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Date

Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026 at 11 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • President and Chief Executive Officer — Kelly Ann Young
  • Chief Financial Officer — Scott Hynes
  • Director of Investor Relations — Melody Huang

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Takeaways

  • Assets Under Management (AUM) -- Reached a record $177.5 billion as of Dec. 31, 2025, representing a 52% increase from the prior year.
  • Net Client Cash Flows -- Achieved $5.4 billion of positive net client cash flows for the quarter, which is 3% of beginning period AUM, and a record $29.4 billion for the full year.
  • US GAAP Net Income -- Decreased 18% for the quarter and 6% for the year due to higher non-cash expenses associated with Acadian LLC equity valuation changes.
  • GAAP EPS -- Declined 14% for the quarter and 0.5% for the year, driven by the same non-cash factors.
  • ENI Diluted EPS -- Set a quarterly record of $1.32, up 2%, and annual record of $3.25, up 18%, supported by share repurchases and higher ENI.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- Increased 1% for the quarter and 9% for the year, with growth attributed to higher recurring management fees.
  • Management Fees -- Generated $146 million in quarterly management fees, a 32% increase, with an 8% or higher quarter-on-quarter growth rate sustained for three consecutive quarters.
  • Total ENI Revenue -- Rose to $170 million for the quarter, up 2%, primarily from base management fee growth offset by lower performance fees.
  • ENI Operating Margin -- Expanded to 45.7% from 42.3% one year earlier, with the Q4 2025 operating expense ratio improving to 40.9%, down 10 percentage points.
  • Variable Compensation -- Decreased 18% for the quarter, and the variable compensation ratio fell to 29.4% from 35.7% in the prior year quarter, with the full-year ratio at 39.4%.
  • Leverage -- Gross leverage reduced to 1 times, down from 1.5 times at prior year-end, following refinancing of senior notes and repayment of $75 million in debt; net leverage at 0.5 times.
  • Share Repurchases -- Bought back 1.8 million shares in 2025 (5% reduction), totaling $48 million; outstanding diluted shares fell to 35.8 million from 86 million in Q4 2019; buybacks paused in Q4 2025 to prioritize deleveraging.
  • Dividend -- Interim dividend increased to 10¢ per share from $0, with payment scheduled for Mar. 20, 2026.
  • Investment Performance -- 100% of assets in five major implementations outperformed benchmarks over three, five, and ten-year periods; revenue-weighted five-year annualized return above benchmark was 4.7%, and asset-weighted was 3.8%.
  • Strategy Flow Composition -- Net flows in the quarter and year were diverse across strategies and geographies, with enhanced extensions and emerging markets equities driving a significant share.

Summary

Acadian Asset Management (AAMI 9.71%) reported record AUM and management fees, highlighting successful organic and market-driven growth within a diversified product base. The company posted an all-time high in annual ENI diluted EPS, demonstrating operational leverage and effective capital return. Despite a decrease in US GAAP net income and EPS due to higher non-cash expenses, the underlying business produced strong free cash flow, enabling strategic deleveraging and the resumption of enhanced dividends. Elevated net flows were attributed to balanced contributions from both existing and emerging strategies, reflecting broad client demand without reliance on a single mandate or region.

  • Management explicitly stated intentions to prioritize active capital returns in 2026, with share repurchases set to resume following temporary Q4 2025 suspension for refinancing activities.
  • The pipeline remains "very strong" and "remarkably durable" across enhanced, extension, and emerging markets strategies, with confirmed interest from both North American and international clients.
  • Investment in systematic credit, technology infrastructure, and AI data initiatives is ongoing, with no planned material increase in fixed costs or a shift in capital allocation strategy.
  • The quarterly dividend hike was described as "a signal of confidence in the way the business is behaving and for that to be durable," supported by a strong recurring revenue foundation.

Industry glossary

  • ENI (Economic Net Income): Internal profitability metric reflecting operating performance, adjusted for certain non-cash or non-recurring GAAP items specific to asset managers.
  • Enhanced Extension: Quantitative investment strategies combining traditional beta exposure with additional long or short extensions, aiming for higher alpha at controlled risk.
  • Operating Leverage: The degree to which an increase in revenue leads to a proportionally larger increase in operating income, resulting from scalable cost structure.
  • Gross/Net Leverage: Measures of total or net debt relative to core financial metrics (e.g., EBITDA or equity), indicating risk and debt capacity.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Melody Huang: Good morning, and welcome to Acadian Asset Management Inc. Conference call to discuss our results for the fourth quarter ended December 31, 2025. Before we begin the presentation, please note that we may make forward-looking statements about our business and financial performance. Each forward-looking statement is subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected. Additional information regarding these risks and uncertainties appears in our SEC filings, including the Form 8-Ks filed today containing the earnings release, our 2024 Form 10-K, and our Form Thank you for 2025.

