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DATE
Friday, May 1, 2026 at 10 a.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer — George Robert Aylward
- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer — Michael Aaron Angerthal
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RISKS
- Management reported that "the first quarter was challenging from a net flow perspective," citing meaningful outflows from quality-oriented equity strategies that "have remained out of favor."
- Fixed income net flows were "essentially breakeven," with positive flows in certain areas offset by outflows in investment grade and leveraged finance.
- Alternatives strategies experienced net outflows of $400 million, attributed mainly to managed futures.
- Operating income as adjusted declined from $61.1 million to $43.8 million, primarily due to seasonal expenses and lower average AUM.
TAKEAWAYS
- Assets Under Management (AUM) -- $149 billion at March 31, declining from $159 billion due to net outflows and market performance.
- Total Net Outflows -- $8.4 billion for the quarter, with over 80% occurring in the first two months, primarily driven by equity redemptions.
- Sales Growth -- Total sales increased 8% to $5.8 billion, led by a 26% increase in equity strategy sales, especially from style-agnostic and growth strategies.
- Retail Separate Account Sales -- Increased 19% to $1.4 billion, with growth consistently each month and supported by reopening of the SMidCap Core strategy.
- Operating Margin -- 24% as reported; excluding seasonal higher employment expenses, 30.3%.
- Adjusted Earnings per Share -- $5.38, down from the previous quarter, with $1.26 per share impact from seasonal employment expenses and a 6% decrease excluding those items.
- Investment Management Fees -- $163.5 million as adjusted, a 3% decline due to lower average AUM but a higher average fee rate of 41.9 basis points.
- ETFs -- ETF AUM reached $5.4 billion, up $200 million sequentially and 58% year over year, with $300 million of positive net flows.
- Alternative Assets Expansion -- Keystone acquisition added $2.3 billion of AUM, raising alternatives to over 12% of total assets compared to 9.7% last quarter.
- Capital Allocation -- $10 million deployed for share repurchases, with a total of 73,463 shares repurchased and quarterly dividend paid.
- Cash Position -- $137 million in cash and equivalents, impacted by the $200 million payment for Keystone, $23 million revenue participation obligation, and seasonal employment expenses.
- Gross and Net Debt -- Gross debt at $448 million (up $50 million sequentially due to credit facility draw); net debt at $311 million or 1.1 times EBITDA.
- Tax Rate -- Effective rate was 14%, aided by amortization tax benefit and expected to remain within 14%-15%.
- Institutional Flows -- Known wins modestly exceeded known redemptions for the first time in several quarters, though management described institutional flows as "lumpy and hard to predict."
- Employment Expenses -- $116.2 million as adjusted, up 11% sequentially from seasonal items; year-over-year expenses declined 3%.
- Non-GAAP Presentation in Income Taxes -- Company updated methodology beginning this quarter to reflect the economic benefit of intangible tax assets, with the 2025 tax benefit at $2.64 per share.
- Open-End Fund Net Flows -- Improved to negative $1.3 billion from negative $2.5 billion last quarter, with positive net flows in fixed income and global equity strategies.
- Alternatives Net Outflows -- Net outflows of $400 million, primarily from managed futures strategies.
SUMMARY
Virtus Investment Partners (VRTS 6.56%) reported declining AUM and net outflows, but achieved higher sales in equities and retail separate accounts. Expansion into private markets advanced with the Keystone acquisition, adding differentiated private credit to the platform. Operating results reflected seasonal employment expense headwinds, updated income tax presentation, and disciplined balance sheet and capital allocation.
- Management indicated improving trends in net flows during March and April, with "ETF sales and net flows were at their highest levels since September."
- Retail separate accounts may benefit from the reopening of the SMidCap Core strategy, which had previously been soft-closed.
- The average fee rate rose by 1.3 basis points sequentially, with management expecting a further lift as Keystone is incorporated for a full quarter.
- Positive investment performance persisted in fixed income and alternative strategies, with 78% of fixed income and 71% of alternatives beating benchmarks over a three-year period.
- Deferred payments related to Keystone total $126 million, with the company holding $200 million in undrawn credit facility capacity to support liquidity.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- SMidCap Core strategy: An actively managed U.S. equity portfolio focused on small- and mid-cap stocks with a core (balanced between growth and value) style.
