NYSE:JHG Janus Henderson Group Q4 2024 Earnings Report $1.43 -0.11 (-7.14%) As of 04/16/2025 04:00 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast Annexon EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.07Consensus EPS $0.94Beat/MissBeat by +$0.13One Year Ago EPS$0.82Annexon Revenue ResultsActual RevenueN/AExpected Revenue$677.56 millionBeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/AAnnexon Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2024Date1/31/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateFriday, January 31, 2025Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsAnnexon's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Monday, May 12, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, May 15, 2025 at 12:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Annexon Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJanuary 31, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning. Speaker 100:00:00My name is Adam, and I will be your conference facilitator today. Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Janus Henderson Group Fourth Quarter and Full Year 20 24 Results Briefing. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer period. In the interest of time, questions will be limited to one initial and one follow-up question each. Speaker 100:00:19In today's conference call, certain matters discussed may constitute forward looking statements. Actual results could material differently from those projected in the forward looking statements due to a number of factors, including, but not limited to, those described in the forward looking statements and risk factors sections of the company's most recent Form 10 ks and other more recent filings made with the SEC. Janus Henderson assumes no obligation to update any forward looking statements made during the call. Thank you. It is now my pleasure to introduce Ali Dibadj, Chief Executive Officer of Janus Henderson. Speaker 100:00:48Mr. Dibadj, you may begin your conference. Speaker 200:00:52Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us today on Janus Henderson's 4th quarter and full year 2024 earnings call. I'm Ali Dibadj, and I'm joined by our CFO, Roger Thompson. In today's call, I'll start with some comments on the momentum being generated across the business. Roger will then go through the quarterly results. And after that, I'll provide an update on the strategic progress we made over the last 12 months. Speaker 200:01:14After those prepared remarks, we'll take your questions. Turning to Slide 2. 2024 demonstrated several signs of clear progress at Janus Henderson. This progress was a result of colleagues who locked arms collaboratively as one firm to continue building our momentum by accomplishing many new and major milestones that support our purpose of investing in a brighter future together and our strategy. We're encouraged that our net flows turn positive in 2024, finishing the year with $2,400,000,000 of net inflows. Speaker 200:01:46This is a tremendous accomplishment and has vastly improved from only 2 years ago when we experienced $31,000,000,000 of net outflows. Delivering positive active flows is a key differentiator for Janus Henderson in an industry with well documented active flow headwinds. The positive net inflows resulted from a diversified set of regions and investment strategies. In the intermediary channel, North America, EMEA and Latin America and Asia Pacific all delivered positive flows in 2024. And at the firm level, there were 29 investment strategies that produced greater than $100,000,000 in net inflows, a roughly 40% increase compared to the prior year. Speaker 200:02:26In addition to the net inflows, Janus Henderson generated new net revenue in both the 3rd and 4th quarters. Fee pressures are relentless in this industry, and not all AUM is created equally. So we are pleased with that result. We're seeing success across a mix of capabilities and regions, including higher fee strategies such as hedge funds and thematics. This has enabled Janus Henderson to maintain a relatively resilient fee rate. Speaker 200:02:51Our 2024 net management fee rate of 48.6 basis points has decreased only 1 basis point over the last 2 years. Given feedback from shareholders, we are also happy bringing in new business where the headline fee rate may deviate from our current blended fee rate if and only if it has an attractive profitability profile. Our fee rate and profitability management are 2 of the key competitive differentiators for Janus Henderson. We are executing our strategic vision, which consists of 3 pillars: protect and grow our core businesses amplify our strengths not fully leveraged and diversify where clients give us the right to win. Under the diversify pillar, we expanded into differentiated private market capabilities for clients with the acquisitions of NBK Capital Partners in September and Victory Park Capital in October. Speaker 200:03:37As I said before, both are skating to where the puck is going on behalf of clients. NBK allows Janus Henderson early entry into the rapidly expanding emerging markets private capital space, and VPC specializes in asset backed lending. Both have unique origination that is the envy of some of our larger alternative peers. Within the Amplify pillar, we acquired Tabula Investment Management in July and have moved quickly to begin leveraging the business with our 1st European ETF launches occurring in the Q4 with more to come in 2025. In September, we announced a unique and innovative affinity partnership with the American Cancer Society. Speaker 200:04:16Through this pioneering partnership, Janus Henderson is donating the equivalent of 50% of its management fee revenue from all AUM in our government money market fund. This partnership allows us to enter the undifferentiated $6,000,000,000,000 and growing money market category with a distinctive product that is extremely hard to replicate and benefits an incredible cause. We invested in our brand to strengthen our profile, drive our business forward and communicate our purpose of investing in a brighter future together for the over 60,000,000 people globally who directly or indirectly rely on Janus Henderson for their financial well-being. We are investing in technology, including AI, as part of our ongoing efforts to improve the ways we work by embracing innovative technologies. An example is leveraging AI and machine learning in our North American client group to deepen existing client relationships and establish new ones. Speaker 200:05:08We also launched a collaborative tool for our RFP team, which was the 1st generative AI tool developed internally and put into production by Janus Henderson colleagues. Janus Henderson is home to incredibly talented people, and we believe we are becoming a destination of choice in the industry. Attracting and retaining the best talent enables us to deliver for clients and execute our strategy over the long term. Finally, our strong financial results and cash flow generation enable us to return $458,000,000 of cash to shareholders in 2024 through the quarterly dividend and share repurchases, while maintaining the flexibility to invest in the business on behalf of clients. The 2024 results on Slide 4 illustrate our tangible progress in the business. Speaker 200:05:52Long term investment performance remains solid with over half of our AUM ahead of benchmark on a 3, 5 10 year basis. Total AUM increased 13% in 2024, mostly reflecting strong markets, alpha generation and positive net flows. Ending AUM of $378,700,000,000 is 5% higher than the 2024 average AUM, providing a tailwind as we begin 2025. As I discussed earlier, net flows were positive, improving for the 2nd consecutive year and resulting in a 1% organic growth rate. Financial results remain solid, and our financial performance and strong balance sheet continue to provide us the ability to invest in the business organically and inorganically and return cash to shareholders. Speaker 200:06:36I'll now turn the call over to Roger to run you through the detail of the quarterly financial results. Speaker 300:06:41Thanks, Ali, and thank you for joining us on today's call. Starting on Slide 5 and a look at our quarterly results. As Ali has discussed our solid investment performance, I'll touch briefly here on AUM, flows and EPS. Net flows were positive for the 3rd consecutive quarter at $3,300,000,000 and ending AUM was down 1% from the 3rd quarter as adverse markets and currency adjustments offset the net inflows. Our financial results are strong. Speaker 300:07:09Better top line revenue provided by positive markets, a stable net management fee rate, net inflows and outperformance delivered by our investment teams coupled with operating leverage resulted in adjusted diluted EPS of $1.07 a 30% increase compared to the same period a year ago. Our financial performance and strong balance sheet continue to give us the flexibility to invest in the business, both organically and inorganically and return cash to shareholders. On Slide 6, we'll look at the investment performance in more detail. Investment performance versus benchmark remains solid with the majority of aggregate AUM beating their respective benchmarks over all time periods. The lower 5 year number compared to the prior quarter is primarily driven by the U. Speaker 300:07:58S. Mid cap growth strategy within our equities capability and was impacted by the narrow leadership driving market gains in the U. S. For small and mid cap growth stocks, which weighed on relative returns to benchmark. Performance for the strategy compared to peers remained solid, and it's in the 1st or second Morningstar quartile over all time periods. Speaker 300:08:21Overall, investment performance compared to peers is very competitive with at least 3 quarters of AUM in the top 2 Morningstar quartiles over 1, 3, 5 10 year time periods. Slide 7 shows total company flows by quarter. Net inflows for the quarter were $3,300,000,000 compared to net inflows of $400,000,000 last quarter and a significant improvement over net outflows of $3,100,000,000 a year ago. The year over year improvement was primarily driven by a 42% increase in gross sales and marks the best quarterly gross sales result in almost 3 years. The increase in gross sales compared to the prior year is across a broad range of regions and strategies, including ETFs, balanced, global small cap, Australian fixed income, thematics such as Life Sciences and Technology, hedge funds and global adaptive multi asset. Speaker 300:09:21Turning to Slide 8 and flows by client type. The positive trends in the intermediary channel continued with 4th quarter net flows of positive $3,500,000,000 For the year, intermediary net inflows were $8,700,000,000 a 5 percent annual organic growth rate. In the 4th quarter, the U. S. And Asia Pacific regions experienced net inflows with small outflows across EMEA and LATAM. Speaker 300:09:49In the U. S, net flows were positive for the 6th consecutive quarter, with the last 5 quarters each delivering at least €1,000,000,000 in net inflows. Several strategies delivered net inflows in the 4th quarter, including most of the active ETFs, multi sector credit and hedge funds. U. S. Speaker 300:10:10Intermediary is a key initiative under our Protect and Grow strategic pillar, and we're pleased that we're gaining market share. Under our Amplify strategic pillar, we've talked about amplifying our investment in client service strengths using various means, including vehicles in which to deliver our products. In addition to ETFs, flows into CITs, SMAs and hedge funds in this channel were all positive in the Q4 and for the full year. Moving to the EMEA and Latin American Intermediary segment. Here, we've spoken previously about expanding our strategic efforts. Speaker 300:10:48And whilst 4th quarter net flows in these regions were slightly negative, net flows were positive for 2024 and the best annual result since 2021. In APAC Intermediary, net flows were positive for the 2nd consecutive quarter and positive for the year. Within APAC, Asia had a particularly strong 2024 and is carrying momentum into 2025. Institutional net inflows were $900,000,000 compared to net outflows of $500,000,000 in the prior quarter. Institutional net flows were aided by 10 distinct fundings between $100,000,000 $500,000,000 We're working to create a sustainable pipeline. Speaker 300:11:34We're pleased with the work our distribution team is doing, and we're encouraged by the leading indicators and increasing number of opportunities across all of our regions. Net outflows for the self directed channel, which includes direct and supermarket investors, were $1,100,000,000 flat to the same period a year ago. Slide 9 is flows in the quarter by capability. Equity flows were negative $2,500,000,000 which declined compared to the last quarter, but improved from negative $3,200,000,000 a year ago. Despite a challenging environment for active equities, the annualized growth sales rate for equities improved to 14% from 13% on a year over year basis. Speaker 300:12:194th quarter net inflows for fixed income were $5,200,000,000 which is a 26% annualized organic growth rate. Several strategies contributed to the positive fixed income flows. In the intermediary channel, fixed income active ETFs delivered strong positive flows of $4,900,000,000 in the quarter, led by flows in JAAA. Other strategies contributing to the intermediary positive flows were Multisector Credit and Australian Tactical Income. In Institutional, fixed income flows were also positive and led by Australian fixed income strategies. Speaker 300:12:57Net flows for the multi asset capability were positive for the first time in 3 years at $100,000,000 improving from net outflows of $400,000,000 and $1,400,000,000 in the prior quarter and prior year. The 4th quarter result was led by positive flows into the global adaptive multi asset and the balanced strategies. Balanced, which is our largest strategy, had its Q1 of positive flows since Q4 of 2021. And finally, net inflows in the alternatives capability were $500,000,000 driven primarily by pooled hedge funds. Moving on to the financials. Speaker 300:13:39Slide 10 is our U. S. GAAP statement of income. Before moving on to adjusted financial results, GAAP results this quarter include an expected $42,600,000 noncash nonoperating accounting release of accumulated foreign currency translation losses related to subsidiary entities liquidated this quarter. This amount is removed from adjusted results. Speaker 300:14:04Continuing to Slide 11 and the adjusted financial results. 4th quarter and full year 2024 adjusted operating results improved compared to the prior quarter and the prior year. The improvement was primarily due to higher average AUM, good investment performance generating higher performance fees and operating leverage. Adjusted operating income improved 20% and EPS improved 18% quarter over quarter. Improvements over the Q4 of last year were even stronger with operating income and EPS up 31% 30%, respectively, and year on year were up 31% and 34%, showing the consistency of our improvement. Speaker 300:14:50Adjusted revenue increased 16% compared to the prior quarter and 25% compared to the prior year, primarily due to higher management fees on higher average AUM and improved performance fees. Net management fee margin was 48.6 basis points, a slight increase over the prior quarter. Our full year net management fee margin of 48.6 basis points was down less than 0.5 basis point compared to 2023 and only 1 basis point lower than 2022. Janus Henderson's net management fee margin continues to be a differentiator compared to many of our peers given the fee pressure headwinds experienced in the asset management industry. 