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Financial Services - Investment - Banking & Investment Services - NYSE - US
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EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2016 - Q2
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Executives

Selene Oh - Vice President-Finance and Investor Relations Sean Healey - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Nathaniel Dalton - President and Chief Operating Officer Jay Horgen - Chief Financial Officer.

Analysts

Craig Siegenthaler - Credit Suisse Alexander Blostein - Goldman Sachs Michael Carrier - Bank of America Merrill Lynch Brian Bedell - Deutsche Bank Securities William Katz - Citigroup Andrew Nicholas - William Blair & Company Dan Fannon - Jefferies & Co Robert Lee - Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc..

Operator

Greetings and welcome to the AMG Second Quarter 2016 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Selene Oh, Vice President, Investor Relations for AMG. Thank you. You may begin..

Selene Oh

Sean Healey, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Nate Dalton, President and Chief Operating Officer; and Jay Horgen, Chief Financial Officer. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Sean Healey..

Sean Healey

Thanks, Selene, and good morning, everyone. Against the backdrop of volatile markets and muted investor risk appetite, AMG generated solid results in the second quarter, including stable economic earnings per share and year-over-year growth of 8% in our pro-forma assets, bringing our total assets under management to approximately $700 billion.

Our Affiliates produced excellent relative investment performance and positive net client cash flows and we added outstanding new Affiliates, including Winton Capital Management and Capula Investment Management.

As Jay will describe, given the increased earnings power of our business, even in a relatively difficult environment for the asset management industry, we see continued earnings growth for the balance of the year and through 2017.

Notwithstanding, elevated market volatility, which resulted in industry-wide risk aversion, we generated positive net client cash flows during the quarter.

As Nate will discuss, our strong net inflows in the retail and high net worth channels were partially offset by lower institutional sales, especially at the end of the quarter as a number of global institutional clients decided to pause implementation of investment decisions in response to the unexpected outcome of the UK’s Brexit referendum.

We believe that this was essentially a short-term response, and looking ahead as markets have stabilized and investor expectations adjusted, we are seeing a resumption in sales momentum and expect to benefit from these delayed fundings through the balance of the year.

We also believe that rise in dispersion in the market will increasingly favor differentiated performance-oriented strategies, including focused active equities and a range of value-added alternative investment products.

Our Affiliates’ equity strategies performed well in the quarter, including Tweedy, Browne, Harding Loevner and Genesis; which all posted strong absolute and relative performance in global and emerging market equities; and the Yacktman and TimesSquare, which in particular generated excellent results in U.S. equities.

Our alternative managers also generally performed well amid the volatility, as several of our Affiliates, including AQR, First Quadrant and BlueMountain generated meaningful alpha during the quarter.

Looking forward, contrary to conventional wisdom around challenges in the hedge fund industry, there is significant and growing client demand for alternative strategies across distribution channels; particularly those which are additive at a total portfolio level, given their lack of correlation to traditional equity and fixed income markets.

We believe this is an enduring trend. The diversification and balanced risk-and-return offered by well-designed alternative strategies are compelling to both sophisticated global institutions, as well as individual retail investors as they strive to meet their investment goals.

We believe that clients are increasingly focusing on the highest quality managers with long-term track records of alpha generation, and those managers which had demonstrated that they can effectively manage at scale and with institutional quality.

This trend benefits the highest quality alternative firms including our Affiliates, which are recognized as leaders in their respective discipline, and as evidence of this, our alternative Affiliates have consistently generated positive net client cash flows over the past five years including in the second quarter.

Across our group of Affiliates, we have strategically and deliberately assembled a very large and diverse set of alternative strategies, which taken as a whole, not only generates strong organic growth, but also have low correlation with equity markets and low correlation with each other.

There is no other firm in the industry with the range and quality of our alternative product set. We think that this point is undervalued by the market and that the benefit of our strategic position across a very broad range of alternative strategies will become increasingly evident.

Our substantial exposure to this array of strategies, which is in aggregate approximately 40% of our AUM and the highly diversified return streams they provide is not only attractive in its own right, but it is also a strong complement to our strategic focus on differentiated active equities through our outstanding traditional Affiliates.