Full Conference Call Transcript
George Robert Aylward: Thank you, Sean, and good morning, everyone. I will start today with an overview of the results we reported this morning, then Michael Aaron Angerthal will provide more detail. Although the first quarter was challenging from a net flow perspective, reflecting our meaningful exposure to quality-oriented equity strategies, which have remained out of favor, we had several areas of strength during the quarter that were overshadowed, and we also advanced key growth initiatives.
Key highlights of the quarter included an 8% increase in sales, with growth in U.S. retail funds, separate accounts, and global funds; positive net flows in several strategies, including high-conviction growth equity, multi-sector fixed income, listed real assets, and event-driven; positive net flows in ETFs and global funds; expansion into private markets with our investment in Keystone National Group; and continued return of capital, including $10 million of share repurchases. We remained active in broadening our product offerings to meet evolving client demand and expand our growth opportunities over time.
The investment in Keystone on March 1 added a differentiated asset-centric private credit capability, and our sales teams are actively focused on expanding distribution of their compelling strategies to retail and institutional clients. Keystone focuses on senior secured amortizing fixed-rate financings backed by tangible assets. We believe their approach offers attractive stability and defensive characteristics to investors seeking a private credit allocation or a broader income-oriented solution with a different risk profile than many traditional direct lending vehicles. Keystone expands our private market capabilities, which also include those of Crescent Cove, as well as our overall alternatives offering, including managed futures and event-driven strategies.
We continue to launch attractive actively managed ETFs, including an emerging markets dividend ETF from our systematic team, a real estate income ETF from Duff & Phelps, and a growth equity ETF from Silvant. We expect to continue to be active in developing and introducing new products over the upcoming quarters. Looking at our first quarter results, assets under management were $149 billion at March 31, down from $159 billion due to net outflows and market performance. Total sales increased 8% to $5.8 billion, with a 26% increase in sales of equity strategies, in large part from some of our strategies that do not have a quality orientation.
By product, we had higher sales of U.S. retail funds, retail separate accounts, and global funds. Retail separate account sales increased 19%, with higher sales in each month of the quarter, and on April 1 we reopened the SMidCap Core strategy that had been soft closed in 2024. Total net outflows were $8.4 billion, and across products the outflows were almost entirely driven by equities. I would note that the majority—over 80%—of the net outflows were in the first two months of the quarter, as net outflows improved significantly in March.
Looking at flows across asset classes, the equity net outflows largely reflected the continued style headwind for quality-oriented strategies, including a meaningful institutional global equity redemption and the previously disclosed rebalancing of a lower-fee retail separate account model-only mandate to a passive strategy. Fixed income net flows were essentially breakeven for the quarter, as positive net flows in multi-sector, convertibles, and preferreds were offset by net outflows in investment grade and leveraged finance. Multi-asset strategies were also essentially breakeven, while alternatives strategies had net outflows of $400 million, primarily driven by managed futures.
In terms of what we saw in April, as previously mentioned, overall trends improved over the course of the first quarter, and April flows were more similar to March. For U.S. retail funds, both sales and flows improved in April over March, and ETF sales and net flows were at their highest levels since September. For retail separate accounts, while we do not have as much transparency given a large portion is model-only, we do anticipate better flows in the second quarter and are pleased to have recently reopened the SMidCap Core strategy.
On the institutional side, known wins actually modestly exceeded known redemptions for the first time in a long time, though as always institutional flows can be very lumpy and hard to predict. Turning now to our financial results, the operating margin was 24% and reflected the impact of seasonally higher employment expenses. Excluding those items, the operating margin was 30.3%. Earnings per share as adjusted of $5.38 declined from the fourth quarter primarily due to $1.26 per share of seasonal employment expenses. Excluding those items, earnings per share as adjusted declined 6%. Turning to investment performance, as we have previously discussed, recent performance reflects our overweight to quality equity.
However, we did see improving relative performance in the first quarter in our equity strategies. Fixed income and alternative strategies have consistently strong performance with 78% and 71%, respectively, beating benchmarks for the three-year period. Over the longer ten-year period, 54% of our equity, 73% of our fixed income, and 71% of alternative strategies beat their benchmarks. In terms of our balance sheet and capital, we ended the quarter with cash and equivalents of $137 million, other investments of $269 million, and $200 million of undrawn capacity on our revolving credit facility. Cash was lower sequentially, as the first quarter of each year is our highest period of cash utilization.
