced that strength, highlighted by record net inflows and significant year-over-year growth in Fee-Related Earnings, Adjusted EBITDA, and economic earnings per share. Our alternatives business continues to scale, underpinned by strong organic growth from existing affiliates and further enhanced by the addition of several new high-quality partnerships. These results underscore the strength and resilience of our model as a result of the ongoing execution of our strategy to evolve the business towards areas of secular growth while remaining disciplined in our capital allocation decision-making. Starting with our results for the first quarter, AMG’s AUM was $882 billion, the highest level in our history, driven by record positive net inflows for our alternative affiliates and the addition of AUM from new investments.
Our business reached this record AUM level despite market headwinds from broader macro events. Net client cash inflows of more than $22 billion marked our fourth consecutive quarter of positive and increasing net flows, driven by ongoing strength and alternatives. In liquid alternatives, our affiliates generated $25 billion in net inflows, marking another record quarter with most of our liquid alternative affiliates, including AQR, Capula, Garda, Systematica, and Winton, contributing to this strong result. Flows were broad-based. We had net inflows from wealth clients of $15 billion into long short tax-aware strategies, $6 billion in net inflows into absolute return strategies from institutional clients, and $4 billion of inflows into retail products across both beta sensitive and absolute return strategies. This is consistent with broader industry trends of rising allocations to these strategies as investors value the role they play in portfolios across market cycles.
As momentum continues to build across channels, we believe AMG’s diversified liquid alternative affiliates are well-positioned to continue to attract new flows over time. Our private market affiliates raised $4 billion in the quarter, primarily driven by Pantheon and secondary strategies, along with infrastructure fundraises at Ara, EIG, and Qualitas Energy. On the heels of a record fundraising year in 2025, we continue to see consistent demand given these affiliates’ specialized strategies, deep institutional relationships, and strong long-term track records. Importantly, with multiple private market affiliates contributing across vintages, products, and channels, AMG exhibits a more durable and consistent fundraising pattern, reflecting a structurally diversified model rather than reliance on any single fundraise, differentiating our private markets profile from that of others. To give further color on our private markets profile, we have a distinctive strategic position in the industry.
Nearly 90% of AUM managed by our affiliates in private markets is institutional, largely in drawdown style funds. These drawdown funds form the core offerings of our private market affiliates. Additionally, we have experienced growing demand for these strategies from wealth clients, and we are well-positioned with our differentiated product offerings and capital formation solutions for affiliates to access this long-term trend. Our affiliates’ private market strategies are well diversified across strategies, including secondaries, private equity, infrastructure, real estate, and private credit. Our private credit exposure is low, representing approximately 3% of AMG’s total assets today. Within private credit, we have limited traditional direct lending exposure given the sale of our stake in Comvest’s private credit business last year. More broadly, the credit exposure we have is more opportunistic in nature, including secondaries in private credit and structured credit and relative value in liquid alternatives.
We believe the current credit market environment is creating compelling long-term opportunities for these strategies. In multi-asset and fixed income, our affiliates generated net inflows of $3 billion, mainly driven by BBH Credit Partners, with additional contributions from Baker Street, Artemis, Beutel Goodman, and GW&K. Finally, in equities, net outflows of approximately $9 billion in the quarter reflected ongoing industry and performance headwinds. However, we continue to see pockets of strength in our differentiated long-only business, including consistent positive net flows at Artemis based on its excellent long-term track record of investment performance. In aggregate, our first quarter flows highlight the structural advantages of AMG’s diversified business model. With a broad group of affiliates spanning strategies, asset classes, geographies, and client channels, we were able to navigate shifting market conditions and trends while continuing to capture growth opportunities.
As we further evolve our mix towards higher growth alternatives, the resulting incremental diversification enhances the resilience of our cash flows and positions AMG to deliver more consistent, sustainable organic growth across market cycles. Turning to first quarter financial results. We reported Adjusted EBITDA of $317 million, which grew 39% year-over-year. Fee-Related Earnings, which exclude Net Performance Fees, grew 29% year-over-year, driven by positive organic growth, the positive impact of investment performance, and margin expansion at some of our largest affiliates. Net Performance Fee earnings of $49 million in the quarter increased $29 million from the prior year, driven by Capula, Winton, AQR and ValueAct. Economic earnings per share of $8.23 grew 58% year-over-year, driven by these factors and further benefiting from the impact of share repurchases. Moving to second quarter guidance.