Any forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based on assumptions as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update them as of new information or future events. We may also reference certain non-GAAP financial measures. Information about any non-GAAP measures referenced, including the reconciliation of those measures to GAAP measures, can be found on our website, along with the slides that we will use as part of today's discussion. Finally, nothing herein shall be deemed to be an offer or solicitation to buy any investment product. Kelly Young, our President and Chief Executive Officer, will lead the call. And now I'm pleased to turn the call over to Kelly.

Kelly Ann Young: Thanks, Melody. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. I'm delighted to share our Q4 2025 and full-year 2025 results with you. I'm pleased to highlight that we delivered breakthrough results across assets under management and profitability. We ended Q4 2025 on another high note. Our US GAAP net income attributable to controlling interest was down 18%, and EPS was down 14% compared to the year prior due to increased non-cash expenses, representing changes in the valuation of Acadian LLC equity and profit interest. Our ENI diluted EPS of $1.32 was up 2%, driven by share repurchases, the highest level of quarterly ENI EPS in the firm's history. Our adjusted EBITDA was up 1%.

We realized $5.4 billion of positive net client cash flows in Q4 2025, 3% of beginning period AUM, driven by enhanced extensions as well as emerging markets equity. And finally, AUM surged to $177.5 billion as of December 31, 2025, making another record high for Acadian.

Moving to slide three, full-year 2025 strong outperformance. Our US GAAP net income attributable to controlling interest was down 6%, and EPS down 0.5% compared to the prior year, driven by increased non-cash expenses representing changes in the value of Acadian LLC equity and profits interest. We will discuss the full-year ENI, EPS, and net flows on the following slide. Our adjusted EBITDA was up 9% compared to 2024, driven by significant growth in recurring management fees. Focusing on slide four, this slide captures the exceptional and historic year 2025 was for Acadian. We generated $29 billion in net client cash flows.

That organic growth combined with robust equity markets drove our AUM to an all-time high of nearly $178 billion as of December 31, 2025. At the same time, our 2025 ENI total revenue grew to nearly $549 million, up 9% from 2024. We also expanded our ENI margin more than two percentage points to 35.5% and reduced our gross leverage to one times as of year-end 2025, down from 1.5 times at year-end 2024. Finally, we delivered record annual 2025 ENI EPS of $3.25, up 18% year-over-year, supported by greater ENI earnings and the efficient return of capital to our shareholders in the form of share repurchases.

These milestones and financial results reflect our team's discipline and dedication in executing the organic growth plan we articulated when I assumed the CEO role in 2025. As we enter Acadian's fortieth year in business, I believe we are better positioned than ever. We remain focused on delivering solutions and generating alpha for our clients, as well as expanding targeted product and distribution initiatives that promise to deliver long-term growth and value for our shareholders.

Turning to Slide five, Acadian's investment performance track record remains strong despite a challenging 2025. We have five major implementations which comprise the majority of our assets. As of December 31, 2025, global equity, emerging markets equity, non-US equity, small-cap equity, and enhanced equity have 100% of assets outperforming benchmarks across three, five, and ten-year periods. Global equity markets delivered strong returns in Q4 2025 to close out 2025. However, crowding in lesser quality, high beta stocks created a more challenging environment for the fundamentally driven signals, such as quality, that drive Acadian's approach, particularly in the second half of the year.

Toward the end of the year, value and quality-oriented stocks performed better, a welcome change after their struggles in Q3. Our performance improved in Q4 2025. As we enter a new year, we remain confident in our disciplined, systematic approach and believe we are well-positioned as markets begin to refocus on company fundamentals.

Slide six details how our investment process has weathered various market cycles and generated meaningful long-term alpha for our clients. Our revenue-weighted five-year annualized return in excess of the benchmark was 4.7% as of the end of the quarter, on a consolidated firm-wide basis. Our asset-weighted five-year annualized return in excess of the benchmark was 3.8% as of the end of the quarter. By revenue weight, 95% of Acadian's strategies outperformed their respective benchmarks across three, five, and ten-year periods as of December 31, 2025. And by asset weight, 91% of Acadian strategies outperformed their respective benchmarks across three, five, and ten-year periods. The next slide highlights our sustained momentum in net flows.

