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Federated Hermes - Earnings Call - Q4 2019

January 31, 2020

Transcript

Speaker 0

Good day, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Federated Hermes Inc. Fourth Quarter twenty nineteen Analyst Call and Webcast. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr.

Ray Hanley. You may begin, sir.

Speaker 1

Good morning and welcome. Leading today's call will be Chris Donahue, CEO and President and Tom Donahue, Chief Financial Officer. And joining us for the Q and A are Saker Nasevi, who is CEO International and Debbie Cunningham, Chief Investment Officer for the money markets. During today's call, we may make forward looking statements and we want to note that Federated's actual results may be materially different than the results implied by such statements. We invite you to review the risk disclosures in our SEC filings.

No assurance can be given as to future results and Federated Hermes assumes no duty to update any of these forward looking statements. Chris?

Speaker 2

Thank you, Ray. Good morning. As of today, we have officially changed our name to Federated Hermes Inc. And we are unveiling an updated corporate identity next week focused on a commitment to responsible investing to achieve financial outperformance. The new name reflects the combining of two active management firms, Federated Investors Inc.

And Hermes Investment Management. Federated Hermes offers world class active investment management and engagement services across a wide range of asset classes for investors around the world, guided by the conviction that responsible investing is the best way to sustainable wealth creation. Beginning on Monday, we will trade under the ticker FHI. Moving on to our business performance and looking first at equities, assets reached an all time record high of $89,000,000,000 at the 2019, an increase of 23% from 2018. For the fourth quarter, in addition to positive market impact of about a little over $5,000,000,000 and gains from PNC funds acquisition, which closed in mid November a little over $2,000,000,000 net sales of combined equity and separate accounts were slightly positive.

Equity mutual fund sales were positive in the fourth quarter, just under $230,000,000 and for the full year of about $625,000,000 We had 16 equity funds with net sales in Q4 led by Kaufman SmallCap, Hermes Global Equity ESG, Hermes Global Emerging Markets, and Hermes SDG Engagement Funds. On a full year basis, equity gross sales increased 45% and net redemptions were down 81%. Using Morningstar data for the trailing three years at the 2019, onefour of our equity funds were in the top quartile and more than half were above median. Looking at the strategic value dividend strategy, recall its objective is to provide a high and growing dividend income stream from high quality companies. The domestic funds twelve month distribution yield was 3.8%, which ranked it in the second percentile of its Morningstar category at the 2019.

The domestic strategic value dividend strategy had combined mutual fund and SMA outflows of about $350,000,000 in the fourth quarter, down from $580,000,000 in Q3. Looking at early first quarter results, combined fund and SMA net sales for this strategy were about $30,000,000 through January 24. Overall, combined equity fund and SMA net redemptions year to date through January 24 were negative by $76,000,000 There were some lumpy redemptions in one of our European mandates. Turning now to fixed income. Equity our assets increased to another record of $69,000,000,000 at year end.

On a full year basis, gross sales were up about 6% and redemptions decreased 8%. Full year net sales were slightly negative $119,000,000 compared to $3,200,000,000 negative in the prior year. For the fourth quarter, net sales of $1,400,000,000 combined with gains from PNC acquisition of about $450,000,000 and market gains of $1,200,000,000 to move assets to the record high level. On the fund side, we saw net sales of high yield funds just under 500,000,000 and ultra short funds just over $300,000,000 among others. Separate accounts net sales included multi sector total return and high yield strategies.

At year end, using Morningstar data for the trailing three years, we had seven funds, 21% in the top quartile, and 20 funds or 59% in the top half. Combined, fixed income fund and SMA net sales are $19,000,000 year to date through January. These net positive sales have been led by total return bond fund, high yield activity and ultra shorts. Moving to money markets. Assets increased about $36,000,000,000 or 10% in the fourth quarter, including about $11,000,000,000 from

Speaker 3

the PNC

Speaker 2

acquisition. Money market assets increased $94,000,000,000 or 31% for the full year to close twenty nineteen at record high assets of $396,000,000,000 Money market strategies continue to have a significant yield advantage compared to average deposit rates. Money market yields also compared favorably to applicable direct market rates and longer duration securities. Our money market mutual fund market share, including sub advised funds at year end, was about 8.8%, up from about 8.4% at the end of Q3 and 7.9% at the 2018. Taking a look now at our most recent available asset totals with Federated as of January 29, Hermes January 17.