4th quarter performance fees of $68,000,000 included performance fees of $74,000,000 generated primarily from a number of funds and capabilities with December 31 crystallization dates. Speaker 300:15:43Partially offsetting this revenue was negative $6,000,000 from U. S. Mutual fund performance fees. Whilst negative, U. S. Speaker 300:15:50Mutual fund performance fees have improved significantly compared to the negative $17,000,000 in the Q4 of 2023. Continuing on to expenses. Adjusted operating expenses in the 4th quarter increased 14% to $363,000,000 primarily reflecting higher incentive compensation and previously communicated expected increases in non compensation expenses. Adjusted employee compensation, which includes fixed and variable costs, was up 18% compared Speaker 100:16:22to Speaker 300:16:22the prior quarter, primarily from higher incentive costs on higher revenues and fixed costs related to the consolidation of acquisitions beginning in the Q4. Adjusted LTI decreased 6% compared to the prior quarter, largely due to mark to market on mutual fund share awards. In the appendix, we've provided the usual table on the expected future amortization of existing grants along with an estimated range for 2025 grants. The 4th quarter adjusted comp to revenue ratio was 42.4%, and our full year comp ratio was 44%, in line with previously provided expectations and improved from 2023. Adjusted non comp rating expenses increased 15% compared to the 3rd quarter, primarily due to expected higher marketing and G and A expenses. Speaker 300:17:15On a full year over year basis, adjusted non comp expenses increased 9%, which is in line with our expectation of the percentage growth to be at the higher end of mid- to high single digit growth. As I mentioned on previous earnings calls, we anticipated adjusted non compensation costs to accelerate in the second half of the year related to attractive ROI investments supporting areas of momentum in our business and the consolidation of VPC beginning in the Q4 and the full costs of NBK. With respect to 2025 expense expectations, we expect a compensation ratio in the range of 43% to 44% in 2025 compared to 44% in 2024. This range assumes AUM as of the 31st December and 0 market assumption in 2025. For non compensation, we expect mid- to high single digit percentage growth as a result of the investments supporting strategic initiatives and operational efficiencies as well as inflation and the full year impact of the consolidation of VPC, MBK and Tabula. Speaker 300:18:22To offset where we can, we'll continue to be mindful of our discretionary cost base and be disciplined in our cost management. Finally, we expect the firm's tax rate on adjusted net income attributable to JHG to be in the range of 23% to 25%. Our 4th quarter adjusted operating margin was 36%, an increase of 180 basis points from a year ago. Full year 2024 adjusted operating margin was 34.4%, an increase of 3.50 basis points. Adjusted diluted EPS was $1.07 up 18% from the prior quarter and up 30% from the Q4 2023. Speaker 300:19:09Skipping over Slide 12 and moving to Slide 13 and look at our liquidity profile. Our capital position remains strong. Cash and cash equivalents were $1,200,000,000 as of the 31st December, which is roughly flat to the end of last year as excess cash flow generation was used to support our inorganic investments, fund our quarterly dividend and to repurchase 6,100,000 shares in 2024. Our return of excess cash is consistent with our capital allocation framework. We'll look to return capital to shareholders where there isn't an immediately more compelling investment either organically or inorganically in the business. Speaker 300:19:49In September 2024, we successfully completed a $400,000,000 issuance of senior unsecured notes at a coupon rate of 5.45 percent due in 2,034. In November, the proceeds of that issuance were used to execute a make whole call to repay the $300,000,000 of notes due in August 2025. The Board has declared a €0.39 per share dividend to be paid on the 27th February to shareholders of record as at the 11th February. In summary, we've maintained a strong liquidity position, and we continue to balance the capital needs and the investment opportunities of the business with returning capital to shareholders. Finally, Slide 14 looks at our annual return of capital to shareholders. Speaker 300:20:36We've been disciplined and consistently returning excess capital to shareholders as the historical data reflects. Since 2018, we've returned 70% of our cash flow from operations or $3,000,000,000 to shareholders in the form of our quarterly dividend and accretive share buybacks. Our dividend has increased 11% and we've reduced shares outstanding by 21.1 percent since our first accretive buyback program commenced in the Q3 of 2018. In 2024, we returned 66% of our cash flow from operations to shareholders, including $250,000,000 in dividends and $208,000,000 in buybacks. Our capital allocation philosophy has not changed. Speaker 300:21:20We reserve cash for our regulatory capital requirements and our liquidity needs and then set aside capital for contractual obligations. We then look to use cash for organic and inorganic reinvestment in the business and then consider returning excess cash via dividends and share repurchases. Our return of capital reflects our positive financial outlook, our cash flow generation and a strong and stable balance sheet. Our buybacks and stable dividends do not impair our ability to execute M and A should the opportunity arise, and we continue to actively look to buy, build or partner to diversify where clients give us the right to win. With that, I'd like to turn it back over to Ali to give an update on our strategic progress. Speaker 200:22:06Thanks, Roger. Turn to Slide 15 and a reminder of our 3 strategic pillars of protect and grow our core businesses, amplify our strengths, not fully leveraged and diversify where clients give us the right to win. We are in the execution phase, and we believe this strategic vision has us on the path to, over time, consistently deliver organic growth. Over the next few slides, I'll highlight several examples of the progress made in 2024 across the three pillars. Moving to Slide 16, which details the improving business trends in the U. Speaker 200:22:37S. Intermediary channel. Net flows were positive for this channel for the 2nd consecutive year, resulting in a 7% organic growth rate compared to 1% growth in 2023, a tremendous result given industry headwinds. Very importantly, we're capturing market share in both gross sales and net flows. We've talked previously about our national brand campaign in the U. Speaker 200:22:58S, which was something new for Janus Henderson and a substantial change from what we've done in the past. The investment made has resulted in a strengthened brand profile that positions Janus Henderson as a trusted financial partner. As I mentioned earlier, we are investing in leveraging AI and machine learning to support the North America client group. We believe we are at the forefront of a technology, AI, which will fundamentally transform how we interact with and service our clients. The amount of data at our fingertips is immense, and the challenge and opportunity is how to turn this data into powerful and actionable information and acumen that will help Janus Anderson drive and anticipate our clients' needs, deliver differentiated insights and accelerate growth. Speaker 200:23:41Slide 17 highlights the meaningful progress made under the strategic pillar of Amplify. Our suite of active ETFs experienced another successful year. Net flows were positive $14,000,000,000 and AUM finished the year at $27,000,000,000 more than doubling in 2024 and equating to an annual growth rate of 79% over the last 5 years. With this growth, Janus Henderson is now the 8th largest provider of active ETFs and 3rd largest provider of active fixed income ETFs in the world. We have momentum in active ETFs in the U. Speaker 200:24:13S. And aim to build upon this momentum outside the U. S. With the acquisition of Tabula in mid-twenty 24. Janus Henderson quickly leveraged the expertise and technology of Tabula, launching our 1st active ETFs in Europe during the Q4. Speaker 200:24:27We anticipate launching a range of active European ETFs across equities and fixed income strategies in 2025, including JCL 0, a European version of JAAA, which launched earlier this month. These will take time to mature, but we are energized by the prospects. In September, Janus Henderson announced a partnership with Animoy and Centrifuge to manage Animoy's liquid treasury fund, a fully on chain tokenized fund issued on Centrifuge's public blockchain that provides investors with direct access to short term U. S. Treasury bills. Speaker 200:24:57Blockchain readiness and tokenization are key pillars underpinning Janus Henderson's innovation strategy, and the decision to partner with Anemo and Centrifuge in this way reflects the firm's commitment to digital assets and our desire to embrace disruptive financial technologies. In 2024, we established an effort to review our product set to identify and amplify opportunities for existing products that we overlooked, subscale products with strong investment performance and significant distribution potential. One such strategy is global small cap equity. We have world class regional small cap investment capability and launched this strategy 5 years ago to utilize this regional investment acumen in a global strategy. The strategy delivered strong investment performance but limited growth. Speaker 200:25:40We developed a sales plan, including infusing the strategy with additional seed capital to elevate its availability for platforms. In 2024, this strategy had $700,000,000 of net inflows from a $2,000,000 starting point to begin the year. This is a great example of our teams working collaboratively to deliver for our clients and embodies 2 of the firm's core values of together we win and clients come first always. In 2024, we established several new products and vehicles based on what our clients are telling us. We launched emerging markets debt, midcapgrowthalpha and income ETFs in the U. Speaker 200:26:15S. And Japan high conviction equity and Pan European high conviction equity in Europe. Elsewhere, we launched additional SMAs, CITs and hedge funds. Turning to Slide 18 and our 3rd pillar of diversify. We're expanding into differentiated private market capabilities for clients with the acquisitions of NBK Capital Partners and Victory Park Capital. Speaker 200:26:35NBK allows Janus Henderson early entry into the rapidly expanding emerging markets private capital space. In addition to enhancing product offerings for existing clients, the acquisition also provides Janus Henderson with the access to engage with new clients that include some of the largest and fastest growing pools of capital, such as the Middle East and Asian Sovereign Wealth Funds and Pensions, who want to actively invest globally, thereby expanding our footprint in the region. Victory Park Capital specializes in asset backed lending, which has emerged as a significant and differentiated market opportunity within private credit, and we believe it will remain appealing to clients as they increasingly look to diversify their private credit exposure beyond direct lending with unique origination, and VPC has that origination. Our joint venture with Pervicore has been ramping operations over the last 15 months. As a reminder, this was a de novo build, and it took some time to get people hired and operationally set up, and we are beginning to see real progress. Speaker 200:27:32As a testament to the differentiated model being built, PivotCore has had over 80 GP conversations in the 1st 15 months, showcasing demand from the private markets community for its solution. PivotCore is selling on 3 warehouse platforms and expects to add another this year. They are also expanding into RIAs and broker dealers. Pivacore has more products coming online in the upcoming months, and they are working with CPC on innovative solutions for the wealth channel. We continue to look actively to buy, build or partner to diversify where clients give us the right to win. Speaker 200:28:02The M and A pipeline is active, and we're going to be very disciplined in our approach. As we enter 2025, to be fair, we are not firing on all cylinders yet as there are many more areas at Janus Henderson that we believe can support our strategic ambitions, not overnight, but over time. Slide 19 provides a few examples. Our ongoing strategic efforts and execution are clearly starting to be manifested in our results. And while we are squarely on the path to consistently delivering organic growth, we are not yet at our destination. Speaker 200:28:34There are still several strategic ambitions across the business that we believe can contribute to future growth. In Protect and Grow, we've been realigning resources in our legacy channels and repositioning these businesses. 2 examples are the U. K. Intermediary and U. Speaker 200:28:47S. Direct channels, which combined represent over 20% of firm wide AUM. Under Amplify, there are several examples of strengths we have yet to fully leverage. In Institutional, we've talked publicly about the need to build a sustainable pipeline. The APAC region, which is 10% of AUM, is relatively small. Speaker 200:29:04However, Janus Henderson is recognized as a key player with many clients. We're in the nascent stages of leveraging Tabula and launching ETFs in Europe. In Diversified Alternatives, we are underpenetrated, and we believe we can increase market share. Lastly, we can continue to broaden our vehicle lineup where clients want us to do so, including SMAs and CITs. In our 3rd strategic pillar of diversify, our focus is to leverage our recent acquisitions in private credit, VPC and NBK and to provide alternatives to Private Wealth clients via Pravacore. Speaker 200:29:35We also remain active in looking at M and A opportunities to diversify where clients give us the right to win. Moving to Slide 20, which is an illustrative view of our strategy and where we believe it can take us. We are executing on our strategic plan and believe our strategy has us on the path to deliver organic revenue growth consistently. There is real progress in all three pillars of our strategic framework as evidenced by U. S. Speaker 200:29:58Intermediary in Protect and Grow, product development expansion in Amplify and VPC and BK and Privacore in Diversify. In addition to the tangible strategic progress, there are several areas of our business that we believe could help to drive future growth. Wrapping up on Slide 21. I'm proud of the progress made in 2024. I want to thank each and every one of my colleagues at Janus Henderson for their hard work and dedication and thank our clients who entrust us with their capital, a responsibility we take humbly and seriously as we continue to show real progress on our strategic path to deliver consistent organic growth. Speaker 200:30:35We are not at our destination yet, but we are clearly on our way. Net inflows for the year were $2,400,000,000 and are positive and aggregate over the past 2 years. Net new revenue was positive in the second half of the year, and we maintained a resilient net management fee margin. We amplified and diversified our businesses through inorganic opportunities, entering the European active ETF through Tabula and expanded into private markets with NPK and VPC. Our brand positioning is strengthening globally we have a strong balance sheet and good free cash flow generation, which enables us to return cash to shareholders and reinvest in the business and looking ahead, we believe we are squarely on the path to deliver consistent results for our clients, shareholders, employees and all our stakeholders. Speaker 200:31:18Let me turn the call back over to the operator to take your questions. Speaker 100:31:23Thank you. And our first question comes from Brennan Hawken from UBS. Brennan, your line is open. Please go ahead. Operator00:31:41Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Ali and Roger, curious about the ETF strategy. So momentum has been really quite solid, and it's really quite remarkable given the heritage in equities rather than fixed income. So you said in the past you're not really interested in clone type ETF products. Operator00:32:06So could you maybe give us an idea about how you're thinking about bringing equity products? We've seen a few filings and heard of a few filings. But what are the plans for 2025? And how big do you think that offering can get? Speaker 200:32:20Sure. Happy to start, Brennan. Thanks for the question. You're right. We're pretty proud of what the team has done with the ETF franchise. Speaker 200:32:29We're now the 8th largest provider of active ETFs in the world, period, and the 3rd largest provider of active fixed income ETFs by assets under management, and that's close to $30,000,000,000 We see enormous opportunity in the ETF landscape as a wrapper, not just because it's a wrapper that in some instances is better for clients' needs, and we can talk about the reasons there, but also because they wrap a really strong investment product that we have. And you mentioned the fixed income landscape in particular. It's a perfect example. We have now 4 fixed income ETFs that are above $1,000,000,000 each. And that's not because of the wrapper only, that's because we had really great investment performance, really great portfolio managers, really great research, really great teams who, if you look at the performance numbers, delivered really, a solid performance for our clients, but they weren't in the decision set, so to speak, of our client base. Speaker 200:33:32It's just not something we had gone after in a very heavy manner. And the ETFs allowed us to unlock that, and in fact, unlock it pretty well. So we think that we have the opportunity to build on the fixed income side on ETFs for sure. To your point though, that's allowed us to then enter the mindset of ETFs more broadly on the active side for equities too. So to your to what you noted, we've launched a couple on the equity side. Speaker 200:34:00There will be more launched on the equity side because again, we're taking things that are unique and differentiated from a foreign's perspective, not clones, but unique and different from an investment perspective and bringing that to clients in a foreign factor that clients appreciate. Now a lot of that discussion is around the U. S. Now outside the U. S, you'll note the Tabula acquisition that we made. Speaker 200:34:22That's been very, very helpful and a great integration for us to work together. And we're finding that there's enormous opportunity in Europe to drive ETF growth as well. And you may have heard this on other calls, but just bear repetition. The patterns we're seeing in the European markets on ETFs is similar to what we would have seen in the U. S, call it 7 or 8 years ago. Speaker 200:34:46Similar patterns in terms of growth, and we want to be part of the leadership there. And with Tableau, we think we can do that. We launched Japan High Conviction. We launched Pan European High Conviction, ETF forms. And most recently, we launched the European version of JAAA, so JCL 0. Speaker 200:35:07Again, we think there's enormous opportunity here. We want to be part of the leadership. And so far, we have Operator00:35:14been. Thanks for that color. That's helpful. Roger, my follow-up, I'd love to ask you about the 2025 outlook for expenses. So you mentioned that assumes flat markets. Operator00:35:28So curious if you could please let us know what kind of leverage operating leverage you'd expect in both comp ratio and on the sensitivity for non comp to upside from market beta? Thanks. Speaker 300:35:42Yes. Hi, Brendan. Yes, I mean, you've seen that over the last 2 years, and that should that would continue if markets do it to go up. So our comp ratio has come down by 1.8% over the last year. We've signaled it will go down on it should go down a little bit more with flat markets and that will continue. Speaker 300:36:04And the same thing in our op margin. Our op margin is up pretty significantly in percentage terms year on year. And positive markets, there is leverage in this business. We will continue to invest in the business. We've given guidance on costs. Speaker 300:36:21That is positive markets and positive sentiment. Operator00:36:26It may mean Speaker 300:36:26you do a little bit more on cost, but there's definitely leverage in the business. So if markets were to rise, then you would expect to see leverage both on the comp ratio coming down and the op margin going up. Operator00:36:39Right. But is there any rule of thumb whereas 100 basis points in markets translates to blank leverage? Or is it not that simple? Speaker 300:36:49It's not quite that simple. It depends where from, etcetera. So we'll see it as it will come. Operator00:36:55Okay. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 100:37:00The next question comes from Craig Siegenthaler from Bank of America. Craig, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:37:07Good morning, Ali. Hope everyone's doing well. Speaker 200:37:10Thanks, and you too. Speaker 100:37:13So I Speaker 400:37:13don't normally say these things, but I did want to congratulate you on the successful turnaround in place, which we know is very hard in Asset Management. I think this actually was Janus' first positive flow year since 2,009 for legacy Janus, even then was barely positive. Speaker 200:37:31Thanks. It's a team effort. We're putting one footprint for the other and hopefully the results continue to be okay. Speaker 400:37:39So, Ali, my question is on fixed income. So investment performance, currently very strong. I think the timing is pretty perfect for duration extensions. We're already seeing a nice lift in your flows there. We know there's many funds inside of that business, and we know there's a big one driving that. Speaker 400:37:59But I'm curious in terms of performance, what factors and themes do you attribute the strong performance to besides just security selection? Speaker 200:38:11So we are very pleased with the light that is being shone on the fixed income business. These teams, to your point, have performed extraordinarily well across many, many different strategies. 1, 3, 5, 10 year beating benchmark, 91%, 84%, 86%, 94%, Top 2 Morningstar quartiles, same time frames, 84%, 74%, 74%, 71%, 75%. I wish I could have gotten those types of scores in school. I mean these are really strong numbers. Speaker 200:38:44And we see it very broad. So areas like multi asset credit, multi sector income are there for investors who want things that are more income related obviously. We have obviously to your point the suite of fixed income ETFs, the JAAAs, but also JBBs, JAAA, JMBS among others that allow, institutional access to well, retail access to institutional type investments. We have very strong regional strategies. A little bit to your question, very strong in Australia, very strong in some parts of Europe. Speaker 200:39:20We have the emerging market debt strategy and really good high yield and other strategies, let alone some of the private credit stuff that we're doing. So it's fairly broad based. It does come certainly from, security selection, but also allocation depending on the strategy between, asset classes, between regions. Certainly, if you've read our themes for 2025, we believe, for example, that going to the securitized marketplace still sees a lot of opportunity for investors as opposed to kind of a typical corporate IG. So we still see opportunities in a lot of our fixed income portfolio. Speaker 200:39:59And we're again very pleased that people are paying attention to it. We're willing to invest and we are. And we want to grow that business quite substantially. Speaker 400:40:08Thank you, Ali. And just sticking with fixed income, but flipping the conversation from performance to flows. What is the outlook for 2025, just given the likely better industry flow outlook, your very good performance, you have money in motion from a very large competitor, and you also ended the year with a lot of momentum heading into the Q4. Speaker 200:40:31Well, we're going to continue to, as I said before, put one foot in front of the other and try to deliver on flows. And the pride that we have on delivering on flows isn't just for these types of calls, right? It's most importantly because that allows us to deliver for more clients and more end clients, to add to the 60,000,000 clients that we have around the world. We are hopeful that we can continue to deliver growth in that sector, not just in the ETF suite that we have in the U. S. Speaker 200:40:59But now in Europe, but also obviously for our clients in the institutional world, whether they be insurance clients as we're trying to grow those or others. So look, we're going to control what we can control and put one foot in front of the other, but hopefully the momentum as you suggest in your question that continues for us. Operator00:41:19Thank you. Speaker 100:41:23Next question comes from Bill Katz at TD Cowen. Bill, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:41:30And I appreciate the update and the guidance. Just thinking about the development you've seen in the Protect and Growth side, particularly on the Intermediary, which is the biggest swing factor for your business. And then on the Institutional side, the incremental opportunity. I was wondering if you could just unpack and maybe click in one more layer deeper in terms of what you're hearing from either the gatekeepers or sort of on the ground financial advisors that is allowing the acceleration of growth and sales, both net and gross. Is it just the brand campaign? Speaker 500:42:03Is it the efficacy? Is it the marketing? All of the above, the data seems very compelling to me. And then you mentioned that you're seeing some good signs in the build out of the sort of the institutional block. Sort of wondering what's resonating with the consultant community and how you think about that looking ahead? Speaker 500:42:20Thank Speaker 200:42:21you. Thanks, Bill. So let me tackle that in 2 buckets and Roger can jump in and redirect anywhere. First from the intermediary side, you're right, we're very pleased about the momentum, the partnership we've built with our clients and quote unquote, gatekeepers, but really we see them as clients. And I think that the U. Speaker 200:42:40S. Is the first place, as you know, that we've really implemented some of the changes and we're trying to broaden that out. And just to double click to your words, what we did in the U. S. Is we first and foremost made sure that we had the right people in the right seats. Speaker 200:42:53There are a lot of changes in the management teams that we put in place there, was step 1. We then want to make sure that production levels were high. And production levels were high, not just in terms of people running around and making every single call, but making sure that the data was supportive of whom they were calling, how often with what information. So there's a real big data exercise that I mentioned earlier on, I think will continue and help there. So the productivity was much higher. Speaker 200:43:24Yes, the promotional element or the marketing element helped quite a bit, putting us on people's radar screens, but also we have to tie compensation to growth for our new batch of people or somewhat changed batch of people. And then of course, we have to make sure the product was right. And that's not just product in terms of the investment strategy, that's also in terms of the communication, that's also in terms of the client service, that's also in terms of being there when a client wants to talk to us, a portfolio manager, me, whoever. So it's the compounding effect of all of that, that we've put together that we started in the U. S. Speaker 200:44:01And clearly, you've seen what's happened in the U. S. There, 6 consecutive quarters of positive flows now. The 2024 gross sales was up 36%, organic growth was up 7%. But your point, it's more broad on intermediary than just the U. Speaker 200:44:17S. Now. EMEA and LatAm intermediary channels are improving quite a bit. LatAm was positive for 2024. The EMEA region was positive flows for the second half of the year. Speaker 200:44:28So we're starting to see this brew. And I think it's all of those things, to answer your questions directly, all of those things together that we certainly hope, coupled always, always with performance that are helping us do well in the intermediary channels really around the world. On the institutional side, Speaker 100:44:49we Speaker 200:44:49are encouraged by what we've seen from a flows perspective in this past quarter and a couple of quarters ago. We are just continuing to try to build the pipeline. In particular for Q4, as Roger mentioned, there are 10 distinct fundings between $100,000,000 $500,000,000 that continue to support our efforts of getting out there and finding new institutional clients. And also importantly, as you mentioned, partnering with consultants, who see the stability that we've brought to the firm and our investment teams as well as, the lack of stagnation or ability to change and be innovative in the areas as well. And that success has been across regions, across asset classes so far. Speaker 200:45:33So if you think about positive flows in the 4th quarter, Asia ex Japan, Japan, Australia, Latin, Middle East, North America also positive flows on the institutional channel. Now I'm not saying our pipeline is always going to be perfect and we're always going to be positive flows in institutional, but certainly leading indicators are positive from RFP perspective as well. And look, could we chase AUM? We could. Not all AUM is created equally. Speaker 200:46:03We want to be mindful of a fee rate. But fee rate is really just a proxy of profitability. So if there are mandates in the institutional world that have lower fee rates but are more profitable, those are the things we will look at as well. And now we have the data to be able to make sure that's the case. So on institutional side, we'll continue to fill you in on more details as we progress through the year. Speaker 500:46:27Okay. And just as a follow-up, you mentioned the M and A story a little bit. I was just sort of wondering, obviously, you have a couple of deals that you're integrating into the New Year that seems to be going along very well. You're generating a ton of free cash flow. Your payout rate is only about 70%. Speaker 500:46:41So how do we think about the opportunity on the inorganic side? And I'm wondering if you could also talk about the possibility of beefing up your ownership of Privacore, which could then potentially increase your flow profile. Thank you. Speaker 200:46:54So let me start with the first one and I'll hand over on Privacore to Roger. The M and A pipeline is very robust, I think, for everybody in the industry, frankly. We will continue to buy, build or partner to support our strategy, to support Protect and Grow, to support Amplify and certainly to support Diversify, and we've shown that. But we're going to be very client led in all the M and A that we do. We do a lot of diligence on the companies and it's not just dollars and cents and numbers on spreadsheets. Speaker 200:47:23It's a lot of time with the management teams and making sure their cultural fit as well is there. That's one of the things that's been very important with the acquisitions and the partnerships we've built so far. We got what we expected from a cultural perspective, which knock on wood is very strong, let alone from a dollars and cents perspective. So we're going to be very, very disciplined there. I don't have a sense of timing, kind of underlying the spirit of the question of when M and A happens. Speaker 200:47:48I do know we're integrating these businesses now and we're quite busy doing that. But over time, if we see things that are opportune for us, we're going to partner with folks who want to grow with us and partner with folks that think that we're a better home for them. Roger, do you want to handle Provacor? Speaker 300:48:05Yes, sure. Remember, this was a de novo build from scratch. We're 15 months in. But we're definitely very optimistic about the interest being shown on both sides, I. E, we've got best in class managers of alternative assets pairing with some great relationships being built now in the warehouses and the broker dealers and the RIAs. Speaker 300:48:29So as you say, we own 49%. We're in active dialogue about the strategic options for that. We'll that may include potentially extending the exercise window to by the remaining 51%. But again, we'll talk about that over time. But we remain very excited about the privates that we're doing in a number of ways. Speaker 300:48:51Obviously, the acquisitions that Ali has talked about, but also Pivacore. Speaker 100:48:57The next question comes from Ken Worthington at JPMorgan. Ken, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:49:04Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. First, I'll start. The presentation you guys have put together very helpful. So thank you for that. Speaker 600:49:13In terms of questions, maybe starting with fee rate, you've been able to maintain and improve the fee rate for the last 7 quarters, so almost 2 years. If I look at mix, I assume strong equity markets over the last 2 years have had some positive contribution to that fee rate. I'll call it complementing, I think your commitment to being disciplined about pricing. If 2025 experiences more normal equity and fixed income market returns, what do you expect the fee rate to do? And I know there's a ton of puts and takes, which is why I asked the question, you've got new products, you've got transactions, you've got certain ramps. Speaker 600:49:51What is your sense? Does it continue to stay flat here? Or does it edge one direction or the other? Speaker 300:49:58Yes. Thanks, Ken. And you're quite right. A positive equity market does help the fee rate. If you in the appendix of the presentation, and thanks for your comments, so on 25, we've given the fee rates by asset class, which again may help a little bit of that. Speaker 300:50:17And also helps show that by asset class, fee rates aren't moving that much. Obviously, we have had significant growth in securitized and the fixed income average rate would have come down a little bit. But from here, it will depend on the growth from here. And what as Ali has talked about, we've got a range of things we're selling. So it is active product we're selling at active prices, the right active prices for the right product, but that ranges from enhanced index through to hedge funds. Speaker 300:50:53So it will depend on the mix. And obviously, we're also selling things now more in the alternative space. So you started to see the VPC fee rate come in. Obviously, as we look to grow that over time, that will increase the fee rate. But broadly, the fee rates come off 1% sorry, 1 basis point Speaker 100:51:15over 2 years, broadly flattish. Speaker 600:51:17Okay. So okay. Thank you. I'll try some fishing here on Animoy. You're managing their tokenized fund through, I assume, a sub advised relationship. Speaker 600:51:29You called this out. This seems like it could be interesting. I guess the question is why take on this business? It's hard to think that this is a big money generator. So I look to Blockchain and tokenization. Speaker 600:51:43Do you have more interest in that sort of technology? Like is there something underlying your willingness to kind of take on this business? Speaker 