In addition to first-quarter seasonal expenses, cash usage included the $200 million closing payment for the Keystone investment and $23 million representing the majority of our remaining revenue participation obligation. During the quarter, we repurchased approximately 73 thousand shares for $10 million and paid our quarterly dividend. We continue to have financial flexibility to balance capital priorities of investing in the business, returning capital to shareholders, and maintaining appropriate leverage. And with that, I will turn the call over to Michael Aaron Angerthal to provide more detail on the financial results. Mike?
Michael Aaron Angerthal: Thank you, George. Good to be with you all this morning. Starting with our results on slide seven, assets under management: our total AUM at March 31 was $149 billion, and average assets declined 4% to $158.2 billion. Our AUM continues to be well diversified across products and asset classes. By product, institutional accounts were 33% of AUM, U.S. retail funds represented 27%, and retail separate accounts, including wealth management, represented 25%. The remaining 15% consisted of closed-end funds, global funds, and ETFs. Within open-end funds, ETF AUM increased to $5.4 billion, up $200 million sequentially on continued strong net flows and up 58% year-over-year.
We are also well diversified by asset class with broad representation across domestic and international equities, including mid-, small-, and large-cap strategies, and fixed income offerings diversified across duration, credit quality, and geography. With the addition of Keystone during the quarter, which added $2.3 billion of AUM, alternatives now represent over 12% of assets, up from 9.7% last quarter and 9% a year ago. Turning to slide eight, asset flows: total sales increased 8% to $5.8 billion, up from $5.3 billion in the fourth quarter. The increase was led by sales of equity strategies, which increased 26%, with growth broadly across domestic, international, and global equity.
Reviewing by product, institutional sales were $1.2 billion versus $1.4 billion last quarter, with higher equity and multi-asset sales offset by lower fixed income and alternatives. Retail separate account sales increased to $1.4 billion from $1.2 billion in the fourth quarter, primarily due to a 30% increase in sales in the intermediary-sold channel across strategies. Open-end fund sales increased 11% to $3.1 billion and included $600 million of ETF sales. Open-end fund sales were higher in equities, fixed income, and multi-asset strategies, with much of the increase in equity sales in style-agnostic and growth strategies.
Total net outflows were $8.4 billion compared with $8.1 billion last quarter, and, as previously mentioned, the outflows improved meaningfully in the last month of the quarter. Reviewing by product, institutional net outflows of $3.2 billion were again primarily due to redemptions of quality-oriented global equity strategies. Retail separate accounts had net outflows of $3.9 billion, which included a $1.4 billion redemption of a lower-fee model-only account that we previously disclosed. Open-end fund net outflows of $1.3 billion improved from $2.5 billion last quarter and included positive net flows in fixed income and global equity. For closed-end funds, which include Keystone's tender offer fund, we reported modestly negative net flows.
I would point out that while Keystone's fund had positive net flows for the quarter, our results reflect just one month of their sales but a full quarter of redemptions, given the fund's quarterly tenders take place in March. ETFs continued to deliver solid growth, generating $300 million of positive net flows and sustaining a strong double-digit organic growth rate. Turning to slide nine, investment management fees as adjusted were $163.5 million, down 3% due to lower average AUM, partially offset by a higher average fee rate. The average fee rate was 41.9 basis points, up from 40.6 basis points last quarter, and included approximately 0.6 basis points of incentive fees from one month of Keystone.
We believe an average fee rate of 43 to 45 basis points is reasonable for the second quarter, reflecting a full quarter of Keystone. As always, the fee rate will vary with market levels and asset mix. Slide 10 shows the five-quarter trend in employment expenses. Total employment expenses as adjusted of $116.2 million increased 11% sequentially, reflecting $11.4 million of seasonal employment expenses related to the timing of annual incentives, primarily incremental payroll taxes and benefits. On the more comparable year-over-year basis, employment expenses declined 3%. Excluding the seasonal items, employment expenses also decreased on a sequential basis. Employment expenses were 58.3% of revenues as adjusted, with a sequential increase primarily due to the seasonal expenses.