Managed assets were approximately $583,000,000,000 including $4.00 $1,000,000,000 in money markets, dollars 90,000,000,000 in equities, dollars 70,000,000,000 in fixed income, 18,000,000,000 in alternative, 4,000,000,000 in multi asset. On the money market mutual fund asset side, the assets were $283,000,000,000 RFP and related activity levels continue to be solid and diversified in the fourth quarter with interest in NVT, Kaufman and global emerging markets for equities, high yield liquid credit and short duration for fixed income. We began 2020 with about four fifty million dollars in net institutional mandates yet to fund, all on the fixed income side. On the international side, we have had a good response from clients for the initial new funds developed for U. S.

Distribution that are sub advised by Hermes. Assets in these funds were just over $75,000,000 at the end of the year with about $44,000,000 externally sourced. By the subtraction method, that will tell you what the seed assets are. We are evaluating further U. S.

Mutual fund launches using Hermes strategies. We are actively presenting Hermes strategies with our institutional customers and are working with Hermes to develop opportunities for them to offer federated strategies to their clients. We are progressing on the expansion of the EOS stewardship and engagement business in The U. S. And are working to hire several new engagers.

EOS assets under administration reached $877,000,000,000 at the end of the year, up from $781,000,000,000 at Q3 and about $500,000,000,000 at the 2018. Hermes managed assets at year end were at $49,000,000,000 up from $44,000,000,000 at the end of the third quarter and $42,600,000,000 at the 2018. Hermes fourth quarter net sales were $1,300,000,000 all third party. Favorable exchange rates and market gains contributed to the increase in assets as well. We are looking to grow our business relationships and opportunities both inside and outside The U.

S, including alliances and acquisitions to complement our domestic and U. K, European, Asia Pac and Canadian operations.

Speaker 4

Tom? Thank you, Chris. Total revenue was up about $18,000,000 or 5% from the prior quarter due mainly to higher money market revenue of about $12,000,000 primarily from higher average money market assets. Equity and fixed income revenue also increased from Q3, primarily from higher average assets. Performance fees of $2,800,000 were recorded in Q4 compared to 1,500,000 in Q3.

2019 total performance fees of $7,400,000 mostly from Hermes strategies. Hermes performance fees in 2017 were approximately $7,400,000 and $8,500,000 in 2018. Revenue was up about $191,000,000 or 17% for the full year due mainly to higher money market revenue of $115,000,000 and the inclusion of a full year of Hermes results in 2019 compared to half of 2018, which accounted for $96,000,000 These increases were partially offset by lower domestic equity, multi asset and fixed income revenue of about $19,000,000 Looking at operating expenses, comp and related decreased about $800,000 from the prior quarter due mainly to lower incentive compensation expense of $4,000,000 partially offset by severance pay of about 2,700,000.0 resulting from the combining of certain administrative, operational, sales and investment teams. Distribution expense increased about $5,000,000 in Q4 compared to the prior quarter and $53,000,000 for the full year due mainly to higher average money market fund assets. As a reminder, for Q1, our revenue is negatively impacted by fewer days in the quarter, partially offset by lower related distribution expense.

In addition, payroll taxes and employee benefit costs are seasonally high in Q1 compared to Q4. Expenses related to the PNC deal totaled about 1,300,000.0 During Q4, these costs, which were primarily recorded previously as professional service fees previously in previous quarters as professional service fees were capitalized as part of the asset purchase intangible asset. Subject to finalization of the P and C deal asset valuations, we do not expect an increase in amortization of intangible assets asset expense due to the nature of the recorded assets. The decrease in other operating expense line item for Q4 compared to Q3 was due largely to the currency exchange rate impacting both the valuation of U. S.

Dollar assets at Hermes and the foreign exchange hedges used by Hermes to swap U. S. Dollar based revenue into pounds in order to line up with their largely pound based operating expenses. In Q4, this resulted in an expense credit of 1,800,000.0 compared to the 1,200,000.0 in Q3 of expense. In other words, a 3,000,000 variance.