200:51:54Thanks for the question and for noticing it. Let me start with what this is and then expanding to the last part of your question, Ken. So just for everybody's knowledge, Animoy is effectively a asset manager that is very much in the tokenized world. And Centrifuge is the sort of platform that does the tokenization underneath it for asset managers, digitizes, manages and distributes funds that are chain focused. And the need that has become present is many institutional companies have on their balance sheet, tokenized coins or currencies. Speaker 200:52:42And most of what's happened is people have used Stablecoin to do that. And Stablecoin doesn't have a yield and that's okay when there is no yield. But now that there is a yield, many of these institutional players and some of them have very, very large balance sheets as it sounds like Ken you may know, are looking for other ways in the tokenized landscape to get yield. Stablecoins don't give them that. So they've looked for an opportunity and Animoy is providing that opportunity with the centrifuge backbone to provide, for example, treasuries, which have yield. Speaker 200:53:15And guess what? We know how to purchase and manage those. And so you're exactly right. We're in that ecosystem. And when they're in that ecosystem because there's a need for a tokenized asset manager or tokenized fund for us to be supporting a client view and a client need to have it. Speaker 200:53:34Now, let me take a little bit of a step back to your point of why we are in this. And I don't want to say this too loudly, I guess, but innovation is actually at the core of our corporate strategy. Blockchain readiness and tokenization are ways for us to amplify, protect and grow and also diversify our businesses. And we do think this collaboration is critical for us to be in the distributed ledger technology world to learn about it and to bring it perhaps forward for asset managers. I think if you take a step way back in our philosophy, we do think to the last part of your question that eventually there will be complete fungibility between private and public, liquid and illiquid assets, hard and soft assets. Speaker 200:54:27And if we can learn about that in this manner with 2 fantastic partners, we're willing to do that. And we want to be in fact one of the leaders into the forefront of this. To your point, it's not a huge tax on our system. It's not a huge cost to us. But it's a lot of learnings that we can bring to bear and hopefully be able to bring that for a broader set of clients. Speaker 600:54:50Okay, awesome. Thank you so much for taking the questions. Speaker 100:54:56The next question comes from Alex Blostein from Goldman Sachs. Alex, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:55:03Hey, good morning. Thank you. Just hoping to double click into a couple of strategic areas you guys talked about. I guess one being European ETF marketplace, clearly nice developments there. Could you spend a minute on sort of the economics in that market relative to the U. Speaker 700:55:18S. Market with respect to things like distribution cost and fee sharing arrangements, etcetera? Speaker 200:55:25Sure. It's a very nascent market. And so the pool is quite small, but it's expected to grow quite significantly. I'm trying to remember the number that's out there from folks, but I think it's $30,000,000,000,000 if I'm not mistaken, over the next few years. These are pie in the sky type numbers, but I think people imagine that could be the case over the next 10 years or something. Speaker 200:55:48We are not seeing any huge economic differentiation between the U. S. And Europe from an ETF distribution perspective at all because these are, as Roger was saying a second ago to the fee rate question, active strategies within these ETF wrappers. Part of the reason we brought Tabula on board and partnering with them is because they're already very well established in the marketplace, 10 plus regions, 10 plus exchanges. And that is an important part of the ecosystem that we as Janus Henderson did not have organic opportunities to get into, unless we were going to take a lot of time. Speaker 200:56:28So Tableau is helping us with that. We're not seeing real big economic differences on a per unit cost perspective. But of course, Alex, maybe to your question, the market is a smaller market. Speaker 700:56:41Yes. I got you. That makes sense. On your point about acquisition pipeline and you sounded, obviously like it's quite busy. It's busy for a lot of folks. Speaker 700:56:51You remain disciplined. But what are the areas that you feel are more likely to materialize in an actual transaction, either in terms of geography or product base? Speaker 200:57:03I'll tell you when we know because it's very varied right now. There are a lot of areas that we're looking at geographically, product wise, across asset classes. There's a lot of interesting opportunities out there. But again, we want to make sure that the right opportunities and that we can digest them appropriately and that they have the right culture. We can always support across protect and grow, across amplify and across diversify in businesses that we currently have, but also businesses that we're looking to get into. Speaker 200:57:33Clearly, in the past, we're talking about we've talked about privates, we've talked about geographic expansion, we've talked about ETFs. But beyond that, I think there are still really interesting opportunities out there. So I don't want to limit it too much to be fair. Suffice it to say that we're always going to be client led. We're always going to be disciplined. Speaker 200:57:50We want to make sure that we have the right cultural fit, not just financial fit. Speaker 700:57:56Yes. Makes sense. Great. Thanks. Speaker 100:58:02The next question is from Dan Fannon at Jefferies. Dan, please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 800:58:08Thanks. Good morning. I wanted to follow-up Roger on your guidance. Obviously, flat AUM and flat markets I get, but performance fees are another attribute that as we think about 2025 have the potential to improve given some of the performance as well as it looks like above high watermarks on some of the other strategies. So how should we think about performance fees into 2025 given what you know today and how that might translate into the expense profile and guidance you've given? Speaker 300:58:39Thanks, Dan. I guess the only thing that we obviously know is what's rolling off. So the U. S. Fulcrum fees, if you trailed off the 3 years and you added average performance for the last 3 years, then the U. Speaker 300:58:54S. Mutual fund performance fees would be sort of negative high single digits. Now that would be a meaningful improvement from the negative $39,000,000 in 2024. So that's one piece of performance fees. On the other side, we obviously have a range of things, both long only funds and absolute and hedge funds that are 1 year performance and can be 0 or can be big as we know. Speaker 300:59:26I guess the thing I would say in those is it is a range. It is a portfolio. We have about CHF 40,000,000,000 I think it is of assets which have performance fees on them outside of the U. S. Mutual funds. Speaker 300:59:41So but I can't tell you what it will be because I can't tell you what performance is. Relating to what that does for margin, they are they obviously have comp associated with them, but they are accretive performance fees are accretive to our margin. Speaker 801:00:02Okay. And in the I guess just following up on what's embedded in your guidance, is the any improvement in the mutual fund side and kind of embedded implied in the guidance you've given for the ranges for 2025? Speaker 301:00:16Yes. That's right. So yes, we model out as you do the U. S. Mutual funds and we make a reasonable assumption as to what might happen elsewhere. Speaker 301:00:25But as I say, I don't know what future performance will be. Speaker 101:00:31The next question comes from Mike Brown of Wells Fargo. Speaker 601:00:41The flow story at JAAA and the tangential products have been very, very strong. I just wanted to ask a little bit about the broadening out by client type. So Ali, you alluded to the fact that you're seeing kind of broader institutional use of the product. I wanted to just ask about kind of what inning that's in, in your view? And then are you seeing any increasing competitive pressure just given the success of the product and some of the new product launches that have come to market? Speaker 201:01:11Hey, Mike. Thanks for the question. So first on the institutional side of things, look, I think we're very, very early days. I'm not sure what inning we're in. Maybe we're in pre warm up or spring trading. Speaker 201:01:25I'm not sure. We're just we're starting. If you look at the RFP pipeline from a percentage growth perspective, across the board for us at least, it's up quite significantly 30%, 40%, high 40% s type percent around the world on average. So we see that. We see consultants giving us more and more upgrades and more and more positive momentum. Speaker 201:01:51I think when we're us looking at it, we've never had as many positive buy ratings or whatever the equivalent is on our strategies at the firm. So things are just starting, I would say. And look, we certainly hope we can deliver on growth in the institutional landscape. For us, again, the most important part is that we are delivering for our clients and they're starting to vote with their feet. But I think it's very, very early days on that front. Speaker 201:02:21From a competitive perspective, we're not really seeing a lot of pressure from a competitive perspective on fees or anything like that. Look, this is a very competitive environment. We have very able competitors. Everybody is scrapping in a business that isn't growing very well, right? We are all very proud of our organic growth rate. Speaker 201:02:43But remember, it's still in the very, very low single digit numbers. So it's a fight. And we certainly want to deliver the best we can for our clients to get there. I will give you the example very specifically around some ETF launches that we've had. And we continue to deliver on what our clients' needs are. Speaker 201:03:01And this industry is like any other industry, like your industry, like any industry. If you deliver on what your clients want, they will pay fair and reasonable prices for it. If you're delivering something that they don't want or you fail, then you have pressure. And so it's again the whole team effort for us to come together and deliver for our clients and in that manner, hopefully, keep them happy and keep our rates there. Speaker 101:03:34Our final question today comes from Michael Cyprys from Morgan Stanley. Michael, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 901:03:41Great. Thanks. Good morning. Thanks for squeezing me in here. Just wanted to come back to a comment, Ali, you made about innovation at the core of Janus Henderson's corporate strategy. Speaker 901:03:51I was hoping maybe you could talk about how you're thinking about and investing in technology to enhance your investment engines and support alpha generation. How do you see that evolving in the near term versus looking out more longer term? Speaker 201:04:08So thanks for the question. We as we've mentioned before and you saw some of the results in Q4, continue to invest in the business, both from a technology perspective but also from a people perspective, from a C Capital perspective and otherwise. When it comes to specifically on technology, we have a team that is they have day jobs, but we have a team that comes together and thinks about disruptive financial technologies or DFT. Shout out to them if they're listening to this call. Really thoughtful group of folks who keep an eye on what's going on externally, not just in our industry, but in other industries and bring that to bear within our organization. Speaker 201:04:48And they bring it to bear really in 3 big buckets. 1 exactly as you described it is how can we make more efficient, make more productive, deliver better results for clients on the investment process side of things, ingesting a lot of data or getting quicker access to information, etcetera. Now the second piece that we have is investing on how to best serve our clients, how we understand our clients better. I mentioned this earlier on in what's going on in U. S. Speaker 201:05:15Intermediary and one of the partnerships that we have there is to understand what client needs are, what advisors' needs are, so we don't waste their time, but we target and are able to deliver on what their needs are, so client service. And then the last one is what we call internally, how do we 10 times our people? We firmly believe that technologies like AI will help our people to do better and be more efficient. And human plus AI is better than AI alone. And so that's somewhere we're investing as well. Speaker 201:05:45So across the board, not just AI, but broad technology, those are the areas we're investing in. And look, you've seen that in our P and L. When Roger release the purse strings a little bit, he looks for ROI, but the ROI is there and we continue to deliver on that. Speaker 901:06:01And maybe just on that latter point on AI, maybe you could just double click on that for just a moment. Maybe you talk a little bit about how you're using and thinking about using generative AI and LLM tools across the organization. I think you mentioned an RFP use case broadly. How many use cases have you guys identified? How do you see that evolving in terms of putting them into production over the next year or 2? Speaker 901:06:23And as you think about over the near to medium term, how meaningful could this be the top versus bottom line results? Speaker 201:06:31So we're early days, less than a handful of things that are actually in production or being used right now, I would say. We clearly like frankly everybody else has their own version of a chat GPT or we call it chat JHI. We have those types of tools that are there for sure. So I don't really count that. But things like the RFP tool, and that team has worked tirelessly in improving that. Speaker 201:06:57I mean the good news is that we have capacity constraints on our RFP team. And so if we can give them tools to improve the speed and accuracy, at least with the first cut of RFPs, that's something that has been quite meaningful. And so that is something, thanks for noting it in the prepared remarks that we mentioned, we think that has a lot of opportunity to help 10 times our people. But I mentioned also work that's going on, for example, in the intermediary world. So we have an AI powered distribution intelligence platform, which looks at taking insights from the data that we have to enhance productivity, to drive growth, to understand again who to target and who to not waste time of because they're not interested in products X, Y or Z, but we can actually bring them product ABC that they're interested in and that their clients need. Speaker 201:07:45So we have good examples of that. It's tough and I don't want to dodge, I apologize. I just I don't really know dollars and cents wise how impactful it's going to be. What I do know is that there's a clear need for extra productivity and capacity within our organization and we're trying to provide that with some of these AI tools. AI tools that's something we're building internally, but a lot of them we're partnering externally with as well. Speaker 201:08:11I think everybody in the industry is probably thinking about this, and if not, they probably should. Speaker 101:08:17We have no further questions. So I'll hand the call back to Ali Dibadj for some concluding remarks. Speaker 201:08:23Thanks, Adam. Just wanted to end by thanking our clients for entrusting us with their capital and the capital of the $60,000,000 end clients that directly or indirectly rely on Janus Henderson. I want to thank everybody at Janus Henderson across the organization, whether you're in IT and ops working on AI or support functions or client groups or investments. These are strong set of results. We're putting one foot in front of the other, as I've said a couple of times internally and externally, and we want to deliver for our clients, our shareholders and all of our stakeholders. Speaker 201:08:56So, bye for now and talk to you next time. Speaker 101:09:01This concludes today's call. Thank you very much for your attendance. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAnnexon Q4 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Annexon Earnings HeadlinesAnnexon Reports Inducement Grant to New Employee Under Nasdaq Listing Rule 5635(c)(4)April 16 at 4:05 PM | globenewswire.comWhy Annexon Inc. (ANNX) Went Down On Thursday?April 10, 2025 | msn.comTrump Treasure April 19Thanks to President Trump… A $900 investment across5 specific cryptos… Could gain 12,000% so quickly that, just 12 months later…April 17, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Annexon Highlights Leadership in Advancing Clinical Research and Education for Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS) at American Academy of Neurology (AAN) 2025 Annual MeetingApril 3, 2025 | globenewswire.comHere's Why We're Not Too Worried About Annexon's (NASDAQ:ANNX) Cash Burn SituationMarch 31, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comBank of America Securities Remains a Buy on Annexon Biosciences (ANNX)March 10, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More Annexon Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Annexon? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Annexon and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About AnnexonAnnexon (NASDAQ:ANNX), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company, discovers and develops medicines for treating inflammatory-related diseases. Its lead candidate is ANX005, an investigational full-length monoclonal antibody, which is in Phase 3 clinical trial for the treatment of patients with guillain-barré syndrome; completed Phase II clinical trial for treating Huntington's disease; and in Phase II clinical trial for the treatment of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The company is also developing ANX007, an antigen-binding fragment (Fab) that is in Phase 3 program for the treatment of patients with geographic atrophy; and ANX1502, a novel oral small molecule inhibitor, which is in Phase 1 clinical trials for autoimmune indications. In addition, it develops ANX009, a C1q-blocking Fab that is in Phase I clinical trial for treating patients with lupus nephritis. 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There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning. Speaker 100:00:00My name is Adam, and I will be your conference facilitator today. Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Janus Henderson Group Fourth Quarter and Full Year 20 24 Results Briefing. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer period. In the interest of time, questions will be limited to one initial and one follow-up question each. Speaker 100:00:19In today's conference call, certain matters discussed may constitute forward looking statements. Actual results could material differently from those projected in the forward looking statements due to a number of factors, including, but not limited to, those described in the forward looking statements and risk factors sections of the company's most recent Form 10 ks and other more recent filings made with the SEC. Janus Henderson assumes no obligation to update any forward looking statements made during the call. Thank you. It is now my pleasure to introduce Ali Dibadj, Chief Executive Officer of Janus Henderson. Speaker 100:00:48Mr. Dibadj, you may begin your conference. Speaker 200:00:52Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us today on Janus Henderson's 4th quarter and full year 2024 earnings call. I'm Ali Dibadj, and I'm joined by our CFO, Roger Thompson. In today's call, I'll start with some comments on the momentum being generated across the business. Roger will then go through the quarterly results. And after that, I'll provide an update on the strategic progress we made over the last 12 months. Speaker 200:01:14After those prepared remarks, we'll take your questions. Turning to Slide 2. 2024 demonstrated several signs of clear progress at Janus Henderson. This progress was a result of colleagues who locked arms collaboratively as one firm to continue building our momentum by accomplishing many new and major milestones that support our purpose of investing in a brighter future together and our strategy. We're encouraged that our net flows turn positive in 2024, finishing the year with $2,400,000,000 of net inflows. Speaker 200:01:46This is a tremendous accomplishment and has vastly improved from only 2 years ago when we experienced $31,000,000,000 of net outflows. Delivering positive active flows is a key differentiator for Janus Henderson in an industry with well documented active flow headwinds. The positive net inflows resulted from a diversified set of regions and investment strategies. In the intermediary channel, North America, EMEA and Latin America and Asia Pacific all delivered positive flows in 2024. And at the firm level, there were 29 investment strategies that produced greater than $100,000,000 in net inflows, a roughly 40% increase compared to the prior year. Speaker 200:02:26In addition to the net inflows, Janus Henderson generated new net revenue in both the 3rd and 4th quarters. Fee pressures are relentless in this industry, and not all AUM is created equally. So we are pleased with that result. We're seeing success across a mix of capabilities and regions, including higher fee strategies such as hedge funds and thematics. This has enabled Janus Henderson to maintain a relatively resilient fee rate. Speaker 200:02:51Our 2024 net management fee rate of 48.6 basis points has decreased only 1 basis point over the last 2 years. Given feedback from shareholders, we are also happy bringing in new business where the headline fee rate may deviate from our current blended fee rate if and only if it has an attractive profitability profile. Our fee rate and profitability management are 2 of the key competitive differentiators for Janus Henderson. We are executing our strategic vision, which consists of 3 pillars: protect and grow our core businesses amplify our strengths not fully leveraged and diversify where clients give us the right to win. Under the diversify pillar, we expanded into differentiated private market capabilities for clients with the acquisitions of NBK Capital Partners in September and Victory Park Capital in October. Speaker 200:03:37As I said before, both are skating to where the puck is going on behalf of clients. NBK allows Janus Henderson early entry into the rapidly expanding emerging markets private capital space, and VPC specializes in asset backed lending. Both have unique origination that is the envy of some of our larger alternative peers. Within the Amplify pillar, we acquired Tabula Investment Management in July and have moved quickly to begin leveraging the business with our 1st European ETF launches occurring in the Q4 with more to come in 2025. In September, we announced a unique and innovative affinity partnership with the American Cancer Society. Speaker 200:04:16Through this pioneering partnership, Janus Henderson is donating the equivalent of 50% of its management fee revenue from all AUM in our government money market fund. This partnership allows us to enter the undifferentiated $6,000,000,000,000 and growing money market category with a distinctive product that is extremely hard to replicate and benefits an incredible cause. We invested in our brand to strengthen our profile, drive our business forward and communicate our purpose of investing in a brighter future together for the over 60,000,000 people globally who directly or indirectly rely on Janus Henderson for their financial well-being. We are investing in technology, including AI, as part of our ongoing efforts to improve the ways we work by embracing innovative technologies. An example is leveraging AI and machine learning in our North American client group to deepen existing client relationships and establish new ones. Speaker 200:05:08We also launched a collaborative tool for our RFP team, which was the 1st generative AI tool developed internally and put into production by Janus Henderson colleagues. Janus Henderson is home to incredibly talented people, and we believe we are becoming a destination of choice in the industry. Attracting and retaining the best talent enables us to deliver for clients and execute our strategy over the long term. Finally, our strong financial results and cash flow generation enable us to return $458,000,000 of cash to shareholders in 2024 through the quarterly dividend and share repurchases, while maintaining the flexibility to invest in the business on behalf of clients. The 2024 results on Slide 4 illustrate our tangible progress in the business. Speaker 200:05:52Long term investment performance remains solid with over half of our AUM ahead of benchmark on a 3, 5 10 year basis. Total AUM increased 13% in 2024, mostly reflecting strong markets, alpha generation and positive net flows. Ending AUM of $378,700,000,000 is 5% higher than the 2024 average AUM, providing a tailwind as we begin 2025. As I discussed earlier, net flows were positive, improving for the 2nd consecutive year and resulting in a 1% organic growth rate. Financial results remain solid, and our financial performance and strong balance sheet continue to provide us the ability to invest in the business organically and inorganically and return cash to shareholders. Speaker 200:06:36I'll now turn the call over to Roger to run you through the detail of the quarterly financial results. Speaker 300:06:41Thanks, Ali, and thank you for joining us on today's call. Starting on Slide 5 and a look at our quarterly results. As Ali has discussed our solid investment performance, I'll touch briefly here on AUM, flows and EPS. Net flows were positive for the 3rd consecutive quarter at $3,300,000,000 and ending AUM was down 1% from the 3rd quarter as adverse markets and currency adjustments offset the net inflows. Our financial results are strong. Speaker 300:07:09Better top line revenue provided by positive markets, a stable net management fee rate, net inflows and outperformance delivered by our investment teams coupled with operating leverage resulted in adjusted diluted EPS of $1.07 a 30% increase compared to the same period a year ago. Our financial performance and strong balance sheet continue to give us the flexibility to invest in the business, both organically and inorganically and return cash to shareholders. On Slide 6, we'll look at the investment performance in more detail. Investment performance versus benchmark remains solid with the majority of aggregate AUM beating their respective benchmarks over all time periods. The lower 5 year number compared to the prior quarter is primarily driven by the U. Speaker 300:07:58S. Mid cap growth strategy within our equities capability and was impacted by the narrow leadership driving market gains in the U. S. For small and mid cap growth stocks, which weighed on relative returns to benchmark. Performance for the strategy compared to peers remained solid, and it's in the 1st or second Morningstar quartile over all time periods. Speaker 300:08:21Overall, investment performance compared to peers is very competitive with at least 3 quarters of AUM in the top 2 Morningstar quartiles over 1, 3, 5 10 year time periods. Slide 7 shows total company flows by quarter. Net inflows for the quarter were $3,300,000,000 compared to net inflows of $400,000,000 last quarter and a significant improvement over net outflows of $3,100,000,000 a year ago. The year over year improvement was primarily driven by a 42% increase in gross sales and marks the best quarterly gross sales result in almost 3 years. The increase in gross sales compared to the prior year is across a broad range of regions and strategies, including ETFs, balanced, global small cap, Australian fixed income, thematics such as Life Sciences and Technology, hedge funds and global adaptive multi asset. Speaker 300:09:21Turning to Slide 8 and flows by client type. The positive trends in the intermediary channel continued with 4th quarter net flows of positive $3,500,000,000 For the year, intermediary net inflows were $8,700,000,000 a 5 percent annual organic growth rate. In the 4th quarter, the U. S. And Asia Pacific regions experienced net inflows with small outflows across EMEA and LATAM. Speaker 300:09:49In the U. S, net flows were positive for the 6th consecutive quarter, with the last 5 quarters each delivering at least €1,000,000,000 in net inflows. Several strategies delivered net inflows in the 4th quarter, including most of the active ETFs, multi sector credit and hedge funds. U. S. Speaker 300:10:10Intermediary is a key initiative under our Protect and Grow strategic pillar, and we're pleased that we're gaining market share. Under our Amplify strategic pillar, we've talked about amplifying our investment in client service strengths using various means, including vehicles in which to deliver our products. In addition to ETFs, flows into CITs, SMAs and hedge funds in this channel were all positive in the Q4 and for the full year. Moving to the EMEA and Latin American Intermediary segment. Here, we've spoken previously about expanding our strategic efforts. Speaker 300:10:48And whilst 4th quarter net flows in these regions were slightly negative, net flows were positive for 2024 and the best annual result since 2021. In APAC Intermediary, net flows were positive for the 2nd consecutive quarter and positive for the year. Within APAC, Asia had a particularly strong 2024 and is carrying momentum into 2025. Institutional net inflows were $900,000,000 compared to net outflows of $500,000,000 in the prior quarter. Institutional net flows were aided by 10 distinct fundings between $100,000,000 $500,000,000 We're working to create a sustainable pipeline. Speaker 300:11:34We're pleased with the work our distribution team is doing, and we're encouraged by the leading indicators and increasing number of opportunities across all of our regions. Net outflows for the self directed channel, which includes direct and supermarket investors, were $1,100,000,000 flat to the same period a year ago. Slide 9 is flows in the quarter by capability. Equity flows were negative $2,500,000,000 which declined compared to the last quarter, but improved from negative $3,200,000,000 a year ago. Despite a challenging environment for active equities, the annualized growth sales rate for equities improved to 14% from 13% on a year over year basis. Speaker 300:12:194th quarter net inflows for fixed income were $5,200,000,000 which is a 26% annualized organic growth rate. Several strategies contributed to the positive fixed income flows. In the intermediary channel, fixed income active ETFs delivered strong positive flows of $4,900,000,000 in the quarter, led by flows in JAAA. Other strategies contributing to the intermediary positive flows were Multisector Credit and Australian Tactical Income. In Institutional, fixed income flows were also positive and led by Australian fixed income strategies. Speaker 300:12:57Net flows for the multi asset capability were positive for the first time in 3 years at $100,000,000 improving from net outflows of $400,000,000 and $1,400,000,000 in the prior quarter and prior year. The 4th quarter result was led by positive flows into the global adaptive multi asset and the balanced strategies. Balanced, which is our largest strategy, had its Q1 of positive flows since Q4 of 2021. And finally, net inflows in the alternatives capability were $500,000,000 driven primarily by pooled hedge funds. Moving on to the financials. Speaker 300:13:39Slide 10 is our U. S. GAAP statement of income. Before moving on to adjusted financial results, GAAP results this quarter include an expected $42,600,000 noncash nonoperating accounting release of accumulated foreign currency translation losses related to subsidiary entities liquidated this quarter. This amount is removed from adjusted results. Speaker 300:14:04Continuing to Slide 11 and the adjusted financial results. 4th quarter and full year 2024 adjusted operating results improved compared to the prior quarter and the prior year. The improvement was primarily due to higher average AUM, good investment performance generating higher performance fees and operating leverage. Adjusted operating income improved 20% and EPS improved 18% quarter over quarter. Improvements over the Q4 of last year were even stronger with operating income and EPS up 31% 30%, respectively, and year on year were up 31% and 34%, showing the consistency of our improvement. Speaker 300:14:50Adjusted revenue increased 16% compared to the prior quarter and 25% compared to the prior year, primarily due to higher management fees on higher average AUM and improved performance fees. Net management fee margin was 48.6 basis points, a slight increase over the prior quarter. Our full year net management fee margin of 48.6 basis points was down less than 0.5 basis point compared to 2023 and only 1 basis point lower than 2022. Janus Henderson's net management fee margin continues to be a differentiator compared to many of our peers given the fee pressure headwinds experienced in the asset management industry. 