Cohen & Steers Earnings: Interest Rate Headwinds Continue To Affect Flows and Market Gains
There was little in narrow-moat Cohen & Steers’ CNS first-quarter results that would alter our long-term view of the firm. We are leaving our $72-per-share fair value estimate in place. We view the shares as being modestly undervalued right now.
Cohen & Steers closed out the March quarter with $79.9 billion in total assets under management, down 0.6% sequentially and 21.8% on a year-over-year basis. Net outflows of $497 million during the March quarter continued the trend of negative flows that started during the second quarter of 2022. With fixed-income securities and funds offering equivalent and higher yields than REITs right now, with less risk for investors, we expect organic AUM growth to be difficult in the near term.
With average AUM down 17.8% year over year, first-quarter revenue declined 18.2% when compared with the prior year’s period. We continue to expect revenue to decline at a 10%-15% rate this year, as Cohen & Steers should post better top-line results in the back half of the year as it laps more difficult 2022 results. Our five-year forecast (which includes an equity market correction midway through our projection period) has revenue growing at a low- to mid-single-digit rate on average annually.
As for profitability, the company’s adjusted operating margins of 35.6% during the March quarter were 730 basis points lower than 2022 results, reflecting the negative side to the operating leverage in the asset manager’s business model. Even so, we are projecting Cohen & Steers’ operating margins to recover over the next five years, with adjusted GAAP operating margins in a 39%-43% range, compared with 41.5% on average during 2018-22.
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