As clients increasingly seek the highest quality active managers for the alpha portions of their portfolios, our industry leading boutique Affiliates are well-positioned for continued strong organic growth going forward.

Finally, turning to new investments, we continue to have an outstanding opportunity to further enhance the diversity of our performance oriented product set by partnering with leading traditional and alternative firms around the world.

The transaction environment remains highly favorable for us and we have a diverse global pipeline of prospective new Affiliates that are drawn to AMG’s excellent reputation as a partner for over 23 years.

Given our unmatched competitive position, and our strong and flexible capital structure, we are confident in our ability to execute additional accretive investments in new Affiliates. And together with the organic growth of our existing Affiliates are well-positioned for continued earnings growth ahead.

With that, I’ll turn it to Nate to discuss our Affiliates results in more detail..

Nathaniel Dalton

AQR Risk Parity fund and the AMG FQ Global Risk-Balanced, which were 6% and 7% respectively. In addition, we saw solid gains across other significant products in the categories such as AQR Style Premia and First Quadrant Tactical Currency.

Now, turning to our equity products and starting with the Global Developed Markets category, where a number of our largest collection strategies posted strong absolute and relative returns. Tweedy, Browne’s flagship Global Value Fund outperformed its benchmark and peers in the quarter further improving its long-term track record.

Through the quarter, this fund holds the top five and ten year track records in Morningstar’s Foreign Large Value category. In addition, Harding Loevner once again outperformed benchmarks and peers in both our International and Global Equity strategies.

Both strategies also feature near or above top decile long-term track records in the respective Morningstar categories. On the other hand, AQR Artemis underperformed their benchmarks, although they still maintained good long-term performance records in the major non-U.S. equity strategies.

Turning to our Emerging Markets category, we have very broad-based strong relative performance. Almost all of our major products and Affiliates including AQR, Genesis, Harding Loevner and Trilogy posted good absolute and relative returns.

Standouts included Genesis Global Emerging Markets and Harding Loevner Emerging Markets, each of which outpaced the benchmark by over 250 basis points. Finally, with respect to our U.S. equities, many of our U.S. growth strategies are biased towards quality growth and away from high beta stock.

And we benefited from that in the quarter, as they generally outperformed their benchmarks and peers. This includes the largest products of Frontier and TimesSquare. On the U.S. value side, our largest U.S.

equity contributor Yacktman, saw their Focus Fund and Diversified Fund each outperform peers for the quarter allowing them to maintain their top decile returns year-to-date and for the trailing year and both funds still ranking the percentile of their Morningstar category across last 10-, 15-year period.

Now, turning to flows for the quarter, and I’ll reiterate that flows of both the institutional and sub-advisory channels are inherently lumpy. First, we’re pleased to generate another quarter of positive net client cash flows of $630 million, bringing us to positive flows in 22 over the last 24 quarters.

Within our flows this quarter, there are a couple of themes to identify. First, as we discussed on previous calls, we remain very well positioned to participate in the trend of rising allocations to alternatives across distribution channel. And we benefited from this trend again this quarter.

As Sean said, investors are increasingly using alternatives to achieve their investment objectives either generate uncorrelated returns or for risk mitigation. And our Affiliates feature some of the best offerings in liquid and illiquid alternatives, whether for institutional, retail or high net worth investors.

While there have been a lot of headlines about the challenges, so called, hedge funds are facing; we should all be very careful to separate those from the strong underlying trend of flows to alternatives more broadly. A trend we believe will continue, which we were very well positioned to participate in.

Second, the quarter was really a tale with two parts, with a relatively good first two months giving way to June, which was impacted significantly by the Brexit vote and the volatility around it. Then moving to specifics for the quarter and starting with the institutional channel, we had a net out flows of $2.9 billion in the quarter.

There were three broad reasons for the negative net flows in the channel. First, we saw the funding process for several significant mandates well in the back-half of the quarter. A couple of cases were explicitly linked to Brexit related uncertainty. Second, we did experience some outflows from petrodollar related client.

And third, unusually, we did not have any meaningful closures in our long-locked capital products with firms such as Pantheon, EIG and Baring Asia. There was really just an idiosyncratic dynamic related to the quarter.