4th quarter performance fees of $68,000,000 included performance fees of $74,000,000 generated primarily from a number of funds and capabilities with December 31 crystallization dates. Speaker 300:15:43Partially offsetting this revenue was negative $6,000,000 from U. S. Mutual fund performance fees. Whilst negative, U. S. Speaker 300:15:50Mutual fund performance fees have improved significantly compared to the negative $17,000,000 in the Q4 of 2023. Continuing on to expenses. Adjusted operating expenses in the 4th quarter increased 14% to $363,000,000 primarily reflecting higher incentive compensation and previously communicated expected increases in non compensation expenses. Adjusted employee compensation, which includes fixed and variable costs, was up 18% compared Speaker 100:16:22to Speaker 300:16:22the prior quarter, primarily from higher incentive costs on higher revenues and fixed costs related to the consolidation of acquisitions beginning in the Q4. Adjusted LTI decreased 6% compared to the prior quarter, largely due to mark to market on mutual fund share awards. In the appendix, we've provided the usual table on the expected future amortization of existing grants along with an estimated range for 2025 grants. The 4th quarter adjusted comp to revenue ratio was 42.4%, and our full year comp ratio was 44%, in line with previously provided expectations and improved from 2023. Adjusted non comp rating expenses increased 15% compared to the 3rd quarter, primarily due to expected higher marketing and G and A expenses. Speaker 300:17:15On a full year over year basis, adjusted non comp expenses increased 9%, which is in line with our expectation of the percentage growth to be at the higher end of mid- to high single digit growth. As I mentioned on previous earnings calls, we anticipated adjusted non compensation costs to accelerate in the second half of the year related to attractive ROI investments supporting areas of momentum in our business and the consolidation of VPC beginning in the Q4 and the full costs of NBK. With respect to 2025 expense expectations, we expect a compensation ratio in the range of 43% to 44% in 2025 compared to 44% in 2024. This range assumes AUM as of the 31st December and 0 market assumption in 2025. For non compensation, we expect mid- to high single digit percentage growth as a result of the investments supporting strategic initiatives and operational efficiencies as well as inflation and the full year impact of the consolidation of VPC, MBK and Tabula. Speaker 300:18:22To offset where we can, we'll continue to be mindful of our discretionary cost base and be disciplined in our cost management. Finally, we expect the firm's tax rate on adjusted net income attributable to JHG to be in the range of 23% to 25%. Our 4th quarter adjusted operating margin was 36%, an increase of 180 basis points from a year ago. Full year 2024 adjusted operating margin was 34.4%, an increase of 3.50 basis points. Adjusted diluted EPS was $1.07 up 18% from the prior quarter and up 30% from the Q4 2023. Speaker 300:19:09Skipping over Slide 12 and moving to Slide 13 and look at our liquidity profile. Our capital position remains strong. Cash and cash equivalents were $1,200,000,000 as of the 31st December, which is roughly flat to the end of last year as excess cash flow generation was used to support our inorganic investments, fund our quarterly dividend and to repurchase 6,100,000 shares in 2024. Our return of excess cash is consistent with our capital allocation framework. We'll look to return capital to shareholders where there isn't an immediately more compelling investment either organically or inorganically in the business. Speaker 300:19:49In September 2024, we successfully completed a $400,000,000 issuance of senior unsecured notes at a coupon rate of 5.45 percent due in 2,034. In November, the proceeds of that issuance were used to execute a make whole call to repay the $300,000,000 of notes due in August 2025. The Board has declared a €0.39 per share dividend to be paid on the 27th February to shareholders of record as at the 11th February. In summary, we've maintained a strong liquidity position, and we continue to balance the capital needs and the investment opportunities of the business with returning capital to shareholders. Finally, Slide 14 looks at our annual return of capital to shareholders. Speaker 300:20:36We've been disciplined and consistently returning excess capital to shareholders as the historical data reflects. Since 2018, we've returned 70% of our cash flow from operations or $3,000,000,000 to shareholders in the form of our quarterly dividend and accretive share buybacks. Our dividend has increased 11% and we've reduced shares outstanding by 21.1 percent since our first accretive buyback program commenced in the Q3 of 2018. In 2024, we returned 66% of our cash flow from operations to shareholders, including $250,000,000 in dividends and $208,000,000 in buybacks. Our capital allocation philosophy has not changed. Speaker 300:21:20We reserve cash for our regulatory capital requirements and our liquidity needs and then set aside capital for contractual obligations. We then look to use cash for organic and inorganic reinvestment in the business and then consider returning excess cash via dividends and share repurchases. Our return of capital reflects our positive financial outlook, our cash flow generation and a strong and stable balance sheet. Our buybacks and stable dividends do not impair our ability to execute M and A should the opportunity arise, and we continue to actively look to buy, build or partner to diversify where clients give us the right to win. With that, I'd like to turn it back over to Ali to give an update on our strategic progress. Speaker 200:22:06Thanks, Roger. Turn to Slide 15 and a reminder of our 3 strategic pillars of protect and grow our core businesses, amplify our strengths, not fully leveraged and diversify where clients give us the right to win. We are in the execution phase, and we believe this strategic vision has us on the path to, over time, consistently deliver organic growth. Over the next few slides, I'll highlight several examples of the progress made in 2024 across the three pillars. Moving to Slide 16, which details the improving business trends in the U. Speaker 200:22:37S. Intermediary channel. Net flows were positive for this channel for the 2nd consecutive year, resulting in a 7% organic growth rate compared to 1% growth in 2023, a tremendous result given industry headwinds. Very importantly, we're capturing market share in both gross sales and net flows. We've talked previously about our national brand campaign in the U. Speaker 200:22:58S, which was something new for Janus Henderson and a substantial change from what we've done in the past. The investment made has resulted in a strengthened brand profile that positions Janus Henderson as a trusted financial partner. As I mentioned earlier, we are investing in leveraging AI and machine learning to support the North America client group. We believe we are at the forefront of a technology, AI, which will fundamentally transform how we interact with and service our clients. The amount of data at our fingertips is immense, and the challenge and opportunity is how to turn this data into powerful and actionable information and acumen that will help Janus Anderson drive and anticipate our clients' needs, deliver differentiated insights and accelerate growth. Speaker 200:23:41Slide 17 highlights the meaningful progress made under the strategic pillar of Amplify. Our suite of active ETFs experienced another successful year. Net flows were positive $14,000,000,000 and AUM finished the year at $27,000,000,000 more than doubling in 2024 and equating to an annual growth rate of 79% over the last 5 years. With this growth, Janus Henderson is now the 8th largest provider of active ETFs and 3rd largest provider of active fixed income ETFs in the world. We have momentum in active ETFs in the U. Speaker 200:24:13S. And aim to build upon this momentum outside the U. S. With the acquisition of Tabula in mid-twenty 24. Janus Henderson quickly leveraged the expertise and technology of Tabula, launching our 1st active ETFs in Europe during the Q4. Speaker 200:24:27We anticipate launching a range of active European ETFs across equities and fixed income strategies in 2025, including JCL 0, a European version of JAAA, which launched earlier this month. These will take time to mature, but we are energized by the prospects. In September, Janus Henderson announced a partnership with Animoy and Centrifuge to manage Animoy's liquid treasury fund, a fully on chain tokenized fund issued on Centrifuge's public blockchain that provides investors with direct access to short term U. S. Treasury bills. Speaker 200:24:57Blockchain readiness and tokenization are key pillars underpinning Janus Henderson's innovation strategy, and the decision to partner with Anemo and Centrifuge in this way reflects the firm's commitment to digital assets and our desire to embrace disruptive financial technologies. In 2024, we established an effort to review our product set to identify and amplify opportunities for existing products that we overlooked, subscale products with strong investment performance and significant distribution potential. One such strategy is global small cap equity. We have world class regional small cap investment capability and launched this strategy 5 years ago to utilize this regional investment acumen in a global strategy. The strategy delivered strong investment performance but limited growth. Speaker 200:25:40We developed a sales plan, including infusing the strategy with additional seed capital to elevate its availability for platforms. In 2024, this strategy had $700,000,000 of net inflows from a $2,000,000 starting point to begin the year. This is a great example of our teams working collaboratively to deliver for our clients and embodies 2 of the firm's core values of together we win and clients come first always. In 2024, we established several new products and vehicles based on what our clients are telling us. We launched emerging markets debt, midcapgrowthalpha and income ETFs in the U. Speaker 200:26:15S. And Japan high conviction equity and Pan European high conviction equity in Europe. Elsewhere, we launched additional SMAs, CITs and hedge funds. Turning to Slide 18 and our 3rd pillar of diversify. We're expanding into differentiated private market capabilities for clients with the acquisitions of NBK Capital Partners and Victory Park Capital. Speaker 200:26:35NBK allows Janus Henderson early entry into the rapidly expanding emerging markets private capital space. In addition to enhancing product offerings for existing clients, the acquisition also provides Janus Henderson with the access to engage with new clients that include some of the largest and fastest growing pools of capital, such as the Middle East and Asian Sovereign Wealth Funds and Pensions, who want to actively invest globally, thereby expanding our footprint in the region. Victory Park Capital specializes in asset backed lending, which has emerged as a significant and differentiated market opportunity within private credit, and we believe it will remain appealing to clients as they increasingly look to diversify their private credit exposure beyond direct lending with unique origination, and VPC has that origination. Our joint venture with Pervicore has been ramping operations over the last 15 months. As a reminder, this was a de novo build, and it took some time to get people hired and operationally set up, and we are beginning to see real progress. Speaker 200:27:32As a testament to the differentiated model being built, PivotCore has had over 80 GP conversations in the 1st 15 months, showcasing demand from the private markets community for its solution. PivotCore is selling on 3 warehouse platforms and expects to add another this year. They are also expanding into RIAs and broker dealers. Pivacore has more products coming online in the upcoming months, and they are working with CPC on innovative solutions for the wealth channel. We continue to look actively to buy, build or partner to diversify where clients give us the right to win. Speaker 200:28:02The M and A pipeline is active, and we're going to be very disciplined in our approach. As we enter 2025, to be fair, we are not firing on all cylinders yet as there are many more areas at Janus Henderson that we believe can support our strategic ambitions, not overnight, but over time. Slide 19 provides a few examples. Our ongoing strategic efforts and execution are clearly starting to be manifested in our results. And while we are squarely on the path to consistently delivering organic growth, we are not yet at our destination. Speaker 200:28:34There are still several strategic ambitions across the business that we believe can contribute to future growth. In Protect and Grow, we've been realigning resources in our legacy channels and repositioning these businesses. 2 examples are the U. K. Intermediary and U. Speaker 200:28:47S. Direct channels, which combined represent over 20% of firm wide AUM. Under Amplify, there are several examples of strengths we have yet to fully leverage. In Institutional, we've talked publicly about the need to build a sustainable pipeline. The APAC region, which is 10% of AUM, is relatively small. Speaker 200:29:04However, Janus Henderson is recognized as a key player with many clients. We're in the nascent stages of leveraging Tabula and launching ETFs in Europe. In Diversified Alternatives, we are underpenetrated, and we believe we can increase market share. Lastly, we can continue to broaden our vehicle lineup where clients want us to do so, including SMAs and CITs. In our 3rd strategic pillar of diversify, our focus is to leverage our recent acquisitions in private credit, VPC and NBK and to provide alternatives to Private Wealth clients via Pravacore. Speaker 200:29:35We also remain active in looking at M and A opportunities to diversify where clients give us the right to win. Moving to Slide 20, which is an illustrative view of our strategy and where we believe it can take us. We are executing on our strategic plan and believe our strategy has us on the path to deliver organic revenue growth consistently. There is real progress in all three pillars of our strategic framework as evidenced by U. S. Speaker 200:29:58Intermediary in Protect and Grow, product development expansion in Amplify and VPC and BK and Privacore in Diversify. In addition to the tangible strategic progress, there are several areas of our business that we believe could help to drive future growth. Wrapping up on Slide 21. I'm proud of the progress made in 2024. I want to thank each and every one of my colleagues at Janus Henderson for their hard work and dedication and thank our clients who entrust us with their capital, a responsibility we take humbly and seriously as we continue to show real progress on our strategic path to deliver consistent organic growth. Speaker 200:30:35We are not at our destination yet, but we are clearly on our way. Net inflows for the year were $2,400,000,000 and are positive and aggregate over the past 2 years. Net new revenue was positive in the second half of the year, and we maintained a resilient net management fee margin. We amplified and diversified our businesses through inorganic opportunities, entering the European active ETF through Tabula and expanded into private markets with NPK and VPC. Our brand positioning is strengthening globally we have a strong balance sheet and good free cash flow generation, which enables us to return cash to shareholders and reinvest in the business and looking ahead, we believe we are squarely on the path to deliver consistent results for our clients, shareholders, employees and all our stakeholders. Speaker 200:31:18Let me turn the call back over to the operator to take your questions. Speaker 100:31:23Thank you. And our first question comes from Brennan Hawken from UBS. Brennan, your line is open. Please go ahead. Operator00:31:41Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Ali and Roger, curious about the ETF strategy. So momentum has been really quite solid, and it's really quite remarkable given the heritage in equities rather than fixed income. So you said in the past you're not really interested in clone type ETF products. Operator00:32:06So could you maybe give us an idea about how you're thinking about bringing equity products? We've seen a few filings and heard of a few filings. But what are the plans for 2025? And how big do you think that offering can get? Speaker 200:32:20Sure. Happy to start, Brennan. Thanks for the question. You're right. We're pretty proud of what the team has done with the ETF franchise. Speaker 200:32:29We're now the 8th largest provider of active ETFs in the world, period, and the 3rd largest provider of active fixed income ETFs by assets under management, and that's close to $30,000,000,000 We see enormous opportunity in the ETF landscape as a wrapper, not just because it's a wrapper that in some instances is better for clients' needs, and we can talk about the reasons there, but also because they wrap a really strong investment product that we have. And you mentioned the fixed income landscape in particular. It's a perfect example. We have now 4 fixed income ETFs that are above $1,000,000,000 each. And that's not because of the wrapper only, that's because we had really great investment performance, really great portfolio managers, really great research, really great teams who, if you look at the performance numbers, delivered really, a solid performance for our clients, but they weren't in the decision set, so to speak, of our client base. Speaker 200:33:32It's just not something we had gone after in a very heavy manner. And the ETFs allowed us to unlock that, and in fact, unlock it pretty well. So we think that we have the opportunity