This Q4 expense credit was partially offset by the overall negative impact of exchange rates on Hermes reported Q4 operating results estimated at about $1,300,000 across all operating line items. The increase in total operating expenses for 2019 versus 2018 was primarily due to the aforementioned inclusion of Hermes' full year results. Also higher distribution expense, primarily from higher average money market, fund assets and higher incentive compensation and related expense. Non operating income expense of $1,400,000 from Q3, primarily due to an increase in the market value of securities held by consolidated funds of $3,400,000 offset by lower private equity carried interest on assets managed by a non consolidated entity. The carry was $5,400,000 in Q4 compared to $6,800,000 in Q3.

Non operating income increased $51,400,000 in 2019 compared to 2018, primarily due to the 2018 FX loss in connection with the Hermes acquisition of 29,000,000 primarily higher equity carried interest on assets managed by the non consolidated entity of $9,000,000 and an increase in the market value of securities held by consolidated funds of 7,000,000 As we have said previously, we are not able to forecast future private equity carried interest. In 2019, carried interest recorded was 11,300,000.0 In four of the previous five years, carried interest was approximately $3,000,000 In the fifth year, the carry was about 13,500,000.0 The 2,400,000.0 increase in net income attributable to non controlling interest in subsidiaries from Q3 was primarily from consolidated funds and from Hermes. At the 2019, cash and investments were $341,000,000 of which about $276,000,000 was available to us. Jess, we would like to open the call up for questions now.

Speaker 0

Question We are now ready to begin. Our first question comes from Brian Bedell with Deutsche Bank.

Speaker 5

Great, thanks. Good morning, folks, and congrats on the new name. Maybe just to start off with that on the name change, maybe Chris, if you just want to elaborate a little bit why now instead of doing this when the deal closed? And then, if you can just talk a little bit about the new marketing program, what you intend to do specifically and what the expense impact, you expect for 2020 on with that new marketing program?

Speaker 2

Yes. In terms of the timing of the name change, the excitement and all of the work that was done to get the deal together was also one of the reasons it didn't happen right away. There is a lot that goes into changing the name of two organizations whose lifetime has been under a different nomenclature. We were able to combine though the fiduciary heritage of Federated and the ESG and responsible investing activities of Hermes and felt that once we got all organized with funds on the block where we are selling them with a responsible investment office opened at Federated with the integration of ESG into money markets at Federated and then well on the way in several other of our investment management teams. And with the acceptance that the clients have had, we felt this was a very good timing.

Behind the curtain in

Speaker 6

terms of

Speaker 2

internal, we announced all this internally last year at our sales conference, which is next week, wherein we have the 230 high powered engine machines coming into Pittsburgh. And we felt this was a perfect time to launch that into the marketplace. So it was both an external and an internal decision making.

Speaker 4

On the expense side, you know, it's a forecast. So it's a forecast. But somewhere around $5,000,000, and that's advertising, signage, you know, business cards, names of of product. There's a lot that's involved in doing that. And we look forward to moving forward, Federated Hermes.

Speaker 5

Okay. That's helpful. And then maybe just the third party sales. It looks like that did on a net sales basis, that did tick up in the fourth quarter. Maybe if you have any kind of expectation given especially given the branding and the additional marketing and of course, the more recent excitement about ESG, so to speak, what are your expectations for third party sales for Hermes products in 2020?

Speaker 2

Saker, that's your turn.

Speaker 3

So all that I can say is the RFP activity is very high and we have seen net sales to continue in this beginning of this quarter. I were to give you the numbers, I'm going give you the numbers in pounds because that's the numbers that I see. In terms of inflows last year, that's gross inflows, we saw about €8,000,000,000 of gross just over £8,300,000,000 £8,300,000,000 of gross inflows coming out last year. And I'd expect something slightly ahead of that without the sales in The United States through this year. It's not an exact answer, but I'm not going to give more of a guidance than saying it's going to be, we believe, better than the year just ended.

Speaker 5

Right. Okay. If I could just sneak one more in on the admin service fee increase in 4Q twenty nineteen versus 3Q. What was the driver of that? And what should we it looks up to $70,000,000 from 64,000,000 What should we be thinking of for a run rate in 2020 on that?