There is significant demand for these illiquid products, with the matter of incidental timing and how the fund rating cycles across facilities stacked up. Turning to the high net worth channel, we had record inflows of $1.7 billion for the quarter.

Key contributors to this quarter’s strong flows were SMA sold to our broker dealer channel, especially municipal bonds, as well as our AMG Wealth Partners platform, where we continue to see good traction developing. In the mutual fund channel, we had net inflows of $1.8 billion in the quarter.

From an asset class perspective as well as this quarter we’re driven by strong inflows for alternatives and emerging market equities offerings and we continue to benefit from much better U.S. equity redemption rates. From an Affiliate perspective, key contributors to net positive flows were AQR and Harding Loevner.

We did have some elevated retail outflows at our UK Affiliate, Artemis, in second-half of the quarter, particularly in the UK-oriented strategies following the Brexit vote. But as markets recover, we expect this to continue to abate.

More broadly, where there is still a lot to be determined regarding the outcome, we do not see the Brexit vote having a significant direct impact on our distribution efforts or our Affiliates operations more broadly.

In fact, in the area most likely to be impacted, the retail channel across the UK and Europe, our Affiliate product offering, even from our UK-based Affiliates are mostly domicile outside of the UK and it would be relatively unaffected, our domiciled in the UK, but also sold to UK clients.

Looking ahead, with our outstanding and growing array of high-quality equity and alternative products, along with our unique distribution strategy, which includes both the Affiliates and distribution teams as well as AMG’s focused complementary resources, we believe we are very well-positioned for meaningful organic growth ahead.

With that, let me turn to Jay, to discuss the financials..

Jay Horgen

Thank you, Nate. As Sean discussed, we generated solid results in the quarter marked by industry-wide risk aversion. AMG has differentiated ability to produce stable earnings across a range of market environment. And with the addition of Winton and Capula, we will further diversify and increase the earnings power of our business.

As you saw on the release, we reported economic earnings per share of $3.06 for the second quarter, which included net performance fees of $0.10. On a GAAP basis, we reported earnings per share of $1.97.

Turning to more specific modeling items, for the second quarter our EBITDA was $220.3 million and the ratio of our EBITDA to end-of-period assets under management was approximately 13.6 basis points or approximately 13.1 basis points, excluding performance fees.

In the third quarter, we expect this ratio to decline to approximately 13.1 basis points, reflecting lower performance fees, which is typical in the third quarter. As a reminder, we will report our recent new investments on one quarter lag. As a result, this will have the effect of lowering our earnings for the second-half of 2016, but not thereafter.

As we closed Capula in July, and we expect to close Winton in the fourth quarter without reporting their respective income in the quarter in which we close. I will further describe the timing and cost of funding of these new investments in a moment.

With regard to our taxes, our effective GAAP tax rate for the quarter was 32.3% and our cash tax rate was 18.8%. In the third quarter and for the full year 2016, we expect our GAAP tax rate to be 33% and our cash tax rate to be 20%. Intangible related deferred taxes for the second quarter were $21.3 million.

We expect this number to remain at approximately $21 million in the third quarter. And for the full year 2016, we expect our intangible related deferred taxes to be approximately $87 million.

Our share of reported amortization for the second quarter was $37 million, which includes $14.8 million of amortization from Affiliates accounted for under the equity method. For the third quarter, we expect our share of amortization to decline to approximately $35 million.

And for the full year 2016, we expect amortization to be approximately $145 million. Our share of interest expense for the second quarter was $21.9 million. In the third quarter, we expect our share of interest expense to be approximately $24 million, reflecting the higher revolver balance from the closing of Capula.

For the full year 2016, we expect our interest expense to be approximately $90 million. Other economic items for the second quarter were $0.8 million. For modeling purposes, we expect other economic items to be approximately $1 million per quarter.

Turning to our balance sheet; in June, we announced new investments for the total purchase price of $800 million and simultaneously entered into a forward equity contract for up to 2.9 million shares, a structure which we have used several times in the past.

