Blackstone profit slides as dealmaking hit by market tumult
BLACKSTONE’S first-quarter profit fell as dealmaking at the world’s largest alternative-asset manager slowed in a tumultuous stretch when rising interest rates roiled markets.
Distributable earnings fell 36 per cent to US$1.25 billion, or 97 cents a share, from a year earlier, New York-based Blackstone said on Thursday (Apr 20) in a statement. That exceeded the 94-cent average estimate of 16 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Assets under management edged closer to the US$1 trillion mark, rising 8 per cent to US$991.3 billion.
Blackstone has grown into a dominant force in the financial universe outside stocks and bonds. It is a giant in take-privates, buyouts and real estate deals. Now it has to wrestle with how the Federal Reserve’s rate increases are crimping dealmaking and ending a period of rapid growth.
“A slower deal environment is not a shock,” president Jon Gray said in an interview. “Things slow given the uncertainty.”
Shares of Blackstone slid 1.1 per cent to US$91.52 in early trading at 7.15 am in New York. The stock had climbed 25 per cent this year through Wednesday, easily outpacing rivals KKR and Apollo Global Management.
Blackstone dealmakers held back more on cashing out of investments compared with a year ago, bringing proceeds from sales down 22 per cent. They also slowed their pace of making new bets by more than half.
BT in your inbox

Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Economic uncertainty is testing investors’ appetite for strategies that are harder to trade and value than stocks and bonds. Blackstone had US$29.5 billion of net inflows in the quarter, down from US$39.9 billion a year earlier.
Its real estate arm was the biggest source of net inflows in the quarter, buoyed by the close of a giant fund for institutions. That offset some of the pain from a backlog of redemptions from the US$70 billion Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust. The property fund for wealthy individuals limited redemptions in recent months after more clients tried to get out.
The world’s largest owner of commercial property, Blackstone wrote down the valuation of some US offices during the quarter, as many employees continue to balk at returning to workplaces after the pandemic. The firm has been paring its exposure to those properties and now counts US offices as less than 2 per cent of its real estate portfolio, down from 61 per cent in 2007.
One drag on profit was its investment in Corebridge Financial Blackstone took a minority stake in the insurer in 2021 in exchange for locking in a deal to manage a growing chunk of its assets over time. Corebridge shares have fallen 15 per cent this year.
Rising interest rates did benefit one business unit. Blackstone’s private credit bets were the highest performers in the quarter, delivering 3.4 per cent.
Gray said that the tumult following the collapse of three US regional lenders last month has created investment opportunities – even after Blackstone backed a firm’s losing bid for Silicon Valley Bank. Blackstone has been talking to small banks about stepping in to lend alongside them as more look to slim down their balance sheets.
“Because of the focus on liquidity they may want to find partners,” Gray said. BLOOMBERG
Copyright SPH Media. All rights reserved.