Speaker 1

So Brian, that's driven by mutual fund average assets generally and given the volumes, money market, mutual funds more specifically. That will correlate to the change in average assets going forward.

Speaker 5

Okay, great. Thanks very much for the color.

Speaker 0

We'll move next to Patrick Davitt at Autonomous Research.

Speaker 7

Hey, good morning guys. So you talked about the $5,000,000 in marketing. How should we think more broadly about the expense trajectory bringing in a full quarter of the P and C assets in 1Q and then beyond now that So

Speaker 4

the expenses on P and C, we've the as Chris went through the list of the money markets and the equity and the fixed, and we're not we said today, we don't expect to have amortization related to that. So the expenses with the money markets will primarily be related to distribution payments And all the other funds merged into our existing funds, so where there's distribution payments there. We also picked up a great team in Cleveland with three funds. So we're picking up the expense of that team in the Cleveland office and the connections into Federated and the new efforts to sell and distribute that fund those three funds in a wider fashion. So we're pretty excited about the whole outlook on the merger and the growth of the new funds.

Speaker 7

I guess, I mean more broadly though, like do you have a view on including that $5,000,000 of extra marketing where expenses will be kind of in 2020 versus 2019? Flattish up a bit?

Speaker 4

Well, we talked about $5,000,000 in 2019 related to Hermes, and that included breadth of broad list of things, new products, people, as Chris mentioned, in responsibility office and kind of across the board. So we would expect to see and then when you start new funds and you hire new people, you have a continuing expense. So we think that some of this expense related to advertising and the other changes might not reoccur, but then we might switch to do advertising into the future. So we'll just see. So all we can talk about is basically a $5,000,000 number for 2020.

Speaker 7

And that is that on top of the $5,000,000 in Hermes you had in 2019? Or to just kind of move into now this?

Speaker 4

Yeah. I think it's you know, I say when we hire people, then this is an addition to that. Yeah. Okay. You know, we didn't go through and say we spent exactly 5,000,000.

That was an estimate from work that we had done in advance. Do we hire all the people or are we going to hire the rest of them in 2020? It's not exact science. We're trying to give you some indication of what we were looking to do, and we're trying to implement it.

Speaker 7

Okay. Fair enough. Thanks a lot.

Speaker 0

We'll move next to Dan Fannon at Jefferies.

Speaker 8

Thanks. Just a follow-up again on expenses. I guess first on comp, 4Q here you had revenues sequentially rise, but comp down. Just curious if there was anything specific in that number. And then the normal seasonal step up as you mentioned for payroll, just remind us for you guys how much that is and anything else that I guess as we kind of bridge between 4Q and 1Q that might be more notable?

Speaker 1

So Dan, the second part of that, the bump up in payroll tax and four zero one seasonality will probably be in the $3,000,000 range for Q1 compared to Q4. And as Tom mentioned, a lot of our revenue most of our revenue is based on is calculated on a daily basis. And we didn't work through the numbers. Coming into 2019, we estimated about $5,000,000 for 2019 of lower sequential net revenue. So it is a significant change in Q1 because of the fewer days.

Speaker 4

And the last thing, the first part of your question was why the recalibration of the down in the incentive compensation, it's basically what it is. We're looking every quarter to get that number right and come into the end of the year and recalibrate everything and we had to adjust down.

Speaker 8

Okay. And then can you elaborate a bit, I think you on the equity year to date trends, the negative, I think it was $76,000,000 and you talked about some international products, maybe that saw some outflows, I guess, a little more color on that. And I guess, you said the backlog and I think the activity levels are there are positive. So just if there's anything else to unpack there, please?

Speaker 2

There was a lumpy redemption that came out of one of our one of our Hermes funds, and I don't have any more to say on it than that. It was over a $100,000,000, and that was greater than what was the negative. And that's why I mentioned it as as lumpy. But when you have big customers, you get big moves. We've discussed that before.

There is nothing going on in the performance. That move was not a performance move. So it doesn't worry us in terms of future flows.

Speaker 1

And on the forward numbers, the four fifty that we talked about was fixed income. There are some institutional type of wins, but we expect those to go into funds. That sometimes happens as well. And that's probably a couple $100,000,000, but we did not include that in the the 450. That's all fixed income.