We expect Adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $290 million-$305 million based on current AUM levels reflecting our market blend, which was up 5% quarter to date as of April 30th. Including seasonably lower Net Performance Fees of up to $10 million. Based on this, and assuming an adjusted weighted average share count of 26.7 million, we expect second quarter Economic earnings per share to be between $7.60 and $8.01. The midpoint of which represents approximately 45% growth versus Q2 2025. Finally, turning to the balance sheet and capital allocation. Building on an active 2025, we continue to execute our capital allocation strategy in the first quarter of 2026.
With the January close of our partnership with BBH Credit Partners and the February announcement of our new investment in HighBrook and follow-on investment in Garda. In January, conversions related to our 2037 junior convertible trust preferred securities were fully settled in cash. The $174 million in conversion premium effectively represented the repurchase of 600,000 adjusted diluted shares, and the share dilution associated with these securities has now been fully removed from our capital structure. We repurchased approximately $186 million in shares in the first quarter. For the full year, we expect to repurchase approximately $500 million, subject to market conditions and capital allocation activity. Our balance sheet remains in a strong position given our long-dated debt, low leverage level, and access to our revolver.
This is further supported by a healthy underlying business generating recurring annual cash flows that continue to grow. These after-tax cash flows are at record levels, delivering approximately $1 billion annually. With these factors, we are well-positioned to execute our growth strategy across all stages of a market cycle. We have ample capacity to both make growth investments and simultaneously return capital to shareholders. Our strong first quarter results reflect the accelerating momentum in our business and the advantages of our highly diversified affiliate model. Looking ahead, we are excited by the breadth of opportunities in front of us as we continue to evolve our business towards higher growth alternatives. We will remain deliberate and disciplined in deploying capital, investing in growth opportunities with new and existing affiliates, while also consistently returning capital to shareholders. We are confident in our ability to generate meaningful incremental value over time.
We are happy to take your questions.
Operator: Our first question comes from the line of Bill Katz with TD Cowen. Please proceed with your question.
Bill Katz, Analyst, TD Cowen: Okay. Thank you. Good morning, everybody. Appreciate the update. Jay, maybe, just pick up at some of your commentary. I think the investment community in the last few weeks has gotten myopically focused on AQR, just given some of the headlines coming out of Schwab, the short interest, et cetera. It all seems to be noise to us. It sounds like there’s a lot of diversification from your comments today, which we appreciate the expanded discussion. Can you dig in a little bit further into maybe these 4 verticals of opportunity for growth? I was intrigued by your comments of April off to a good start as well. Maybe expand on that as well. Thank you.
Dava E. Ritchea, Chief Financial Officer, AMG: Great. Thanks for your question, Bill. Good morning to you. I’ll start. Dava can help. We’re gonna talk about our flows and then maybe I’ll circle back on AQR. Yes, the answer is our flows were broad-based, and they were along the lines of the four trends that I mentioned in our prepared remarks. Just to dimensionalize it, in the quarter, we had $29 billion in alternative flows. That was a record for us. Over the past year, we generated $90 billion in flows into alternatives. I know there’s a temptation, there always has been, to focus on one affiliate or one element of AMG, but AMG is truly a diverse business.
Jay C. Horgen, President and Chief Executive Officer, AMG: These 4 growth drivers that I mentioned, infrastructure, secondary solutions, absolute return, and tax-aware strategies, they’re all powering the strong organic growth story and the $90 billion of flows into alternatives. Our flows were balanced across each of these 4 areas over the quarter and over the year, with none accounting for a majority. Maybe I’ll turn it to Dava just to drill down a little bit further, contextualize some of this, and then I’ll come back and address, maybe some of the noise. Thanks, Jay. Just digging in a little bit further here. Our flow profile is really an output of our strategy. It aligns our business with areas of secular client demand trends and alternatives, and it continues to evolve our mix through organic growth and new investments. I’ll double-click into each of private markets and then liquid alts.
Dava E. Ritchea, Chief Financial Officer, AMG: Starting with private markets. Our private market affiliates raise capital through multiple strategies, vehicles, and channels, which help produce a more consistent fundraising profile than a single flagship-led model. That consistency is supported by durable client demand trends, most notably in infrastructure and real assets, secondaries and specialized allocations such as decarbonization and healthcare. Our private market flows have been relatively consistent over the past 8 quarters, exhibiting about 18% annualized growth on average. As 1 of our largest and longest-standing affiliates, Pantheon has been a consistent driver of that fundraising, supported by a scaled multi-product platform, particularly in secondaries. It’s been recurring demand across vintages, and it’s had meaningful contributions from institutional clients as well as within the wealth channel.