Of the available 2.9 million shares, we expect to issue 2.5 million shares for $400 million proceeds in the fourth quarter upon closing Winton, with the remainder of the purchase price funded under our revolver.

Given this funding profile as well as the ongoing strength of our balance sheet, and the quality and diversity of our business, we replaced on positive outlook by S&P. With our flexible capital structure, we are well-positioned for growth in a range of market environments.

And looking ahead the strength and scale of our business, which generates run rate EBITDA of approximately $1 billion along with approximately $1 billion of undrawn capacity available by year-end under our revolver, positions us to create meaningful earnings growth, as we execute on our new investment strategy and return capital to shareholders over time.

Now turning to guidance; we are updating our 2016 guidance, as we now expect economic earnings per share to be in the range of $12.30 to $13.30. This guidance range assumes our normal model convention of actual market performance through Friday for the current quarter and 2% quarterly market growth for the fourth quarter.

As per our convention, given the pacing of our 2016 new investments, our guidance does not assume incremental share repurchases for the balance of 2016. We expect our weighted average share count for 2016 to be approximately 55 million, which includes the expected equity issuance in the fourth quarter.

Given the meaningful run-rate impact of our recent new investments which is not reflected in 2016, as well as the full year impact of the fourth quarter share issuance, we are providing preliminary guidance for 2017, as we expect economic earnings per share to be in the range of $14 to $16.

This range assumes the full year effect of our 2016 new investments, our normal model convention of 2% quarterly market growth beginning in the fourth quarter of 2016 and each quarter thereafter, and includes our normal model convention for share repurchase in 2017 equal to 50% of our annual economic net income.

As a result, we expect our weighted average share count to be approximately 56 million for the full year of 2017. The lower-ends of our guidance ranges include a modest contribution from performance fees and organic growth, while the upper-end assumes a more robust contribution from both performance fees and net client cash flows.

As always, these assumptions do not include earnings from future new investments and are based on our current expectation of Affiliate growth rates performance in the mix of Affiliate contribution to our earning. Of course, substantial changes in markets and the earnings contribution of our Affiliates could impact these expectations.

Now, we’ll be happy to answer your questions..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Craig Siegenthaler with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question..

Craig Siegenthaler

Hey, good morning..

Sean Healey

Good morning..

Nathaniel Dalton

Good morning..

Craig Siegenthaler

I want to hit first on the $8 billion of lower institutional sales activity in 2Q. So I’m just trying to think about it. But if Brexit really only impacted the last week of the quarter and the petrodollars impacted the redemptions, but not sales, I just want to better understand the $8 billion decline.

And may be the answer is institutional sales activity is very lumpy as you said. And also, I think, you also said that you didn’t have any large lock-up fund raises too..

Nathaniel Dalton

All right, this is Nate. So I think you understand it mostly right. So I think, first, I would say that the Brexit vote, the slowed funding is really where the uncertainty around it. So we actually saw that show up more broadly through the month of June, than just right after the vote. So there’s actually that uncertainty running into it.

We saw a few things sort of push out. That was the first. And then the second is, as you say, we didn’t have any closes in long-locked capital products, which is the other underlying sort of trend I’d give you. And then, yes, of course, as you say, it is always lumpy.

And so the timing of the close on one or two fundings ends up - can end up impacting that growth sales number - can end up back in that growth sales number. The new thing I would say just follow on to your question is, yes, look, July was a good month and the institutional pipeline looks really strong.

And partly that is probably because of something that slipped from Q2 into back-half of the year. But the RFP levels and the finals activity levels are really fantastic. And so maybe even a nuance there which is that description I gave of June was really on funding, not really on activity level.

Because again, activity level through the quarter was actually quite good..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Blostein with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question..

Alexander Blostein

Thanks. I was hoping you guys can update us on the year-to-date trends that you’re seeing out of Winton and Capula, specifically on performance and flows. And I guess, once you think about your 2017 guidance, can you just remind us I guess again what accretion you’re assuming for that one from these new deals.

And I guess the underlying assumptions for that, meaning, flows and the performance fees for those new Affiliates?.