to build on the fixed income side on ETFs for sure. To your point though, that's allowed us to then enter the mindset of ETFs more broadly on the active side for equities too. So to your to what you noted, we've launched a couple on the equity side. Speaker 200:34:00There will be more launched on the equity side because again, we're taking things that are unique and differentiated from a foreign's perspective, not clones, but unique and different from an investment perspective and bringing that to clients in a foreign factor that clients appreciate. Now a lot of that discussion is around the U. S. Now outside the U. S, you'll note the Tabula acquisition that we made. Speaker 200:34:22That's been very, very helpful and a great integration for us to work together. And we're finding that there's enormous opportunity in Europe to drive ETF growth as well. And you may have heard this on other calls, but just bear repetition. The patterns we're seeing in the European markets on ETFs is similar to what we would have seen in the U. S, call it 7 or 8 years ago. Speaker 200:34:46Similar patterns in terms of growth, and we want to be part of the leadership there. And with Tableau, we think we can do that. We launched Japan High Conviction. We launched Pan European High Conviction, ETF forms. And most recently, we launched the European version of JAAA, so JCL 0. Speaker 200:35:07Again, we think there's enormous opportunity here. We want to be part of the leadership. And so far, we have Operator00:35:14been. Thanks for that color. That's helpful. Roger, my follow-up, I'd love to ask you about the 2025 outlook for expenses. So you mentioned that assumes flat markets. Operator00:35:28So curious if you could please let us know what kind of leverage operating leverage you'd expect in both comp ratio and on the sensitivity for non comp to upside from market beta? Thanks. Speaker 300:35:42Yes. Hi, Brendan. Yes, I mean, you've seen that over the last 2 years, and that should that would continue if markets do it to go up. So our comp ratio has come down by 1.8% over the last year. We've signaled it will go down on it should go down a little bit more with flat markets and that will continue. Speaker 300:36:04And the same thing in our op margin. Our op margin is up pretty significantly in percentage terms year on year. And positive markets, there is leverage in this business. We will continue to invest in the business. We've given guidance on costs. Speaker 300:36:21That is positive markets and positive sentiment. Operator00:36:26It may mean Speaker 300:36:26you do a little bit more on cost, but there's definitely leverage in the business. So if markets were to rise, then you would expect to see leverage both on the comp ratio coming down and the op margin going up. Operator00:36:39Right. But is there any rule of thumb whereas 100 basis points in markets translates to blank leverage? Or is it not that simple? Speaker 300:36:49It's not quite that simple. It depends where from, etcetera. So we'll see it as it will come. Operator00:36:55Okay. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 100:37:00The next question comes from Craig Siegenthaler from Bank of America. Craig, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:37:07Good morning, Ali. Hope everyone's doing well. Speaker 200:37:10Thanks, and you too. Speaker 100:37:13So I Speaker 400:37:13don't normally say these things, but I did want to congratulate you on the successful turnaround in place, which we know is very hard in Asset Management. I think this actually was Janus' first positive flow year since 2,009 for legacy Janus, even then was barely positive. Speaker 200:37:31Thanks. It's a team effort. We're putting one footprint for the other and hopefully the results continue to be okay. Speaker 400:37:39So, Ali, my question is on fixed income. So investment performance, currently very strong. I think the timing is pretty perfect for duration extensions. We're already seeing a nice lift in your flows there. We know there's many funds inside of that business, and we know there's a big one driving that. Speaker 400:37:59But I'm curious in terms of performance, what factors and themes do you attribute the strong performance to besides just security selection? Speaker 200:38:11So we are very pleased with the light that is being shone on the fixed income business. These teams, to your point, have performed extraordinarily well across many, many different strategies. 1, 3, 5, 10 year beating benchmark, 91%, 84%, 86%, 94%, Top 2 Morningstar quartiles, same time frames, 84%, 74%, 74%, 71%, 75%. I wish I could have gotten those types of scores in school. I mean these are really strong numbers. Speaker 200:38:44And we see it very broad. So areas like multi asset credit, multi sector income are there for investors who want things that are more income related obviously. We have obviously to your point the suite of fixed income ETFs, the JAAAs, but also JBBs, JAAA, JMBS among others that allow, institutional access to well, retail access to institutional type investments. We have very strong regional strategies. A little bit to your question, very strong in Australia, very strong in some parts of Europe. Speaker 200:39:20We have the emerging market debt strategy and really good high yield and other strategies, let alone some of the private credit stuff that we're doing. So it's fairly broad based. It does come certainly from, security selection, but also allocation depending on the strategy between, asset classes, between regions. Certainly, if you've read our themes for 2025, we believe, for example, that going to the securitized marketplace still sees a lot of opportunity for investors as opposed to kind of a typical corporate IG. So we still see opportunities in a lot of our fixed income portfolio. Speaker 200:39:59And we're again very pleased that people are paying attention to it. We're willing to invest and we are. And we want to grow that business quite substantially. Speaker 400:40:08Thank you, Ali. And just sticking with fixed income, but flipping the conversation from performance to flows. What is the outlook for 2025, just given the likely better industry flow outlook, your very good performance, you have money in motion from a very large competitor, and you also ended the year with a lot of momentum heading into the Q4. Speaker 200:40:31Well, we're going to continue to, as I said before, put one foot in front of the other and try to deliver on flows. And the pride that we have on delivering on flows isn't just for these types of calls, right? It's most importantly because that allows us to deliver for more clients and more end clients, to add to the 60,000,000 clients that we have around the world. We are hopeful that we can continue to deliver growth in that sector, not just in the ETF suite that we have in the U. S. Speaker 200:40:59But now in Europe, but also obviously for our clients in the institutional world, whether they be insurance clients as we're trying to grow those or others. So look, we're going to control what we can control and put one foot in front of the other, but hopefully the momentum as you suggest in your question that continues for us. Operator00:41:19Thank you. Speaker 100:41:23Next question comes from Bill Katz at TD Cowen. Bill, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:41:30And I appreciate the update and the guidance. Just thinking about the development you've seen in the Protect and Growth side, particularly on the Intermediary, which is the biggest swing factor for your business. And then on the Institutional side, the incremental opportunity. I was wondering if you could just unpack and maybe click in one more layer deeper in terms of what you're hearing from either the gatekeepers or sort of on the ground financial advisors that is allowing the acceleration of growth and sales, both net and gross. Is it just the brand campaign? Speaker 500:42:03Is it the efficacy? Is it the marketing? All of the above, the data seems very compelling to me. And then you mentioned that you're seeing some good signs in the build out of the sort of the institutional block. Sort of wondering what's resonating with the consultant community and how you think about that looking ahead? Speaker 500:42:20Thank Speaker 200:42:21you. Thanks, Bill. So let me tackle that in 2 buckets and Roger can jump in and redirect anywhere. First from the intermediary side, you're right, we're very pleased about the momentum, the partnership we've built with our clients and quote unquote, gatekeepers, but really we see them as clients. And I think that the U. Speaker 200:42:40S. Is the first place, as you know, that we've really implemented some of the changes and we're trying to broaden that out. And just to double click to your words, what we did in the U. S. Is we first and foremost made sure that we had the right people in the right seats. Speaker 200:42:53There are a lot of changes in the management teams that we put in place there, was step 1. We then want to make sure that production levels were high. And production levels were high, not just in terms of people running around and making every single call, but making sure that the data was supportive of whom they were calling, how often with what information. So there's a real big data exercise that I mentioned earlier on, I think will continue and help there. So the productivity was much higher. Speaker 200:43:24Yes, the promotional element or the marketing element helped quite a bit, putting us on people's radar screens, but also we have to tie compensation to growth for our new batch of people or somewhat changed batch of people. And then of course, we have to make sure the product was right. And that's not just product in terms of the investment strategy, that's also in terms of the communication, that's also in terms of the client service, that's also in terms of being there when a client wants to talk to us, a portfolio manager, me, whoever. So it's the compounding effect of all of that, that we've put together that we started in the U. S. Speaker 200:44:01And clearly, you've seen what's happened in the U. S. There, 6 consecutive quarters of positive flows now. The 2024 gross sales was up 36%, organic growth was up 7%. But your point, it's more broad on intermediary than just the U. Speaker 200:44:17S. Now. EMEA and LatAm intermediary channels are improving quite a bit. LatAm was positive for 2024. The EMEA region was positive flows for the second half of the year. Speaker 200:44:28So we're starting to see this brew. And I think it's all of those things, to answer your questions directly, all of those things together that we certainly hope, coupled always, always with performance that are helping us do well in the intermediary channels really around the world. On the institutional side, Speaker 100:44:49we Speaker 200:44:49are encouraged by what we've seen from a flows perspective in this past quarter and a couple of quarters ago. We are just continuing to try to build the pipeline. In particular for Q4, as Roger mentioned, there are 10 distinct fundings between $100,000,000 $500,000,000 that continue to support our efforts of getting out there and finding new institutional clients. And also importantly, as you mentioned, partnering with consultants, who see the stability that we've brought to the firm and our investment teams as well as, the lack of stagnation or ability to change and be innovative in the areas as well. And that success has been across regions, across asset classes so far. Speaker 200:45:33So if you think about positive flows in the 4th quarter, Asia ex Japan, Japan, Australia, Latin, Middle East, North America also positive flows on the institutional channel. Now I'm not saying our pipeline is always going to be perfect and we're always going to be positive flows in institutional, but certainly leading indicators are positive from RFP perspective as well. And look, could we chase AUM? We could. Not all AUM is created equally. Speaker 200:46:03We want to be mindful of a fee rate. But fee rate is really just a proxy of profitability. So if there are mandates in the institutional world that have lower fee rates but are more profitable, those are the things we will look at as well. And now we have the data to be able to make sure that's the case. So on institutional side, we'll continue to fill you in on more details as we progress through the year. Speaker 500:46:27Okay. And just as a follow-up, you mentioned the M and A story a little bit. I was just sort of wondering, obviously, you have a couple of deals that you're integrating into the New Year that seems to be going along very well. You're generating a ton of free cash flow. Your payout rate is only about 70%. Speaker 500:46:41So how do we think about the opportunity on the inorganic side? And I'm wondering if you could also talk about the possibility of beefing up your ownership of Privacore, which could then potentially increase your flow profile. Thank you. Speaker 200:46:54So let me start with the first one and I'll hand over on Privacore to Roger. The M and A pipeline is very robust, I think, for everybody in the industry, frankly. We will continue to buy, build or partner to support our strategy, to support Protect and Grow, to support Amplify and certainly to support Diversify, and we've shown that. But we're going to be very client led in all the M and A that we do. We do a lot of diligence on the companies and it's not just dollars and cents and numbers on spreadsheets. Speaker 200:47:23It's a lot of time with the management teams and making sure their cultural fit as well is there. That's one of the things that's been very important with the acquisitions and the partnerships we've built so far. We got what we expected from a cultural perspective, which knock on wood is very strong, let alone from a dollars and cents perspective. So we're going to be very, very disciplined there. I don't have a sense of timing, kind of underlying the spirit of the question of when M and A happens. Speaker 200:47:48I do know we're integrating these businesses now and we're quite busy doing that. But over time, if we see things that are opportune for us, we're going to partner with folks who want to grow with us and partner with folks that think that we're a better home for them. Roger, do you want to handle Provacor? Speaker 300:48:05Yes, sure. Remember, this was a de novo build from scratch. We're 15 months in. But we're definitely very optimistic about the interest being shown on both sides, I. E, we've got best in class managers of alternative assets pairing with some great relationships being built now in the warehouses and the broker dealers and the RIAs. Speaker 300:48:29So as you say, we own 49%. We're in active dialogue about the strategic options for that. We'll that may include potentially extending the exercise window to by the remaining 51%. But again, we'll talk about that over time. But we remain very excited about the privates that we're doing in a number of ways. Speaker 300:48:51Obviously, the acquisitions that Ali has talked about, but also Pivacore. Speaker 100:48:57The next question comes from Ken Worthington at JPMorgan. Ken, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:49:04Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. First, I'll start. The presentation you guys have put together very helpful. So thank you for that. Speaker 600:49:13In terms of questions, maybe starting with fee rate, you've been able to maintain and improve the fee rate for the last 7 quarters, so almost 2 years. If I look at mix, I assume strong equity markets over the last 2 years have had some positive contribution to that fee rate. I'll call it complementing, I think your commitment to being disciplined about pricing. If 2025 experiences more normal equity and fixed income market returns, what do you expect the fee rate to do? And I know there's a ton of puts and takes, which is why I asked the question, you've got new products, you've got transactions, you've got certain ramps. Speaker 600:49:51What is your sense? Does it continue to stay flat here? Or does it edge one direction or the other? Speaker 300:49:58Yes. Thanks, Ken. And you're quite right. A positive equity market does help the fee rate. If you in the appendix of the presentation, and thanks for your comments, so on 25, we've given the fee rates by asset class, which again may help a little bit of that. Speaker 300:50:17And also helps show that by asset class, fee rates aren't moving that much. Obviously, we have had significant growth in securitized and the fixed income average rate would have come down a little bit. But from here, it will depend on the growth from here. And what as Ali has talked about, we've got a range of things we're selling. So it is active product we're selling at active prices, the right active prices for the right product, but that ranges from enhanced index through to hedge funds. Speaker 300:50:53So it will depend on the mix. And obviously, we're also selling things now more in the alternative space. So you started to see the VPC fee rate come in. Obviously, as we look to grow that over time, that will increase the fee rate. But broadly, the fee