Alongside of that, many of our other private market affiliates are more specialized and tend to raise capital through more targeted fundraisers across their focus areas. Given we have 11 of these private market affiliates, we’re less reliant on any single affiliate’s capital-raising calendar. This tends to produce a more consistent, durable overall private markets flow profile. Based on what we’re seeing today, fundraising and client demand are expected to remain robust, with multiple funds coming to market across our private market affiliate strategies, including all the affiliates we just recently partnered with over the past 15 months. Turning over to liquid alternatives. We had $25 billion of flows this quarter. Flows this quarter were broad-based across both beta sensitive and absolute return strategies. Broad-based across investor channels with institutional wealth and retail flows all coming through.
This is consistent with broader industry trends as investors are increasing allocations to these strategies as they’ve demonstrated a real role that they can play across market cycles. These allocations have been flowing to the largest managers. Here we’re well-positioned with several of our affiliates like AQR, Garda, Capula, and Verition. Finally, it’s worth mentioning that we’ve been experiencing positive mix shift over the past year as well, leading to an increase in our management fee rate and margin expansion at some of our largest affiliates, which has had a direct benefit to our EBITDA. By contrast, though, we have continued to see some headwinds alongside of overall industry and equities. We reported about $9 billion in net outflows from equities this quarter, in line with average levels over the last 12 months.
When taken together with $3 billion in net inflows in multi-asset and fixed income, we’re seeing an improvement in our differentiated long-only net flows. Across these affiliates, we see pockets of strength, including at Artemis, where strong performance has led to positive net flows, and at BBH Credit Partners, where we see ongoing demand for fixed income strategies.
Jay C. Horgen, President and Chief Executive Officer, AMG: Yeah. Great. Thanks, Dava. I’m just going to comment on one thing here, which is in addition to the strong alternative flows. As we look out for the next 12 months, we actually think that our long-only outflows seem to be getting better. Our flow story just all around for the moment is positive relative to what it’s been in the past. We had $52 billion of net flows for the last 12 months, and that trend seems to be getting better as we look forward. I’m going to take the second part of your question and just address AQR for a moment.
Maybe I’ll just start with a bit of a fun statement, which is, you know, over the past 15 years, I’ve answered a lot of questions on AQR, mostly on these earnings calls. Virtually every time I answer the question, I start, and I’ll end as well with 1 observation. AQR is an incredibly innovative business. Their success is rooted in its decade-long reputation and history of this innovation. They deliver strategies and products that meet clients’ objectives, that can be used in portfolio construction and that can produce alpha. AQR’s reputation and its long-term investment track record across its broad range of strategies today, including absolute return, beta sensitive, long only. It’s driving demand across all of its client types, institutional, wealth, retail. The firm’s primary goal is to deliver institutional caliber pre-tax alpha to all investors.
For individuals, AQR has a focus on compounding after-tax returns. This is a very large addressable market. It has been around for a long time, and AQR is just one of the participants in the market. We continue to see strong demand for these strategies, including in the second quarter. We are not aware of anything that changes our positive outlook for the firm or their strategies and underlying trends supporting its ongoing business momentum. These tax aware strategies, however, they only speak to one aspect of AQR’s broad platform and its continued innovation. The firm has generated inflows across a range of strategies, including in this quarter. We also are very excited about their absolute return strategies and the prospect for additional flows into these strategies, which have excellent performance and are gaining interest from all types of clients, including institutions.
I’d like to take it back to the AMG level. Long-short strategy and wealth account for just 8% of our assets under management. As I mentioned, our affiliates generated $90 billion in flows into alternatives. A minority of those flows came from tax-aware strategies. AMG is highly diverse, this one trend is just one of the four major drivers of our growth. Again, these four trends being infrastructure, credit secondaries, absolute return strategies, and tax-aware strategies. Again, all four are driving our growth, none are accounting for a majority. The last question you asked me is April. Interestingly, during the first quarter, we had, as others did, we had to face, you know, reasonably significant volatility in the market, beta was down in the quarter.
AMG had record AUM and record cash flow and record earnings in the quarter. In April, we’ve seen strong beta, and because of the balance in our business, our assets are at another all-time high. Thanks, Bill. I appreciate the question.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Blostein with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.