Speaker 2

Okay. Thank you.

Speaker 0

We'll go next to Michael Carrier with Bank of America.

Speaker 6

Good morning and thanks for taking the questions. So maybe the first one just on the Hermes Federated like the rebranding and then maybe just going a little bit more in detail and particularly on The U. S. Side. When you look at maybe 2020 versus 2019, just like what initiatives maybe are in place, whether it's by the different distribution channels, whether it's through the trust of the banks or the retail, some of the products that were launched, what are the sales force, like which products are they going be focused on?

Just any more granularity to try to see that traction starts to pick up within The U. S. Side.

Speaker 2

We are very, very excited about what now amounts to a broad based family of international products to bring to our U. S. Distribution. This includes the products that Tom mentioned from Cleveland, New York products, Pittsburgh products and London products that now represent a complete array. And part of the effort, as I mentioned in our sales meeting next week, will be to focus on these products into the future.

So that's one, you know, pretty big push. Another area that we're going to be making a bet on is Asia Pac through Harriet Steele's operation inside Hermes. And we think that is something that's going to be get some focus as well. And as you know, on the institutional side, these things are not these sales are not made in a short time frame. It takes a minimum of a year, sometimes into the second year before you begin to actually win mandates having plowed the ground.

It's just the timing that's involved. So those are some of the things. Internally, and this wouldn't be for 2020 that we're talking about, but internally, we're looking at getting organized the private markets area. We already announced the completion of the purchase of MEPC, which is a real estate development company that the pension scheme in Hermes had worked on for many years. We're looking at the private equity side of it as well.

We've added people to the infrastructure side. And we're trying to get that all organized for building into the future. But as I said, that's not a 2020. That's more down the road. So those are some of the main things.

Speaker 9

Right. That's helpful. Can is I also mention basically the full integration of ESG analysis into our credit review process for all of our liquidity products? That was something we had been striving toward since the 2018 acquisition and accomplished that in 2019. Now it's evolutionary, not revolutionary.

It will continue to develop, but we have absolutely included from the analysts and the engagers the information that's coming out of the Hermes proprietary model and use that within the qualitative aspects of our credit analysis process for our money market fund.

Speaker 6

Okay. And then just a quick follow-up. Just on the fixed income side. So in the quarter, saw pretty good strength and then it sounds like that's continuing into 2020. Just anything particularly in the quarter, just given that the number was over $1,000,000,000 just anything that was more lumpy that you'd call out?

Speaker 1

Well, on the institutional side, Mike, there were some good wins on the multi sector side. And so institutional accounts are by definition lumpier when they come. We also saw a return to strength in high yield. So with the yield challenges in the marketplace, High yield came back into more significant flows. And we mentioned that's continued early into the 2020, the total return bond fund.

So it's the spread products that have been responsible for the inflows. Ultrashorts were a meaningful part of the Q4 positive. Just to correct, They're actually a little bit negative in the 2020. And that's really just more technical analogous to what happens in the money market fund side where money tends to come in, especially late in the year and then go out. You can kind of think of it as much more like long cash than the spread products that really have driven the inflows on fixed income.

Speaker 2

Okay. Thanks a lot.

Speaker 0

We'll move next to Bill Katz at Citi.

Speaker 10

Okay. Thank you very much for taking the question this morning. Just to spend a little time talking through some of the choppiness on the multi asset and the alternative buckets, you're seeing better growth elsewhere, sort of wondering what might be going on underneath that just as we think ahead?

Speaker 2

Well, those sales are slow and take a long time. And as you've noticed, the numbers are roughly flat. And that's one of the reasons I mentioned that we were looking to get better organized on the ownership and of those entities, even though we control some of them. We have to get those things organized first before we decide to make big investments into them into the future. And that's why I characterized it as getting organized this year with ideas of having them put points on the Board next year.

And that's pretty much the theme in all of those private markets. I think the multi asset credit product, however, has had good strong positive flows, good reflection on the new product. And I'd ask Saker to comment on that particular one.