We realized positive net flows of $5.4 billion in the fourth quarter, representing 3% of beginning period AUM. The quarter's net flows were again diverse across products and client types. Enhanced extension and emerging markets equities all generated strong net client cash flows. As I referenced earlier, for the full year of 2025, we generated net flows of $29 billion, and with positive flows of $2 billion in 2024, we have now generated eight consecutive quarters of positive net flows. Our current pipeline remains robust and active after the funding of a number of significant client wins in 2025, and we expect continued positive momentum in the year ahead.

I'm now going to turn the call over to our CFO, Scott Hynes, to provide you with more detail on our financial performance this quarter and an update on capital allocation.

Scott Hynes: Thanks, Kelly. Turning to slide nine, our key GAAP and ENI performance metrics are summarized here on both a quarterly and full-year basis. As previously noted, we manage the business using ENI metrics, which better reflect our underlying operating performance. You can find complete GAAP to ENI reconciliations in the appendix. Let me now turn to our core business results. Starting on slide 10, Q4 2025 management fees of $140 million increased 32% from Q4 2024, reflecting a 43% increase in average AUM, driven by strong positive net flows and market appreciation. Total ENI revenue of $170 million increased from Q4 2024 by 2%, primarily due to recurring base management fee growth partially offset by a decline in performance fees.

We have now delivered nearly 8% or higher quarter-on-quarter management fee growth for three consecutive quarters, and with fourth-quarter end-of-period AUM of $178 billion, we enter 2026 with a significantly stronger recurring revenue base. This stronger entry point enhances our confidence in our ability to deliver earnings, generate free cash flow, self-fund organic investments, and return capital to shareholders.

Moving to slide 11, Q4 2025 ENI operating expenses increased 5%, primarily driven by higher sales-based compensation, as well as general and administrative costs, including continued investments in IT and infrastructure. Our ENI operating margin expanded 338 basis points to 45.7%, from 42.3% in Q4 2024, driven by increased ENI management fees. While our Q4 2025 operating expense ratio fell 10 percentage points year-over-year to 40.9%, reflecting the impact of improved operating leverage. Q4 2025 variable compensation decreased 18% year-on-year, primarily driven by reduced performance fee-related compensation, as well as increased non-cash compensation. In sympathy, our Q4 2025 variable compensation ratio decreased to 29.4% in Q4 2025, from 35.7% in Q4 2024.

While our full-year 2025 variable comp ratio decreased to 39.4% from 42.3% in 2024. Assuming revenue mix and levels similar to 2025, contractual allocations would imply a 2026 variable compensation ratio of approximately 40 to 43%.

Turning to slide 12 on capital resources, as of December 31, 2025, we had $101 million of cash and $97 million of seed investments on the balance sheet, with a $200 million balance on our new term loan credit facility, and zero balance on our revolving credit facility. We completed the previously announced refinancing of our $275 million senior notes in Q4 2025, reducing our gross debt by $75 million and helping lower our gross leverage ratio from the prior year by half a turn to one times and our net leverage ratio to 0.5 times.

This refinancing has left our balance sheet stronger and more durable, better positioning us to navigate various market environments and to continue to return excess capital going forward. As a reminder, Acadian's leverage typically peaks in the first quarter of each year, as we draw down on our revolver to fund annual compensation, but then declines through the year as we generate cash and pay down the revolver. We expect this dynamic to continue in 2026.

Moving to Slide 13, we have a track record of creating significant value through share buybacks in recent years. Outstanding diluted shares have decreased 58% from 86 million in Q4 2019 to 35.8 million shares in Q4 2025. Over the same period, $1.4 billion in excess capital was returned to shareholders through share buybacks and dividends. Share repurchases were suspended in Q4 2025, as balance sheet cash supported the previously discussed deleveraging. We repurchased 1.8 million shares of common stock in 2025, a 5% reduction in our total shares outstanding from 2024, for an aggregate total of $48 million.

Acadian's board has declared an interim dividend of 10¢ per share, an increase from the prior $0 per share level, to be paid on March 20, 2026, to shareholders of record as of the close of business on March 13, 2026. This increased dividend level reflects the board's confidence in our recurring revenue base and continued strong free cash flow generation. Going forward, we expect to continue generating strong free cash flow and returning excess capital to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. I'll now turn the call back over to Kelly.

