Artisan Partners Asset Management (APAM) delivered solid QQ2 2024 results, with revenue of $270.8 million, net income of $57.6 million, and diluted EPS of $0.80. Year-over-year revenue rose 11.5%, while QoQ growth was a modest 2.5%, reflecting the typical seasonality in the second quarter and ongoing mix shifts toward higher-fee or alternative strategies. End-of-quarter AUM stood at $159 billion, up 11% versus a year ago but down slightly versus the prior quarter as net outflows totaled $1.6 billion. Importantly, growth was anchored by notable inflows into higher-value franchises: Sustainable Emerging Markets (+$800 million in June) and Emerging Markets Debt Opportunities (+$860 million in July), underscoring management’s emphasis on talent-driven, alternatives-oriented growth and longer-duration capability.
Management emphasizes a measured expansion into Alternatives and Emerging Markets, supported by a durable balance sheet, strong cash generation, and a disciplined capital deployment plan (dividends and seed capital redeployment). Adjusted operating income rose 7% sequentially and 13% year-over-year, with adjusted net income per share up 8% QoQ and 15% YoY. The company maintains a recurring fee rate of 69 basis points, with expectations that alt-franchises can sustain mid-to-low-100 basis point fee levels given risk-adjusted alpha. While near-term net outflows in growth/value strategies present a hurdle, the firm’s EM and Sustainable Emerging Markets platforms and its expanding Alternatives distribution are positioned to deliver medium-term upside as allocator demand stabilizes and re-focuses on active, high-conviction strategies. The dividend remains established at $0.71 per share for the June quarter, reflecting a policy of returning a substantial portion of cash generation to shareholders.
Overall, APAM exhibits a favorable risk-reward profile: steady cash flow, moderate leverage, a diversified revenue base anchored in recurring management fees, and a clear strategic path toward scale in Alternatives and Emerging Markets. The principal near-term risk remains asset outflows in traditional Active mandates and potential fee competition, but the EM/Alt development trajectory and strong balance sheet provide a solid foundation for earnings growth and multiple expansion over the medium term.