Alex Blostein, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Hi. Good morning. Thank you. Thank you guys for the question as well, and appreciate all the detail and extra discussion on the flow backdrop. Wanted to double-click into the wealth channel. You guys had quite a lot of success with Pantheon’s retail product focused on secondaries and co-invest markets. How is the appetite for these kind of products in the channel today, given the turbulence we’re seeing in the credit part of the business? Obviously, that’s not part of your model, but just curious if you’re seeing any spillover effects of that into other parts of the wealth channel. Maybe as part of that hit on the roadmap of additional products you’re likely to launch in the coming 12 to 18 months as we think about further diversifying your flow base.
Jay C. Horgen, President and Chief Executive Officer, AMG: Yeah. Great. Thanks, Alex. Good morning to you. I think that’s an excellent question. We’ll take it in a few different pieces. We’ll talk about the wealth products, and then I’ll circle back. I’ll let Dava do that then. I’ll have Dava do that, and then I’ll come back and do Pantheon more broadly and then other products that we’re looking at introducing.
Dava E. Ritchea, Chief Financial Officer, AMG: Great. Thanks for the question, Alex. We remain constructive on the secular trend. While we’re monitoring the broader industry dynamics, wealth investors and advisors continue to broaden portfolios beyond traditional allocations, evergreen structures are an increasingly important way to access institutional quality alternatives in a more flexible wrapper. AMG’s focus on delivering the right strategies in the right structure, meeting clients where they are on liquidity preference, access, and portfolio needs. We believe AMG is differentiated in this channel, providing investors access to independent affiliates and their breadth of offerings across private markets and alternative credit. We see the most compelling opportunities today in differentiated strategies led by credit secondaries. Liquidity needs, duration management, and slower exits are driving greater secondary activity, while market noise and headline risks are creating pricing dislocations that can offer seasoned assets at attractive valuations.
We also see opportunity in asset-backed credit solutions, where structural protections and collateral quality support capital preservation. Ultimately, the key to long-term success is education and setting expectations while staying disciplined. Education remains a critical enabler of growth for evergreen private market solutions. While these vehicles expand access, their structural features differ meaningfully from traditional private market funds and require deeper understanding. We are committed to providing scalable education that equips advisors to understand these mechanics, assess suitability, and thoughtfully integrate evergreen solutions to support clients’ long-term investment objectives. We believe these products can be a compelling option for wealth clients seeking diversified access to alternatives over a long time horizon. Let me walk you through the main products that we have here on the platform. First, P-BUILD.
This is the AMG Pantheon Infrastructure Fund, which we launched last year, and it is still in its seed phase. The portfolio is ramping nicely, and we expect it will benefit from the rising demand for infrastructure strategies as infrastructure investment has become a global imperative. P-BUILD is uniquely positioned to combine the benefits of infrastructure investments, including the potential for capital appreciation, yields, lower volatility, and portfolio diversification, with the added advantages of secondaries, which can offer greater risk mitigation, shorter investment durations, and more immediate distributions compared to traditional infrastructure investments. The next one is P-SECC, the AMG Pantheon Credit Solutions Fund, and it is still relatively new, launched within the last 2 years. The fund’s investment approach is first of its kind, focused on private credit secondaries. Since inception, it has been among the top performers in its peer set.
Given broader market dynamics, we believe the current environment creates a compelling investment opportunity for the fund. While near-term growth may be more muted due to traditional direct lending trends, we believe this is a compelling long-term product for investors and differentiated from peer offerings. In these environments, pricing dislocations and motivated sellers can allow access to high-quality, seasoned investment opportunities at potentially attractive valuations. This dynamic enables selective capital deployment with a margin of safety, positioning the fund to benefit from both income generation and potential capital appreciation as markets stabilize. For P-SECC, periods of increased volatility can create particularly attractive entry points for disciplined secondary credit investing. This growing opportunity set underscores the increasing role credit secondaries are playing in managing liquidity and portfolio exposures in a market characterized by heightened demand for capital flexibility.
Finally, P-PEXX, the AMG Pantheon Fund, which has a long operating history since its launch in 2014, with a strong long-term track record of delivering private equity exposure through cycles. Notably, it has a compelling fee structure versus market comparables with a lower management fee, and it does not charge performance fees. It provides a single allocation, globally diversified portfolio across co-investments, secondaries, and primaries. Diversified by manager, vintage, geography, and sector, which we view as more sustainable for building long-term compounding of returns. We remain constructive on its outlook, including ongoing progress in expanding its reach to new wealth platforms and intermediaries. Overall, these three products represent a small but growing proportion of Pantheon, and when put into context of AMG, represent less than 1% of AUM today.