Speaker 3

So if I may, Chris, I'll comment just briefly on the private market and then on to this one. On the private market one, I will just remind people that it's a longer sales cycle because generally speaking, the assets remain with us for many, many years to come. It also affects our income because quite oftentimes there are two kinds of additional revenue besides the fee revenue we get, which is the management fee revenue. One is performance property funds generally speaking, and then a carry fee in private equity funds. And that means that it's sometimes difficult to look on them on a quarter by quarter or year by year basis for these two reasons.

And if you look at our multi assets, this is a capability that we've been holding over several years. It exhibits the same standards of alpha that others have. Again, just to remind everybody, the Hermes product offering effectively is all high market, a higher high active share, which means very different from benchmark, integrates ESG and has very strong performance fees and that is beginning to come in multi assets, and that's why we're seeing inflows coming through as we are in other parts of the business.

Speaker 2

And I'd make one other comment. Saker doesn't make a comment like this because of the reason I'm going to say, but we did have $1,600,000,000 in sales in private equity. But those are basically numbers that we already had before where they're just rolling over. But it is a positive indicator about the underlying strength of the organization.

Speaker 10

Okay. I'll follow-up offline. I'm just not tracking to the outflows you're talking about in your disclosure. Just one last question. Just in terms of how you think about you have a lot of different flows, different segments, different geographies.

How do think about the interplay between net new assets on the long side of the business long only side of the business versus fee rates from here?

Speaker 2

Well, the fee rates are we haven't had immediate or current or grand disputations on those in our plans, especially for this year. On the institutional side, they are generally individually negotiated as per the disclosures we've made. On the fund side, there are the normal discussions with distributors about sharing and the regular marketplace that is unchanged. So, you know, we aren't currently dealing with meaningful reductions in fee rates.

Speaker 10

Okay, thank you.

Speaker 0

We'll move next to John Don at Evercore.

Speaker 11

Morning. Thank you. Wonder if you could give us a little more flavor of the Hermes sale discussions with institutional clients and maybe how big an opportunity that could be and if we could start to see more of an impact in the 2020.

Speaker 2

Well, since Saker was on that roadshow with the institutions, I will let him comment and then I will add.

Speaker 3

Thank you. So we continue to see a strong interest in our products for institutional clients. Again, to remind everybody before the majority stake was acquired by Federated, we already had some marquee clients in The United States. So although we weren't big, it's not as if we were not known. But these sales as you well know, typically take some time to come through, but we're seeing a lot of positive reception, some to our fixed income.

It might surprise some of you, but some to our U. S. Small cap and certainly to our SDG fund as well. So we're hopeful that this will begin to come through in this year and translate into assets.

Speaker 2

And I would add a couple of things. We are adding to our institutional sales force here. You know, it's like onesies, twosies. But it is because we have a lot of confidence in these mandates. And at a macro level, one of the reasons is exactly the reason for the combining of the name.

You bring Federated's fiduciary heritage, which is a drive for performance, an alpha hunter, an active manager with Hermes who shares exactly those views along with a lifetime commitment to responsible investing. This is the overall message that we are bringing to the institutions. And we think we are able to bring it in a unique way because of the focus on the fiduciary and because of the beauty of the engagement the way Hermes has done it. And the way Hermes has done it that makes it unique is it is a third party effort. So there is a group that does EOS that sends the 40 person team into various companies to get data that looks forward into what is going to happen in addition to taking all the data that's backward looking as to how people did do.

And these kinds of things are good messages in the institutional world. And if you have the numbers to go along with it, we think it makes for an excellent project.

Speaker 11

Got you. And then just one on strategic value dividend. It seems to be trending in a better direction. But where do you think we are in the sales cycle for that? And maybe just some of the environments in the past where you've that have been good for that strategy?

Speaker 2

Well, in terms of the sales cycles, mentioned, we've seen the sales continuing to increase and redemptions continuing to decrease. And so far in January, it's a positive flow story. Part of the reason for that is in a continuing low rate environment, this 3.8% distribution yield with a growing dividend stream is a very, very viable product. And people, at least some of the thoughts from the marketplace, are that there are continued interest in this product and they are continually interested in the yield. Some are not willing to jump full scope into the market, but they like getting the yield to keep them interested.

So overall, the tone we're finding from the broker dealer SMA world is that they're cautiously optimistic. And that's a good situation for strategic value dividend.

Speaker 11

Great. Thank you very much.

Speaker 0

We'll move next to Kenneth Lee at RBC Capital.