Sean Healey

I’ll start. Maybe, Nate, if you want to add in some color and Jay can answer the last bit. When in Capula of course our - in the case of Capula, we just closed our investment and Winton will be later this year. Their performance is actually good and was ironically even better post-Brexit.

So across our book, alternative strategies and you heard a broader more comprehensive discussion this quarter and you’ll hear more as we broaden and expand our disclosure around the range and quality of our alternative products.

But the main answer is that looking ahead we feel very good about the position and performance level of especially our largest Affiliate products; but including the range and diversity of the products, because inevitably not every product or strategy will outperform in every period and that it’s the correlation among the alternative products as well as correlation or lack of correlation to equity markets.

That’s important to bear in mind..

Jay Horgen

Yes, Nate, do you want to…?.

Sean Healey

Jay, I’m just going to answer on the 2017 piece if that’s okay. So on 2017, the first thing, obviously, Alex, is that we’ve incorporated Capula, which has closed and Winton that will close in the fourth quarter. Again, we will hold a full year reporting of those in 2017. The 2016 numbers will be affected by the lag that I mentioned.

But that is included in the $14 or $16 of the 2017 estimate. But specifically when you look at the deal itself, we had announced the range of accretion $0.50 to $0.80. Given that we will be issuing the 2.5 million shares in the fourth quarter, it’s going to be closer to $0.60, but it will still be in that range.

And it’s included in the 2017 numbers already..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Michael Carrier with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question..

Michael Carrier

All right, thanks, guys. Hey, Jay, just wanted to get an update, like when we think about the activity that you guys have pursued this year both in kind of the end of 2015, beginning of 2016 and then more recently in June on deals, it’s been pretty active.

So just wanted to get an update, when we think about the balance sheet, the capacity, what we should be expecting maybe over the next six months, in terms of either paying down some debt versus the - maybe as you’re going into 2017? It sounds like you still have capacity and there’s a lot of activity that could potentially be done over the next few years.

But just wanted to get an update, just because you guys have been relatively active over the past six months?.

Sean Healey

Right, yes. I think that’s a fair comment. So far in 2016 we’ve closed or will close on approximately $1.3 billion in new investments. So I think you are right on that. We have positioned the balance sheet for both flexibility and capacity. As you know we expanded or we increased the revolver to $1.45 billion.

And we did the equity forward, really in anticipation to continuing our new investment strategy continuing to execute on our pipeline. We are well-positioned for that. And as it relates to overall leverage levels, we are just a hair above two times. I think two times would be a level that over a longer period of time we would think we would be at.

So we are not really over levered at this point. And in fact, we are probably right where we would want to be.

You can see a modest de-levering, but nothing that would change the sort of course of our balance sheet and as it relates to capacity to do deals we’ll by the end of the year have over a $1 billion under our revolver that we can continue to execute..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Brian Bedell with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question..

Brian Bedell

Hi, good morning, folks. Just going to circle back on the institutional side, if you could, size some of that delayed funding in what you’re seeing so far in July just to give us a sense of the flows into July. And also, if you could, break that out between the petrodollar redemptions.

I think, Jay, you had before talked about exposure to petrodollar funds all-ins. Just wanted to get a sense of where we are through that sort of potential pipeline of redemptions. And then also just the magnitude of the private equity fundraisers, I realize they’re lumpy. But I just want to get a sort of a sizing of that..

Nathaniel Dalton

Yes, so I’ll try to hit all those. And I think there - it’s not unfair to think about them as sort of relatively equal magnitudes as a way to think about it. So the fundings sort of a couple of billion, the petrodollar outflows, again that’s not impacting that growth sales number. But that was also significant.

And the closes on long-locked capital, as you say, they’re very lumpy. Some of these when you come through with flagship products those are multibillion products, sometimes spread across multiple closings. But as you say, it will be lumpy, but those are all very significant things. I don’t declare.

We did have some additional pieces in, but there was nothing that was sort of a meaningful close on long-locked. Which again, if you look across the breadth and diversity of that product set across the Affiliates we sort of talked about, it’s quite unusual to not have anything. But again, as I said, it was just the accident of how things stacked up.

And then I think our petrodollar, kind of the exposures, still one of the lowest I think in the industry frankly. But it’s still a couple - probably a couple of percentage is probably how we’d characterize that..

