KKR profit beats forecasts as deals speed up, assets grow

 KKR (KKR.N), opens new tab raked in higher fees from managing a growing pile of ​assets and made more money from deals, pushing its first-quarter earnings ‌ahead of Wall Street expectations on Tuesday. Shares of the company rose about 1% in trading before the bell.

Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here. The New York-based group raised $28 billion of fresh capital, driven by flows ​into the credit business which is the biggest segment of its $758 ​billion under management.

KKR and its peers have had a bumpy ⁠ride on the stock market over the past year as investors fretted ​about their future growth, artificial intelligence disrupting their portfolio companies and lending standards ​in private credit. War in the Middle East then rattled markets and cast a pall over forecasts of brisk dealmaking. "Against a volatile backdrop, monetization activity accelerated, and over the past ​12 months we've invested more capital on behalf of our clients than ​at any point in our history," co-CEOs Joseph Bae and Scott Nuttall said.

Fees from managing ‌money ⁠for clients, which it earns regardless of how investments perform, jumped 30%, to $1.2 billion. Overall adjusted net income hit $1.2 billion, which translated to $1.39 per share.

Analysts were expecting a profit of $1.29 per share, according to estimates compiled by LSEG. Gross ​returns from its private ​equity and ⁠credit funds slowed. The traditional private equity portfolio returned 1% in the first quarter, compared with 10% across the ​past twelve months. Its debt funds dipped into negative territory, with ​composites for ⁠both its leveraged credit and private credit strategies returning -1% versus 5% and 4% respectively in the last twelve months.  

Related Posts
Commnets
or

For faster login or register use your social account.

Connect with Facebook