BLACKSTONE posted an increase in third-quarter profit as its credit arm was boosted by an influx of investor cash and became its biggest business by assets.
Distributable earnings climbed 5.5 per cent to US$1.28 billion from a year earlier, buoyed by its lending arm, according to a statement on Thursday (Oct 17). That profit measure amounted to US$1.01 a share, beating the 91-cent average estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.
The credit and insurance arm took in US$21.4 billion of flows during the three months ended Sep 30, accounting for more than half of what Blackstone collected from all of its businesses during the period.
Credit assets comprised US$354.7 billion of Blackstone’s US$1.1 trillion of assets at the end of the quarter, edging out real estate as the biggest unit. The firm also decided to categorise a portion of the real estate lending business under credit.
The credit arm’s strong showing helped the firm overcome subdued performance in private equity and real estate.
“We like having a diversified business,” president Jon Gray said in an interview.
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The rise of credit underscores a push by the biggest alternative-asset managers to become financial superstores. The transformation has made them look more like banks and provided some relief during a challenging stretch for their private equity businesses.
Lofty prices
Buyout rainmakers have been tiptoeing back to the deal table, but many have struggled to sell at the lofty prices they anticipated.
At Blackstone, realisations remained muted in key business lines during the third quarter, as the firm had signalled last month. Distributable earnings fell 11 per cent in private equity and 3 per cent in real estate.
A property slump and high costs of debt continued to weigh on the real estate sector. But redemptions slowed during the third quarter for the firm’s marquee Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust, down substantially from their peak, while investments into the fund have ticked up since Oct 1.
“If current trends hold, we’re moving towards positive net flows in BREIT,” Gray said.
Wall Street is becoming more comfortable doing deals, he added.
“People are now having more confidence about the economic outlook and strength in equity markets,” Gray said. “It feels like the deal market is at an inflection point.”
Blackstone reached the US$250 billion milestone for assets managed for individuals and bank channels. Corporate private equity and infrastructure posted the highest gains in the period, helping the firm to notch the highest fund appreciation in three years. BLOOMBERG