Excluding those items, employment expenses were 52% of revenues, higher than the fourth quarter largely due to lower revenues. For modeling purposes, it is reasonable to assume employment expenses as adjusted will be in the 51% to 53% range as a percentage of revenues, and at the high end of that range in the second quarter, primarily due to the decline in equity assets under management. And as always, results will vary with flows and market performance. Turning to slide 11, other operating expenses as adjusted were $30.6 million, up modestly from $30.2 million, in part due to the addition of Keystone during the quarter.
For modeling purposes, a quarterly range of $31 million to $33 million is reasonable going forward to reflect the full-quarter impact of Keystone. In addition, keep in mind that our annual Board of Directors’ equity grant occurs in the second quarter and is incremental to the outlook. Slide 12 illustrates the trend in earnings. Operating income as adjusted of $43.8 million decreased from $61.1 million in large part due to seasonal expenses. Excluding those items, operating income decreased 10%, primarily due to lower average assets under management. The operating margin as adjusted of 24% compared with 32.4% in the fourth quarter. Excluding the seasonal employment expenses, the operating margin was 30.3%.
With respect to nonoperating items, interest and dividend income declined by $1.4 million due to a lower cash balance reflecting the timing of the Keystone investment and seasonal cash obligations. Noncontrolling interests of $1.4 million were modestly lower than the prior quarter. Looking ahead, for modeling purposes, we believe that a reasonable range for noncontrolling interests will be $4 million to $5 million, which factors in a full quarter of Keystone. Turning to income taxes, as we recently announced, beginning with this quarter’s results, we updated how we reflect income taxes in our non-GAAP presentation and have recast the relevant line items in prior quarters.
Over time, through acquisitions, we have built a significant intangible tax asset that generates meaningful economic tax benefits. Given the size of this attribute and our expectation of realizing the benefit, we believe it is appropriate to reflect it in earnings. For context, the tax benefit represented about $2.64 per share of earnings in 2025. For the first quarter, our effective tax rate of 14% was lower sequentially by approximately 400 basis points due to the impact of the amortization tax benefit on a seasonally lower level of pretax income. Beginning with the second quarter, an effective tax rate of 14% to 15% would be reasonable to expect.
Net income as adjusted was $5.38 per diluted share, which included $1.26 per share of seasonal expenses, compared with $7.16 in the fourth quarter, and declined 16% from the prior year primarily due to lower average AUM. Slide 13 shows the trend of our capital, liquidity, and select balance sheet items. On March 1, we completed the 56% investment in Keystone for $200 million. As a reminder, there is up to $170 million of additional consideration over two years, a meaningful portion of which is subject to achievement of revenue targets. The estimated fair value of the deferred payments is recorded on the balance sheet as contingent consideration.
Contingent consideration at March 31 totaled $126 million, with a sequential increase reflecting the addition of the Keystone deferred payments, partially offset by the payment of the majority of our remaining revenue participation obligation, which was $23 million. As previously discussed, our transaction with Keystone includes increasing our ownership to 75%, with the equity purchases taking place during years three through six after closing. The estimated value of those purchases is recorded in redeemable noncontrolling interest, which increased to $131 million at March 31. The remaining 25% of Keystone is reflected in the manager noncontrolling interest liability, which totaled $152 million, the majority of which represents Keystone equity held by Keystone employees that will be recycled to future generations.
Cash and equivalents at March 31 were $137 million, down from December 31 due to the payment for Keystone, seasonal employment expenses, and return of capital. In addition, we had $269 million of other investments, including seed capital to support future growth opportunities. Return of capital to shareholders in the first quarter included our quarterly dividend and the repurchase of 73 thousand 463 shares of common stock for $10 million. Gross debt at the end of the quarter was $448 million, up from $399 million at December 31 due to a $50 million draw on our revolving credit facility. Net debt was $311 million, or 1.1 times EBITDA.
As a reminder, we typically prioritize repayments of amounts drawn on our credit facility over the short term. And with that, let me turn the call back over to George Robert Aylward. George?
George Robert Aylward: Thank you, Mike. We will now open the call for questions. Didi, would you open up the lines, please?