Sean Healey

And, again, all of that is separate and apart from the very elevated. In fact, I think I heard Nate use the word fantastic, which is not a typical Nate-word, RFP and finals activity. So we feel very good about current trends, especially given our product set and performance..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of William Katz with Citigroup. Please proceed with your question..

William Katz

Okay. And thanks so much. I’m just kind of curious, in terms of guidance for this year. I appreciate you giving us next year as well. You’ve narrowed down the range pretty substantially. And feel like the midpoint phased down about $0.50.

How much of that just relates to the timing of the economics of the deals versus perhaps a little bit less performance fee dynamic going into the end of the year?.

Sean Healey

Yes. So the short answer is it is primarily related to the timing of the financing and the quarter lag of reporting. And then there is a bit of it that’s performance fee. Maybe just to give you the backdrop, but the last time we gave guidance are - at the time we gave that guidance in the quarter which was May 2, we were already up above 1%.

And as you can see from our AUM table, we experienced about 1.3% market change for the full quarter. And I also we note that FX impacted it by about 0.5% negative. So we really from the last time we gave guidance, markets really haven’t changed materially. So it really was not market related.

And then, when you look at what happened quarter-to-date July, we’ve effectively experienced about 2% up in our blend which would be exactly consistent with what a quarter would expect. So there is really no change to our forecast with respect to beta, because we got the 2% that I just described.

So really the three items are the quarter lag, closed in July Capula, but we won’t report until the fourth quarter, expect to close Winton in October, but won’t report till the first quarter of 2017. But we will have the revolver balance and the 2.5 million share issuance in this calendar year. And so, that’s the first bit.

The second bit then would be our model convention, given the pacing of due investments, the $1.3 billion I mentioned earlier, we would from a guidance and a model perspective not assume anymore share repurchases. So that has an impact. And then lastly, we’ve taken down our performance fee expectation just modestly, but that’s the third piece here..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Chris Shutler with William Blair. Please proceed with your question..

Andrew Nicholas

Hi, good morning. This is actually Andrew Nicholas calling in for Chris. I just wanted to talk briefly or ask a question on the fiduciary rule.

If you guys wouldn’t mind just reminding us what percentage of your EBITDA is exposed to the rule or kind of exposed to US retirement accounts? And then, any thoughts more generally on the shelf space, distributors potentially changing and maybe just more broadly how you expect AMG to be impacted?.

Nathaniel Dalton

So this is Nate, I’ll take that one. So I think the short answer, right, is that we don’t think the DOL rules will have a significant impact on our business and maybe just at a first answer, at a bit of a high level. But our Affiliates that are interacting with retirement advisors, retirement investors are already fiduciaries.

And so there were time that a piece of our business is modest. It’s actually, frankly, an area where we should able to grow our business and there should be real opportunities for us there over time. That said, right, there definitely going to be ways that the rules are impacting the way products are sold by intermediates you work with.

And that is where most of our retirement business is. And so, we’re probably thinking about this the same way as many others are from that perspective, which is, okay, what are the things we can be doing to be a supportive partner as we are sort of working through - as they’re working through primarily, but as they are working through that.

So, again, not a particularly large piece of our business, the places that we’re interacting directly already with retirement investors were already fiduciaries. It’s 100% of our business. And so, it really is for us the question, how do we really support our channel partners..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Dan Fannon with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question..

Dan Fannon

Thanks, Sean. I guess, could you talk a bit about the new investment outlook and kind of what’s happening there.

And maybe, post-Brexit that volatility effect really changes the potential for deals in the short-term, and then also kind of pricing of - we’re seeing evaluations come in given what we’re seeing in the public markets for what the traditional - or their evaluations coming-in in?.

Sean Healey

Sure. As you heard us say in the prepared remarks, generally speaking, the new investment pipeline continues to be strong. I guess, I would say looking back over what we’ve done over the last year and trying to imagine looking forward, I think, there is probably a little more balance in the mix of little more traditional and perhaps a bit more U.S.

based. But that’s I think, just the - really just the incidental element of the pipeline in our relationship set and not anything that I would call an enduring trend, I think, because the overall opportunity is very much global and includes, of course, excellent alternative firms as well as traditional loan only.