We are confident in the long-term secular trend and the underlying fundamentals of each of these products, but mindful of the impact of current market dynamics in the evergreen space on near-term growth expectations. We continue to focus resources on partnering with affiliates in the U.S. wealth space through robust product development and access to our broad capital formation resources with several products, including the newly registered AMG BBH Asset-Backed Credit Fund in development. This fund is expected to be launched into a compelling credit market environment for its opportunistic structure and alternative credit approach.
Jay C. Horgen, President and Chief Executive Officer, AMG: Yeah. Alex, Dava covered it, covered the landscape, but I think what I would maybe contextualize, maybe even just give some perspective is, you know, look, the market has had been painting everything with a single brush. This is actually an opportunity to differentiate. You know, I think we see opportunities here because we think our products are unique, differentiated, certainly, on the semi-liquid side. Education, as Dava said, is key. People have to understand what they own. There’s suitability questions. What we like about our products is that they’re opportunistic in nature. I’ll take the AMG Pantheon Credit Solutions Fund. It actually has an opportunity to take advantage of what’s happening in the market, and that’s the same with the newly registered AMG BBH Asset-Backed Credit Fund.
It’s got it in its name. I think we’re having, you know. In some ways, we might come out better through this period as people sort through what products really are differentiated and what products, you know, people want to own. We’re long-term constructive. As Dava said, there is a bit of sorting we’re gonna go through here. On, you know, as we come out of it, we have an expectation that we’re gonna be on our front foot. Maybe just on our wealth strategy more broadly, it is clearly important to us. We collaborate with our affiliates. We offer strategic capabilities to new and existing affiliates. It’s part of our brand.
It’s part of our reputation, the ability to engage with our affiliates and help them meet their goals, exceed their goals, and get them into this channel. It’s very difficult to get into this channel. It’s an area where you need scale. AMG offers our affiliates that scale. We also offer them the ability to package the products and bring them to the market. It’s a, it’s a growth area for us long term. I think we made it through this period reasonably well, I think partly because we were methodical and careful. Obviously, you know, we have good fortune on our side too. We’re not, you know.
I think we’re just trying to do the very best that we can here, and we do think this is a good long-term opportunity.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Dan Fannon with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.
Dan Fannon, Analyst, Jefferies: Thanks. Good morning. Jay, wanted to just talk about the environment for new investment. You guys have obviously been quite active over the last 12 months. Given some of the dislocations we’re seeing, in certainly the private credit markets or broadly within some of the equity markets, is that creating more of an opportunity for you to deploy capital in this environment or any changes kind of in the backdrop as you think about the new investment pipeline?
Jay C. Horgen, President and Chief Executive Officer, AMG: Yeah. Great, Dan. Thank you, and good morning. I apologize it’s so early for you on the West Coast. Look, we did have a very active period, the last 18 months, been one of our more active periods of new investments. It’s one of the benefits that we have. It’s contributing to our earnings this year and our growth rate this year. We’re very excited about the businesses that we invested in over this period. Largely speaking in alternatives with a focus on private markets, but more specialty businesses. Coming off of an active period, really even into this first quarter, because we were just closing on HighBrook, the second investment in Garda and BBH.
You know, when we look at the rest of this year, you know, one of the things that we note is that public market valuations for alternatives are way down. It takes a little while to have that trickle into the M&A market, but I think we have an expectation that it will. We’re mindful that some of the key competitors in that market are the ones who have lower valuations today, so maybe they’re not offering their stock. Competition just, you know, may have gotten better for AMG. As you know, we’ve been an active participant, maybe I would say the most active participant, for independent firms over the past 30 years. We are open for business.
We like to partner with outstanding, independent firms and, you know, maybe the competitive environment and pricing has gotten better for us as we look forward. We’re excited about that. Thanks for your question.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ryan Riddell with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.