Kelly Ann Young: Before moving to Q&A, let me recap some key points on slide 14. Acadian is competitively positioned as the only pure-play publicly traded systematic manager with a forty-year track record and competitive edge in systematic investing. Our investment performance track record remained strong this quarter, with more than 95% of strategies by revenue outperforming over three, five, and ten-year periods. Business momentum continued to pace in 2025, with net inflows of $5.4 billion for the quarter, and $29.4 billion for the year, the highest annual NCCF in the firm's history, and with record AUM of $177.5 billion.

Q4 2025 financial results included record management fees of $146 million, up 32% from Q4 2024, record ENI EPS of $1.32, up 2% from 2024, and operating margin expansion to 45.7%, up from 42.3% in Q4 2024. Finally, capital management remained a focus in the quarter as we strengthened our balance sheet with the senior notes redemption and Term Loan A refinancing, and announced an increase in our quarterly dividend to 10¢ per share. Acadian is well-positioned to continue to drive growth and generate value for shareholders through targeted distribution initiatives and strategic product offerings. Our talented and dedicated team is acutely focused on achieving these goals, and I look forward to building on the momentum we saw in 2025.

This concludes my prepared remarks.

Operator: At this time, those with questions should lift their phone receiver and press star followed by the number one on their telephone keypad. To cancel a question, please press star 1 again. Please hold for a brief moment while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of John Joseph Dunn with Evercore. Please go ahead.

John Joseph Dunn: Thank you. I wanted to go back to the institutional pipeline. You said it remains robust. Maybe if you could just give a little flavor of the composition of it and maybe the cadence of timing you expect over the course of 2026?

Kelly Ann Young: Yeah. Hi, John. It's Nicole. Thanks. Thanks for the question. Yes. As I said, I think, you know, the pipeline remains very strong, and the pipeline looks exactly how we would want it to. So in terms of very diverse by product type, by geographies, and by vehicle. We continue to see a lot of interest in enhanced. As you know, that was a theme that we saw a lot through 2025. That continues, I think, to resonate with clients looking for, you know, lower risk but consistent returns at a lower fee, and we continue to see that as a key feature in the pipeline.

On the other end of the risk spectrum, our extension strategy, we've seen real interest there, I'd say particularly from North America, but increasingly across the globe. So those are the two key features and, again, two of the key terms that we talked about in terms of our growth strategy last year. And then a real resurgence of interest in some of our core areas like EM, which, you know, has been muted over the last few years, and that was a feature of cash flows in Q4, and we continue to see interest there, I think, as clients are looking for diversification, you know, away from the US and with strong tailwinds from dollar weakening.

So again, it looks very diverse. Really, I'd say that, you know, the features of enhanced core and extensions continue to hold as things. And, again, we're continuing to see that diversification and interest really across the globe, driven by, you know, not just our US clients but internationally as well. So again, broad pipeline, a continuation of the things that we saw in 2025. But as I say, with areas like EM that historically, it's perhaps a little more used over the last couple of years continuing now to sort of feature as a theme.

Scott Hynes: Hey. Hey, John. It's Scott. I just had to add to what Kelly provided there that, you know, since I joined last spring, and we obviously stare at very granular pipeline data, you know, the levels have been remarkably durable. Even through, as you know, with the digestion or the realization of some really large wins. So again, we feel incredibly well-positioned going into the year, and that's probably suggested kind of if anything. From my chair, it should be remarkable the extent to which we've seen that pipeline refill.

John Joseph Dunn: Got it. And then maybe just a word on your current areas of investment. And looking over the course of the year, any changes we should be thinking about in the more like fixed expense line items?

Scott Hynes: Yeah. Well, I'll start, and I'll let Kelly add anything if she'd like. I mean, one, stepping back, I think we are very bullish in this regard in our ability to continue to generate positive operating leverage. We're focused on scaling the business. We're confident in our ability, you know, to do so. When we think about investment areas, you know, I think there are some key areas, some of which are related to certain of the positive initiatives that we already announced in the last year. You think about areas like systematic credit. I know Kelly's team has already talked to you and others about some of the continued investments we make there that take the form.