So to your question about whether the recent volatility has done anything to impact the pipeline, I would say, not, not really. I mean, I could maybe argue that to the extent that markets have recovered that there might be a greater inclination to move forward.

But it’s not anything, we’ve seen from the discussions that we’re in the midst of and in terms of the forward part of the pipeline that continues to be positive with, I would say, transactions that we’ve been working on, as well as ones that we’re just at the earlier stages.

And finally, with respect to your question about pricing, I would say, for the best firms it’s you always have to pay fair prices. We, as you know, don’t participate in auctions, don’t try to quote, win actions.

And firms which choose to partner with AMG are making a much broader decision, beyond just the valuation of the portion of the firm’s revenues that were acquiring in a short transaction.

There are pockets of the industry, I would call out probably, private equity firms where there is a lot of activity, and I would say a supply/demand balance among buyers and sellers which is less favorable. But even there we still find opportunities to invest in a sensible basis.

And overall, it continues to be very much an execution of our new investment strategy in the same way that we’ve been doing it for two decades, building on relationships that we’ve established over years, and then making investments as a product of all the relationships and the description of our investment structure and how that fits with the prospective Affiliates’ long-term succession plans..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Robert Lee with KBW. Please proceed with your question..

Robert Lee

Thanks. Good morning. I guess my first question is actually in the high net worth flows. I mean, they were pretty strong this quarter and they’ve been actually a fairly positive for a while now.

Can you maybe give us a little bit of color on that? Is that coming a lot from - I know they’re not particularly large - but is a lot of that coming from your initiatives in the RIA market or maybe little more color on what’s driving the strong flows in that channel?.

Nathaniel Dalton

Sure, so as you said, we’ve been - I think our Affiliates have done a really nice job in the channel.

The biggest driver in the quarter and over this period sort of has been the strong flows of - disseminated through the broker dealer channel, including through AMG funds, which has also got a distribution platform for those and the operational platform for those products as well.

But as you say, the Wealth Partners - the AMG Wealth Partners is developing some real nice traction with a very significant contributor this quarter, and has been over the last four or five quarters.

And most of that, as always, most of that is due to the really good work of those Affiliates - those very high-quality leading independent RIAs are doing themselves, but we are also doing some - we are also exploring and have now launched a few initiatives to help augment their new business development, and I think some of those are starting to take hold as well, so I think that’s contributing..

Operator

Thank You. Our next question is a follow-up from the line of Brian Bedell with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question..

Brian Bedell

Hi, great. Thanks for taking the follow-up. Just wanted to circle back on just the last part of that my prior question on just the month of July, I think, Nate, you talked about the delayed fundings of around $2 billion. I just wanted to see if that actually came in July, and if the institutional channel is substantially positive in July.

And Jay on the guidance, just the range for performance fee assumptions within your guidance? And on the net flow, on the bottom side, is that still a positive organic growth assumption on the bottom side of the net flows for guidance?.

Nathaniel Dalton

Let me start with the question about July. I don’t think, we are going to be able to do kind of month by month. I think, July was a good month, and I think we sort of characterized the sort of sizing of stuff that slipped into the back half of the year.

So I think those are both - it was a good month and that is a positive kind of tailwind for the next two quarters, yes..

Jay Horgen

So I am going to - I think, you’re asking about 2017, Brian, in terms of performance fees?.

Brian Bedell

Yes..

Jay Horgen

So I’ll address it. I’d just say that as we look at the estimate for 2016, we’ve already booked $6.01, and so really we’re just looking at the second half of the year, we’re making a judgment on where we are. But the year is still early and that’s why we have a range, primarily for performance fees on that $12.30 to $13.30.

But when you look out into 2017, and I should have said this earlier, a lot of these items that really just affect 2016, they go away. They normalize, because we’ll have the full year effect of Winton and Capula, we’ll obviously have the full year effect of the share count, and we will have a new year with respect to performance fee opportunity.