Speaker 12

Hi. Thanks for taking my question. Just one on the Hermes EOS. You touched upon mentioned that you're in the process of hiring new engagers right now. Wondering what other further milestones would you expect in the near term?

And could we potentially see implementation in The U. S. Sometime this year? Thanks.

Speaker 2

Well, the implementation is in The U. S. This year. We've already hired some, and there are more on the docket. And overall, my expectation is we'll cross we'll go from $8.77 over $1,000,000,000,000 in assets under administration in some time frame here in the future.

I hate to put exact date on it. It's Sackers Lee on Camby who runs it. I'll let him tell you about it.

Speaker 3

So we already, prior to this, of course, engaged with companies in The United States. Our commitment to increase our engagement capability in The US is partly was partly also to service the fund managers within the Pittsburgh and New York and Boston offices for Federated because our view has always been that the use of ESG which we pioneered from thirty years ago and the use of stewardship which we pioneered again from thirty years ago and formalized fifteen years ago with the launch of the EOS team is in fact a way in which helps us find better data on companies and helps us add alpha. So this has always been a commitment there. The increase in people in The States engages allows us a deeper engagement with American companies and a better way of servicing our increasing number of US based clients. And again to remind people, we run EOS in a different way from others.

We run it as a kind of a club where all of our clients decide collectively on the topics that they want to pursue with the companies and the companies they want to talk to, including by the way, the teams that we have here who act as client. So the Federated Hermes teams act as a client to the EOS. And this is different from perhaps others who are trying to enter the stewardship arena by pursuing what they see as the right teams to pursue. Now that allows us to focus on companies in a way of improving the long term performance and that way actually release better value creation and wealth creation in the long term. So we are there.

We've added more people. There is a segment of the floor in Pittsburgh, which is already EOS and that will continue to grow over time. It's something we've been building fifteen years. We're the market leaders. We will continue to build.

Speaker 12

Great. Thanks. And I just one follow-up if I may, just on the money market funds. You touched upon that money market fund rates are still favorable compared to some competing products. Wonder if you can just give us a little further details in terms of the current competitive landscape.

Thanks.

Speaker 2

Debbie? Sure.

Speaker 9

I'll take that one. Deposit rates are still I think the last Trane Bank brokerage deposit rate index came in at 14 basis points. So it's not much above where money funds were in a zero rate environment, and we're no longer in a zero rate environment. Most of our funds are somewhere on a net yield basis between one sixty and one eighty. The interest rates went down with with the coronavirus over the course of the last several weeks and concerns about what that might do from an economic activity perspective and how the Fed may need to react.

The Fed, however, on Wednesday confirmed rates and actually raised IOER and the RRP, which is overnight lending by five basis points. So that's beneficial to our products and has made the the yield curve look a little bit more attractive on a fund basis. So I don't expect those yields to drop very much. So when you're talking about deposit rates, you're talking at least 150 basis point advantage over for what most customers in those types of accounts are receiving at this point.

Speaker 2

Great, thanks.

Speaker 0

We'll move next to Ken Worthington with JPMorgan.

Speaker 13

Good morning. This is Will Cuddy filling in for Ken. So first, the compensation ratio has bounced around a little. Could you remind us of how you think about the growth of compensation relative to revenue over the long term? And more specifically, with revenue growth, how should we be thinking about that trending over time?

Speaker 4

Yes, Will, this is Tom. We don't look at it based on revenue. We are more granular in The U. S. In terms of how the sales force is how the compensation is done there, and that's based on how sales go.

And of course, then you go to investment management and huge portion of their pay is on an incentive is on how performance is done, then the operation and the rest of the non sales and non investment management are more tied to an operating income view. So that would have a little bit of revenue look at it, but it's certainly more of a bottom line approach. And we don't look at the ratio of comp to revenue. We've never calculated that. We've never used that in our budget process.

We're really doing a build from ground zero and up.

Speaker 2

Okay. Got

Speaker 13

it. Thank you. And did I hear correctly earlier, is $1,600,000,000 of sales in private equity? And if so, what products are seeing those sales?