rates come off 1% sorry, 1 basis point Speaker 100:51:15over 2 years, broadly flattish. Speaker 600:51:17Okay. So okay. Thank you. I'll try some fishing here on Animoy. You're managing their tokenized fund through, I assume, a sub advised relationship. Speaker 600:51:29You called this out. This seems like it could be interesting. I guess the question is why take on this business? It's hard to think that this is a big money generator. So I look to Blockchain and tokenization. Speaker 600:51:43Do you have more interest in that sort of technology? Like is there something underlying your willingness to kind of take on this business? Speaker 200:51:54Thanks for the question and for noticing it. Let me start with what this is and then expanding to the last part of your question, Ken. So just for everybody's knowledge, Animoy is effectively a asset manager that is very much in the tokenized world. And Centrifuge is the sort of platform that does the tokenization underneath it for asset managers, digitizes, manages and distributes funds that are chain focused. And the need that has become present is many institutional companies have on their balance sheet, tokenized coins or currencies. Speaker 200:52:42And most of what's happened is people have used Stablecoin to do that. And Stablecoin doesn't have a yield and that's okay when there is no yield. But now that there is a yield, many of these institutional players and some of them have very, very large balance sheets as it sounds like Ken you may know, are looking for other ways in the tokenized landscape to get yield. Stablecoins don't give them that. So they've looked for an opportunity and Animoy is providing that opportunity with the centrifuge backbone to provide, for example, treasuries, which have yield. Speaker 200:53:15And guess what? We know how to purchase and manage those. And so you're exactly right. We're in that ecosystem. And when they're in that ecosystem because there's a need for a tokenized asset manager or tokenized fund for us to be supporting a client view and a client need to have it. Speaker 200:53:34Now, let me take a little bit of a step back to your point of why we are in this. And I don't want to say this too loudly, I guess, but innovation is actually at the core of our corporate strategy. Blockchain readiness and tokenization are ways for us to amplify, protect and grow and also diversify our businesses. And we do think this collaboration is critical for us to be in the distributed ledger technology world to learn about it and to bring it perhaps forward for asset managers. I think if you take a step way back in our philosophy, we do think to the last part of your question that eventually there will be complete fungibility between private and public, liquid and illiquid assets, hard and soft assets. Speaker 200:54:27And if we can learn about that in this manner with 2 fantastic partners, we're willing to do that. And we want to be in fact one of the leaders into the forefront of this. To your point, it's not a huge tax on our system. It's not a huge cost to us. But it's a lot of learnings that we can bring to bear and hopefully be able to bring that for a broader set of clients. Speaker 600:54:50Okay, awesome. Thank you so much for taking the questions. Speaker 100:54:56The next question comes from Alex Blostein from Goldman Sachs. Alex, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:55:03Hey, good morning. Thank you. Just hoping to double click into a couple of strategic areas you guys talked about. I guess one being European ETF marketplace, clearly nice developments there. Could you spend a minute on sort of the economics in that market relative to the U. Speaker 700:55:18S. Market with respect to things like distribution cost and fee sharing arrangements, etcetera? Speaker 200:55:25Sure. It's a very nascent market. And so the pool is quite small, but it's expected to grow quite significantly. I'm trying to remember the number that's out there from folks, but I think it's $30,000,000,000,000 if I'm not mistaken, over the next few years. These are pie in the sky type numbers, but I think people imagine that could be the case over the next 10 years or something. Speaker 200:55:48We are not seeing any huge economic differentiation between the U. S. And Europe from an ETF distribution perspective at all because these are, as Roger was saying a second ago to the fee rate question, active strategies within these ETF wrappers. Part of the reason we brought Tabula on board and partnering with them is because they're already very well established in the marketplace, 10 plus regions, 10 plus exchanges. And that is an important part of the ecosystem that we as Janus Henderson did not have organic opportunities to get into, unless we were going to take a lot of time. Speaker 200:56:28So Tableau is helping us with that. We're not seeing real big economic differences on a per unit cost perspective. But of course, Alex, maybe to your question, the market is a smaller market. Speaker 700:56:41Yes. I got you. That makes sense. On your point about acquisition pipeline and you sounded, obviously like it's quite busy. It's busy for a lot of folks. Speaker 700:56:51You remain disciplined. But what are the areas that you feel are more likely to materialize in an actual transaction, either in terms of geography or product base? Speaker 200:57:03I'll tell you when we know because it's very varied right now. There are a lot of areas that we're looking at geographically, product wise, across asset classes. There's a lot of interesting opportunities out there. But again, we want to make sure that the right opportunities and that we can digest them appropriately and that they have the right culture. We can always support across protect and grow, across amplify and across diversify in businesses that we currently have, but also businesses that we're looking to get into. Speaker 200:57:33Clearly, in the past, we're talking about we've talked about privates, we've talked about geographic expansion, we've talked about ETFs. But beyond that, I think there are still really interesting opportunities out there. So I don't want to limit it too much to be fair. Suffice it to say that we're always going to be client led. We're always going to be disciplined. Speaker 200:57:50We want to make sure that we have the right cultural fit, not just financial fit. Speaker 700:57:56Yes. Makes sense. Great. Thanks. Speaker 100:58:02The next question is from Dan Fannon at Jefferies. Dan, please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 800:58:08Thanks. Good morning. I wanted to follow-up Roger on your guidance. Obviously, flat AUM and flat markets I get, but performance fees are another attribute that as we think about 2025 have the potential to improve given some of the performance as well as it looks like above high watermarks on some of the other strategies. So how should we think about performance fees into 2025 given what you know today and how that might translate into the expense profile and guidance you've given? Speaker 300:58:39Thanks, Dan. I guess the only thing that we obviously know is what's rolling off. So the U. S. Fulcrum fees, if you trailed off the 3 years and you added average performance for the last 3 years, then the U. Speaker 300:58:54S. Mutual fund performance fees would be sort of negative high single digits. Now that would be a meaningful improvement from the negative $39,000,000 in 2024. So that's one piece of performance fees. On the other side, we obviously have a range of things, both long only funds and absolute and hedge funds that are 1 year performance and can be 0 or can be big as we know. Speaker 300:59:26I guess the thing I would say in those is it is a range. It is a portfolio. We have about CHF 40,000,000,000 I think it is of assets which have performance fees on them outside of the U. S. Mutual funds. Speaker 300:59:41So but I can't tell you what it will be because I can't tell you what performance is. Relating to what that does for margin, they are they obviously have comp associated with them, but they are accretive performance fees are accretive to our margin. Speaker 801:00:02Okay. And in the I guess just following up on what's embedded in your guidance, is the any improvement in the mutual fund side and kind of embedded implied in the guidance you've given for the ranges for 2025? Speaker 301:00:16Yes. That's right. So yes, we model out as you do the U. S. Mutual funds and we make a reasonable assumption as to what might happen elsewhere. Speaker 301:00:25But as I say, I don't know what future performance will be. Speaker 101:00:31The next question comes from Mike Brown of Wells Fargo. Speaker 601:00:41The flow story at JAAA and the tangential products have been very, very strong. I just wanted to ask a little bit about the broadening out by client type. So Ali, you alluded to the fact that you're seeing kind of broader institutional use of the product. I wanted to just ask about kind of what inning that's in, in your view? And then are you seeing any increasing competitive pressure just given the success of the product and some of the new product launches that have come to market? Speaker 201:01:11Hey, Mike. Thanks for the question. So first on the institutional side of things, look, I think we're very, very early days. I'm not sure what inning we're in. Maybe we're in pre warm up or spring trading. Speaker 201:01:25I'm not sure. We're just we're starting. If you look at the RFP pipeline from a percentage growth perspective, across the board for us at least, it's up quite significantly 30%, 40%, high 40% s type percent around the world on average. So we see that. We see consultants giving us more and more upgrades and more and more positive momentum. Speaker 201:01:51I think when we're us looking at it, we've never had as many positive buy ratings or whatever the equivalent is on our strategies at the firm. So things are just starting, I would say. And look, we certainly hope we can deliver on growth in the institutional landscape. For us, again, the most important part is that we are delivering for our clients and they're starting to vote with their feet. But I think it's very, very early days on that front. Speaker 201:02:21From a competitive perspective, we're not really seeing a lot of pressure from a competitive perspective on fees or anything like that. Look, this is a very competitive environment. We have very able competitors. Everybody is scrapping in a business that isn't growing very well, right? We are all very proud of our organic growth rate. Speaker 201:02:43But remember, it's still in the very, very low single digit numbers. So it's a fight. And we certainly want to deliver the best we can for our clients to get there. I will give you the example very specifically around some ETF launches that we've had. And we continue to deliver on what our clients' needs are. Speaker 201:03:01And this industry is like any other industry, like your industry, like any industry. If you deliver on what your clients want, they will pay fair and reasonable prices for it. If you're delivering something that they don't want or you fail, then you have pressure. And so it's again the whole team effort for us to come together and deliver for our clients and in that manner, hopefully, keep them happy and keep our rates there. Speaker 101:03:34Our final question today comes from Michael Cyprys from Morgan Stanley. Michael, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 901:03:41Great. Thanks. Good morning. Thanks for squeezing me in here. Just wanted to come back to a comment, Ali, you made about innovation at the core of Janus Henderson's corporate strategy. Speaker 901:03:51I was hoping maybe you could talk about how you're thinking about and investing in technology to enhance your investment engines and support alpha generation. How do you see that evolving in the near term versus looking out more longer term? Speaker 201:04:08So thanks for the question. We as we've mentioned before and you saw some of the results in Q4, continue to invest in the business, both from a technology perspective but also from a people perspective, from a C Capital perspective and otherwise. When it comes to specifically on technology, we have a team that is they have day jobs, but we have a team that comes together and thinks about disruptive financial technologies or DFT. Shout out to them if they're listening to this call. Really thoughtful group of folks who keep an eye on what's going on externally, not just in our industry, but in other industries and bring that to bear within our organization. Speaker 201:04:48And they bring it to bear really in 3 big buckets. 1 exactly as you described it is how can we make more efficient, make more productive, deliver better results for clients on the investment process side of things, ingesting a lot of data or getting quicker access to information, etcetera. Now the second piece that we have is investing on how to best serve our clients, how we understand our clients better. I mentioned this earlier on in what's going on in U. S. Speaker 201:05:15Intermediary and one of the partnerships that we have there is to understand what client needs are, what advisors' needs are, so we don't waste their time, but we target and are able to deliver on what their needs are, so client service. And then the last one is what we call internally, how do we 10 times our people? We firmly believe that technologies like AI will help our people to do better and be more efficient. And human plus AI is better than AI alone. And so that's somewhere we're investing as well. Speaker 201:05:45So across the board, not just AI, but broad technology, those are the areas we're investing in. And look, you've seen that in our P and L. When Roger release the purse strings a little bit, he looks for ROI, but the ROI is there and we continue to deliver on that. Speaker 901:06:01And maybe just on that latter point on AI, maybe you could just double click on that for just a moment. Maybe you talk a little bit about how you're using and thinking about using generative AI and LLM tools across the organization. I think you mentioned an RFP use case broadly. How many use cases have you guys identified? How do you see that evolving in terms of putting them into production over the next year or 2? Speaker 901:06:23And as you think about over the near to medium term, how meaningful could this be the top versus bottom line results? Speaker 201:06:31So we're early days, less than a handful of things that are actually in production or being used right now, I would say. We clearly like frankly everybody else has their own version of a chat GPT or we call it chat JHI. We have those types of tools that are there for sure. So I don't really count that. But things like the RFP tool, and that team has worked tirelessly in improving that. Speaker 201:06:57I mean the good news is that we have capacity constraints on our RFP team. And so if we can give them tools to improve the speed and accuracy, at least with the first cut of RFPs, that's something that has been quite meaningful. And so that is something, thanks for noting it in the prepared remarks that we mentioned, we think that has a lot of opportunity to help 10 times our people. But I mentioned also work that's going on, for example, in the intermediary world. So we have an AI powered distribution intelligence platform, which looks at taking insights from the data that we have to enhance productivity, to drive growth, to understand again who to target and who to not waste time of because they're not interested in products X, Y or Z, but we can actually bring them product ABC that they're interested in and that their clients need. Speaker 201:07:45So we have good examples of that. It's tough and I don't want to dodge, I apologize. I just I don't really know dollars and cents wise how impactful it's going to be. What I do know is that there's a clear need for extra productivity and capacity within our organization and we're trying to provide that with some of these AI tools. AI tools that's something we're building internally, but a lot of them we're partnering externally with as well. Speaker 201:08:11I think everybody in the industry is probably thinking about this, and if not, they probably should. Speaker 101:08:17We have no further questions. So I'll hand the call back to Ali Dibadj for some concluding remarks. Speaker 201:08:23Thanks, Adam. Just wanted to end by thanking our clients for entrusting us with their capital and the capital of the $60,000,000 end clients that directly or indirectly rely on Janus Henderson. I want to thank everybody at Janus Henderson across the organization, whether you're in IT and ops working on AI or support functions or client groups or investments. These are strong set of results. We're putting one foot in front of the other, as I've said a couple of times internally and externally, and we want to deliver for our clients, our shareholders and all of our stakeholders. Speaker 201:08:56So, bye for now and talk to you next time. Speaker 101:09:01This concludes today's call. Thank you very much for your attendance. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by