When you look at performance fee opportunity and we continue to add incremental breadth and diversity to this product set with the addition of our 2016 Affiliates, and when you take them all together. We expect kind of low-teens contribution for performance fees at the midpoint of the 2017 guidance range.

And obviously there is a range around that, makes up a good part of that $2 range. The other thing that you mentioned is organic growth, and yes we do assume positive organic growth, and a range as well, more modest amount at the low end and more robust amount at the top end..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of William Katz with Citigroup. Please proceed with your question..

William Katz

Okay, thanks so much. Just two questions, actually.

Number one, Jay could you talk more about the decision to use equity in the Winton and Capula transactions versus just funding it from operations and taking on the dilution, and what that might mean for go-forward buying power? And then on the real assets in private equity, are those three platforms you have called out, are they actually in the market right now for some mandates? Thank you..

Jay Horgen

So I’ll go first. Yes, so, Bill, going back to the backdrop here was we did $1.3 billion in the first six months of announced deals. The forward equity structure, which we’ve used several times in the past, really gives us the option to issue equity.

I think the third consideration is our leverage ratio of debt-to-EBITDA is just about two times now, call it 2.1.

So those things taken together, we want to make sure that we have ability to execute on our new investment strategy as we obviously want to pick up the very best highest quality boutique Affiliates, when they come to us, so that we have no interruption there, we obviously also want to keep our leverage at a reasonable level.

So that’s really the two main drivers as to why we chose or why we are choosing to issue 2.5 million shares later this year. It does preserve in both respects, our ability to execute, and as we look forward we expect to continue to execute. So really it is in preparation and getting ready for the next wave of new investments..

Nathaniel Dalton

And then, on the private capital, there’s not a lot we can sort of say about it other than, I’d say what, there is good demand for some of the products. They do have plans, sort of capital raise plans for the back-half of the year.

And I think the thing that’s driving the timing or a thing that’s driving the timing, I don’t want to say it’s the only thing, but a thing that is driving the timing has been the pace of putting capital to work from prior things and whatnot.

So it really is just good underlying demand trends and just the question of when they bring products to market..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Blostein with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question..

Alexander Blostein

Thanks for the follow-up guys. Just hoping I can get your updated thoughts on - thoughts around capital management and buyback specifically. So I understand the philosophy around 50% of cash flow.

But given where the valuation is for the stock and significantly, I guess, improved capital flexibility from just increased cash flow generation, how are you guys thinking about opportunistic buybacks here?.

Sean Healey

Well, to just correct and maybe it’s just semantics, but it’s not a philosophy, it’s a model convention to allow or illustrate the magnitude of the impact on our earnings from the use of the cash that the business generates.

So how do we spend the $1 billion in EBITDA that the business generates is, of course, a much more important and relevant question than it was three years ago, five years ago. We have a long track-record of returning capital to shareholders, when we see periods of relatively lower new investment opportunities.

And over time, inevitably as the business grows there will be fewer and fewer periods where all of the cash or the largest part of the cash is used up by new investment opportunities. And so what we see going forward and in terms of the quality and pacing and magnitude of new investments is hard to gauge.

As you’ve heard us say, we continue to be very optimistic about our prospects for adding outstanding new affiliates which will generate earnings accretion, and broaden and diversify our product set and enhance our business in another way.

So to the extent we have those opportunities that that will continue to be the primary focus of our capital activity.

That’s said, inevitably, the pacing of new investment opportunities, and again, over time as the business grows, the repurchase of shares will continue to be and over time maybe, I would say, even be a more important element of our capital management.

That part is philosophy, and the commitment to return capital, and not to just build cash on the balance sheet, is also part of our philosophy.

But the amount and timing of repurchase relative to new investments is difficult to forecast and I think if you look at our track record we expect that that we will continue to do both and do both in a meaningful way..

Operator

Thank you. Mr. Healey, there are no further questions at this time. I’d like to turn the floor back to you for any final remarks..

Sean Healey

Thank you again for joining us this morning. As you’ve heard, we’re pleased with our results for the quarter and more confident in our ability to continue to create shareholder value for both organic growth and accretive investments in new affiliates. We look forward to speaking with you again in October. Thanks..

Operator

Thank you. This concludes today’s teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation..

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