Usually, at this point of people. So to make that more real, dedicated salespeople, for instance, systematic credit, you know, when we think about technology, that's obviously a huge focus for us. Part of the mode around the business. So, you know, we're seeing continued investments there. A pick around here is, like, data. How we work with data that does involve some ongoing AI investments just to amount our research team, for instance, to be more focused on strategies, achieving outcomes, less on manipulating data so to speak. So, hopefully, that gives you a bit of a flavor of where we're headed.

But, again, I think overall, expenses we made a lot of headwind this year in terms of realizing margin improvement. As Kelly said earlier, we remain really confident in our ability to where the business is heading today to effectively self-fund and investment we see going forward. But there's certainly no step change. It's just ongoing investments in areas where we see, you know, growth like systematic credit.

John Joseph Dunn: Thanks very much.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Kenneth S. Lee with RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Kenneth S. Lee: Hey, good morning and thanks for taking my question. Just one on the outlook for capital returns. And realize that you increased the quarterly common dividend there as well. How do you think about share repurchases in this context? Is there a certain level that you could be looking at or some kind of payout ratio, you know, any kind of, you know, guardrails around that? Thanks.

Scott Hynes: Yeah. Thanks, Dan. I appreciate the question. Look. I think we feel really well-positioned, right, in terms of capital return. You know, I know you know and our investors know we completed a refinancing last year. We think that makes the balance sheet much, much more durable, provides a lot more flexibility here. The business is behaving really well and generating a lot of free cash flow. The dividend, I would add, up from a penny to 10¢ a quarter, is there a signal as I suggested earlier in Kelly underlying as well, a signal of confidence in the way the business is behaving and for that to be durable.

I would add that when you set that aside, share repurchases, I would not want folks to misread that's some sort of either-or conversation. We need a more reflection that dividend increase of the business growing and scale in such a way in our level of free cash flow that we think that's durable. Right? But that in no way is a binary either-or conversation to share repurchases. To be very direct on the levels, as I said, we want to be athletic. No. There's not a payout ratio per se that we're managing to.

And, you know, stepping back and from your balance sheet management, if over time, and this is over the long term, I do think it is our intention to march newer toward a net cap position versus more net debt position. And the term loan, we could all provide this flexibility in this regard. That was purposeful. But that's certainly not a rush, and we do think that share repurchases will be a priority this year. Again, very healthy free cash flow. We did pause in the fourth quarter with that plan refinancing. That is over. That is done.

And with more than $100 million on balance sheet as we printed at the end of April, let's put it this way. It wouldn't be our intention to just sit on that. Right? We're going to be athletic. We're going to be active. It is now put balanced against the investment that Kelly and team would be looking at us for is the finance side. But, again, we think no step changes there. We've already had the investment we need for announced product initiatives. Could there be incremental seed capital? Yes. But, again, there's no big step change. So again, that's a long way of saying that AUD and your purchasing is over.

And we think, again, we're really well-positioned heading into this year. The business is behaving well. And we're going to be active in athletic industry.

Kenneth S. Lee: Gotcha. That's very helpful there. And one follow-up if I may. I'm not sure whether I might have missed this early in the call, but what was the composition of net flows in the quarter in the fourth quarter? Were there any particular outsized mandates, to want to see what strategies were driving some of the flows there? Thanks.

Kelly Ann Young: Yeah. Sure. Of course, Ken. Yeah. No. Just again, it was a sort of quarter that we really want to see from the NCCS standpoint. So, no one big dominant mandate that is driving those numbers. Again, very diverse across, I'd say, everything from enhanced at the lower risk end through to extensions on the higher risk side. As I mentioned earlier, EM was an EM core strategy with a core feature of Q4 flows as well. Very much balanced, I'd say, between international and our US clients. So very diverse, not one large sort of theme there that's dominating on one particular mandate.

And very diverse, as I say, by strategy group, by geography of client, and then by vehicle type, some of those separate accounts, some of those coming into our existing funds. So broad and diverse and exactly what we really want to see in the quarter, you know, from an NCPF standpoint.

Kenneth S. Lee: Right. Very helpful. Thanks again.

Operator: Thanks. Again, if you would like to ask a question, press 1 on your telephone keypad. There are no further questions at this time. This concludes our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the conference call back over to Kelly Young.

Kelly Ann Young: In closing, I'd like to reiterate our excitement for the business. We were delighted by the 25% increase in net client cash flow in the period, the 52% increase in AUM, and the 32% growth in management fees. And we remain incredibly positive for the trajectory for Acadian in 2026 as we continue strong growth ahead. Thank you, everyone, for joining us today.