Speaker 1

We're referring to Hermes did a press release actually in November talking about Hermes GP raising 1,000,000,000 point dollars for private equity. And Saker, you might want to comment on that more. But essentially, the point that Chris was making is, this business is largely rolling over from other successful vehicles and it's a good indicator of the quality of the results that have been delivered through that enterprise.

Speaker 3

So the way that our private equity business works is that we raise tranches that go into essentially funds, although they're not funds in the sense that you think about them in The United States, but they're in fact private equity funds. And each tranche raises money over a set amount of time and then it's closed. And then the performance is calculated over the next depending on the fund between three and five years and then the carry is paid out accordingly. And this increase was going around to primarily all of our existing clients who are very pleased with the performance of our previous funds, which remember when a private equity fund performs, you actually give the money back because you're selling the underlying assets and therefore reinvesting it back into our new fund, which then allows us to go out and invest it again. And so the cycle starts again and that's typical for private equity cycles.

And the clients are widely dispersed including some major clients we've got in North America as well.

Speaker 1

And Will, it's Ray. Just from a reporting standpoint, you won't see the 1,000,000,000 point dollars We would not put that in there as a new sale. So it's not in the Q4 number. Those are commitments going forward. And as Saker indicated, they'll largely roll over, from existing mandates.

So you won't see that in the numbers, but it's obviously a very positive development.

Speaker 13

Actually, 1,600,000,000.0 like is that mostly re upped, it's not new clients coming in, it's just it's them re rolling back into the new funds? Yes.

Speaker 2

Got it.

Speaker 13

Yes. Thank you.

Speaker 3

And sorry, and remember, we make our money in two ways in private equities. One is we make our money obviously on the management fee, but also we make our money on the carry on the upside that we create and the alpha we create for our clients over the long term. Bit different than property where it's performance fee and slightly over a shorter time horizon, but they both have that basic model within it.

Speaker 0

We'll move next to Robert Lee with KBW.

Speaker 2

Great, thanks. Good morning guys. Most of my questions were asked but I guess I will ask the inevitable capital management question. I mean Chris knowing you like to hit on acquisitions, dividends and buyback, just with the apparently increased earnings power of the company kind of coming through, I'd last quarter, this quarter, any subtle changes, particularly maybe in how you're thinking of the dividend or repurchase part of that? Because I guess having raised the dividend in a while and payout ratio is, I guess, trending towards a little bit lower than pure average.

So how do you think of that? Well, we certainly don't want this price to go down to improve that ratio. But acquisitions remain on the table and doing all of these other things which we talked about on capital assets, I mean, we are looking at as all the things I mentioned on the marketing side, I'm not going to go through them again. We have some internal things we're doing on our data management and warehousing, and we've accelerated those. We're putting a new CRM in.

We're going with Salesforce for the federated part of it, which Hermes already has that. So that will be put together. And that will take a few bucks. So internal is added to that list of the dividend, share buyback and acquisitions. Now in dividends, we always look at that in April.

And we are well aware of all of the statistics that you're commenting on. And we will have a hearty look at that in April. On share buybacks, we were up a little bit from our polite activity in the past, and we continue to be active on that. And that's about as much as I can give you on that activity. Okay.

That was all I had. Thanks for taking my question.

Speaker 0

We'll return to Patrick Davitt at Autonomous Research.

Speaker 7

Hey guys, thanks for the follow-up. I remember some chatter last year you had kind of mentioned that there were some discussions to maybe roll some of the BTPS money that had come out back into other strategies. Are those discussions ongoing? Any update on the potential for some of that money to come back in?

Speaker 2

Zaker? I Sorry, I just realized I

Speaker 3

had my mute on. I had I had a mute on, sorry. As I said, we have some rollover of money from B2B, but net net, we have net decline as per the plan that we agreed with them when the majority stake was purchased, but we continue to show them other stuff that we have particularly in money market and fixed income. And again, they're an institutional client and you'd expect them to take some time. I would repeat what I said, I think previously on these calls, which is the following.

As you would expect, the net fee basis that I can that we can charge BTPS is commensurate with the size, which means as they free capacity in our high alpha in demand funds and we sell the same capacity to new clients, our margins actually go up.

Speaker 4

Right. Okay. Thank you.

Speaker 0

With no other questions holding, I'll turn the conference back to management for any additional or closing comments.