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Apollo Assets Hit $1Tn as Fee Earnings Touch Record High

May 6 (Reuters) - Apollo Global Management's assets under management surpassed the $1 trillion mark, driving its earnings from fees for the first quarter to record levels, ​the company said on Wednesday.

Adjusted net income rose 8% to $1.21 billion, or $1.94 ‌per share, from the same period a year earlier, boosted by a 30% increase in earnings derived from managing assets and arranging debt and equity transactions.

New York-based Apollo initially focused on private ​equity when it was founded in 1990, but branched out to become a ​major lender. It beefed up its insurance business in 2021 after taking control of retirement ⁠services company Athene.

Assets under management passed the $1 trillion target that CEO Marc Rowan had ​set for this year. The company's next goal is $1.5 trillion by 2029.

Shares of the ​company were up about 1.3% in trading before the bell.

Apollo and its fellow managers of alternative assets - which include private equity, private credit and real estate - have been facing investor pressure for months ​over fears about slower future growth and standards applied in direct lending. Many have ​nonetheless continued to post inflows.

Apollo shares have bounced back from the lows hit in early March ‌and ⁠are currently down 10% for the year.

Inflows totalled $115 billion in the quarter, partly driven by the acquisition of UK insurer Pensions Insurance Corporation (PIC) through Athora, a European group Apollo created. Wealthy retail investors pitched in $4 billion.

Apollo booked a net loss attributable to common ​shareholders of $1.9 billion under ​generally accepted accounting ⁠principles (GAAP). This was mainly due to $2.1 billion of unrealized losses on investments in the retirement business.

Returns from its direct lending funds, ​a part of private credit that has come under intense scrutiny ​in recent ⁠months, were 0.5% in the first quarter, compared with 8.5% over the last 12 months.

Smaller peers Blue Owl and KKR have also reported negative performances in that business over that period.

Apollo's asset-backed finance and ⁠flagship private ​equity funds posted losses of 1% and 0.3%, ​respectively. Hybrid value, which Rowan has singled out as a growth driver, returned 4%.

Reporting ​by Isla Binnie in New York and Prakhar Srivastava in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D'Silva

Source: Reuters


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