Ryan Riddell, Analyst, Deutsche Bank: Great, thanks. Good morning, folks. Thanks for the question. Good to see the really strong flows across the franchise and diversified contribution as well. We of course, are getting more questions on the tax-aware strategies. I just wanna zone in on that a little bit. Just your view maybe of obviously really strong growth in 1Q. Maybe if you could talk a little about the contribution in 1Q from tax aware. I think you mentioned it’s 8% of AUM. Just was curious if there’s a way to frame, like, what percentage of EBITDA that is or, I think last time you spoke about AQR as a percentage of EBITDA was about 20%. I don’t know if there’s updated comments on that.
As this is getting added to more platforms, given really strong retail demand, if you can talk about the pipeline of doing that, because I know, of course, you know, Fidelity had constrained it, and I think Schwab had put some guardrails around it. Of course, they’re continuing to sell it. They just have some, you know, constraints around it. Just some comments around the growth outlook for that product as it pertains to adding it to more, you know, wirehouse and brokerage and private bank platforms.
Jay C. Horgen, President and Chief Executive Officer, AMG: Okay. Yeah, thanks. Thanks, Ryan. Well, I’m not gonna go back through my conversation, my response on AQR specifically, but I will maybe just broaden it and talk about the environment for these products. I’m sure I’ll weave in a few of those data points that you’re looking for. Tax-aware businesses and tax loss harvesting, it’s been around since, as far as I can tell, since 1993. Just for everyone who may think this is a new business, it’s a 3-decade-old business. I think what’s happened in the market is that advisors realize that investors, individual investors, they pay tax. Institutional investors, they don’t pay tax. When you think about your portfolio, you just have to think about it in general on an after-tax basis.
It might change what where you allocate your capital. It might change the type of asset or the type of strategy you allocate to. I think everyone should be aware the fact that taxes interrupt compounding. If you’re aware of that fact, then you need to at least consider it when you know, decide that you’re going to create, you know, a portfolio. These products that have been around many people, many big firms, that you all cover, have these products. AQR is just one participant in the market. Just wanna make sure that everyone understands that. Then the other thing I would just say is we gave you the number on an AUM basis, which is less than 8%. I rounded up.
It actually has contributed to less than 8% of our EBITDA last year in the first quarter. It just isn’t that big. It has grown significantly. It has been less than a majority of our flow. Just like I said in my prepared remarks and then in the answer to the last question, the 4 major trends that are driving our business, they’re balanced. Over that $90 billion of inflows that we had, no one of those trends made up a majority. Even in the most recent quarter, $29 billion, the same statement holds. Very balanced.
I don’t wanna go through that all again. We feel pretty good about that trend as well as the other 3 trends in our business. I think in terms of sizing, it’s important, but it’s not the major factor. When you zoom way out at AMG, and I think this is probably the most important thing that I haven’t said yet, is we have record cash flow. Our business AUM is at all-time high. We had record EBITDA in the quarter. As Dava said, our EBITDA guidance that we gave you at the midpoint would be up, or at least it would be up with significant growth and on a cash earnings per share would be up 45% at the midpoint.
With that record cash flow, if you think about that, annualized out at over $1 billion a year, it is that cash flow that we have to reinvest. As we reinvest, we diversify the business. We add new sources of earnings. Our business grows because of it. If you’re thinking about AMG today, you need to think about what AMG is gonna look like in 12 months, you know, and then 3 years and then in 5 years, because we generated $5 billion of cash flow over the last 5 years. We’re expected to generate much more than $5 billion over the next 5 years. The biggest impact to our business is what we do with those cash flows. I think you know this, we have a very disciplined capital allocation philosophy.
As we continue to invest in growth areas and return capital through share repurchases, this record level of free cash flow is going to shape AMG. We are looking forward to doing that. When you think about where we are today at these record levels, our shares are trading at less than 10 times after-tax earnings on a backward-looking basis, not a forward, but a backward-looking basis, and less than 8 times EBITDA on a backward-looking basis. It is an excellent opportunity for us to continue to buy back at an elevated pace. We’re excited about our capital opportunity. Dava mentioned in her script that we look forward to estimated share repurchases this year of $500 million. That’s not all the capital that we have.
If you think about the numbers I just gave you, $1 billion of after-tax earnings, $500 million’s only half of that. With a little bit of leverage, ’cause we like to lever it up to 2 times, and right now we’re under-leveraged at that point, we can do more than $1 billion. In the next 12 months, more than $1 billion of capital will be the single biggest impact on our business for 2027 and 2028 and beyond. Thanks, Ryan.
Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our question-and-answer session and will conclude our call today. We thank you for your interest and participation. You may now disconnect your lines.