Operator: Thank you. To ask a question, please press star-1-1 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star-1-1 again. Our first question comes from Crispin Elliot Love of Piper Sandler.
Crispin Elliot Love: Thank you. Good morning. I appreciate you taking my questions. First, in the release and also on the call, you called out the 26% increase in sales of equity strategies. Can you dig into that a little further? Was that partially buying the dip in the quarter, especially the March improvement in flows? And then any specific areas—value or growth—would be helpful. And has that continued in April?
George Robert Aylward: Sure. While we have highlighted that the majority of our equity AUM and strategies have a quality orientation from the managers that have grown the business over the years, we have other strategies that do not have those same orientations. Many of them were a little smaller and had not previously been areas where we had seen significant growth. Those have been the strategies that we have continued to focus on and to find additional opportunities for. We were very pleased with some of our strategies, which include high-conviction strategies, more style-agnostic strategies, and other growth strategies.
We have recently made these available in SMAs, increased our focus on other wrappers, and launched some ETFs that are not tied to our quality-oriented strategies. Those have been the big drivers of the increase in equity sales. We hope that will continue. We still fully believe that the quality-oriented strategies will come back into favor as well, but we have been focused on other strategies and capabilities that have been smaller and are now growing. Our hope is to continue to make them available, particularly in retail separate accounts, and, very recently, to make them more available in ETFs. Mike, anything you would add?
Michael Aaron Angerthal: I think you hit on the key points. We are starting to see contribution on the top line from some of those managers, and they have experienced growth. Obviously, it has been overshadowed by some of the larger managers who have a quality orientation, but we are seeing that growth. We called it out in the intermediary-sponsored retail separate account platform. As George mentioned, we have seen expanded access at some of our key distribution partners, and that is benefiting the top line. We are pleased to see that.
Crispin Elliot Love: Great. Thank you, Mike. The second question is on net outflows. They remain elevated, especially over the last few quarters. Curious on the longer-term trajectory—what needs to be done for that to improve, first on a macro level and then on a micro level? On the micro side, it looks like you are making some progress on strategies outside of the quality orientation, but how do you get closer to more neutral over time? And I appreciate the comments on the improvement in March and April—just thinking more on a longer-term broad basis on flows.
George Robert Aylward: Sure. I will start by reiterating that the largest percentage of the outflows—and we highlighted two specific large mandates that drove that—were in the earlier part of the first quarter, and that March, and as we have indicated, April, have been at significantly lower levels than January, February, or the fourth quarter. We view that as positive. There are a couple of factors. For the quality-oriented strategies, as the cycle eventually turns, we see that as a good opportunity.
We do believe that certain investors, particularly institutional investors, are cognizant of how out of favor growth equity and quality-oriented equity are, and may view this as an opportunity because, inevitably, at the turn of the cycle is usually when many managers, including ours, have generated some of their better performance. We see that as an opportunity. Separate from that, over the last year, we have spent considerable time creating wrappers and enhancing our sales efforts on those other strategies from the first question—for investors not interested in quality orientation in particular—by offering more of our style-agnostic, other growth, and other differentiated strategies. We have started to see traction. It is nice to see those levels of growth.
Those managers have compelling investment performance, and we are increasingly making them more available. Separate from that, we recently completed the Keystone transaction, and as I indicated in our talking points, our wholesaler force is very excited about offering that very differentiated strategy. We think there is a great opportunity for that to be utilized in different portfolios. We definitely see that as another area of continued opportunity to raise additional assets, which would complement what should eventually be the return of higher demand for quality-oriented strategies. We also highlighted the strategy that had been closed; one of the reductions in our flows over the last few quarters since 2024 was the absence of having sales in that closed strategy.
We are pleased to have that strategy reopened. Our quality-oriented strategies include some of our best-selling strategies; it is just that outflows are greater than inflows at this point. We want to increase inflows, and opening that strategy up will be helpful.
Operator: Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star-1-1. This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Aylward.
George Robert Aylward: Thank you very much, and thank you everyone for joining us today. We certainly encourage you to reach out if you have any further questions, and have a great day. Thank you very much.
Operator: That concludes today’s call. Thank you for participating, and you may now disconnect.
