Artisan Partners Asset Management Inc.
APAMBusiness Model
source: coverage-next-full step: 01 ticker: APAM date: 2026-06-15
Step 01 — Business Model Overview: APAM
Company Profile
Artisan Partners Asset Management Inc. (NYSE: APAM) is an independent, multi-boutique active investment manager headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Founded in 1994 and publicly traded since 2013, Artisan operates 12 autonomous investment franchises collectively managing approximately $186 billion in assets under management as of May 2026 [S1].
The core proposition: Artisan recruits proven investment talent, provides institutional infrastructure and distribution, and allows each team to operate independently with minimal cross-team interference. Portfolio managers share in the economics of their strategies through a profit-sharing model, aligning their incentives tightly with strategy performance and AUM growth.
Value-Chain Layer Map
INVESTOR (Institutional / Intermediated Wealth / Retail)
│
▼
DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL
├── Intermediated Wealth (61% of AUM, +13% CAGR) — RIAs, broker-dealers, DCIO
└── Institutional (39% of AUM, ~2% CAGR) — Endowments, pensions, sub-advisory
│
▼
ARTISAN PLATFORM (Value add: brand, compliance, risk, distribution, operations)
├── 12 Autonomous Investment Franchises
├── Artisan Funds (mutual fund platform) — $92.3B AUM (May 2026)
└── Separate Accounts & Other — $93.7B AUM (May 2026)
│
▼
INVESTMENT TEAMS (11-12 teams; each manages 1-4 strategies)
Key franchises by AUM:
├── International Value → $56.1B (David Samra team; flagship strategy)
├── Global Value → $38.4B
├── Non-U.S. Growth → $16.8B
├── High Income (Credit) → $14.2B
├── Global Opportunities → $13.4B (Growth team)
└── Other 7 teams (EMsights, Thematic Growth, etc.)
│
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INVESTMENT OUTCOME
99% of AUM outperforming benchmarks (10-year, gross of fees) [S1]
→ Supports premium fee rate (68.6 bps weighted avg vs. ~40 bps industry avg)
Business Model Summary
Revenue formula:
Revenue ≈ Average AUM × Weighted-Average Management Fee Rate
- Average AUM (FY2025): ~$180B (end AUM $179.9B)
- Weighted-avg management fee: 68.6 bps (FY2025), secular decline from 70.9 bps (FY2016) [S2]
- FY2025 Revenue: $1,197M
Performance fees: A secondary, variable revenue stream from certain strategies (typically institutional separate accounts with performance hurdles). Q4 2025 included meaningful performance fees (~$18M estimated), creating tough comps.
Economic model:
- Fixed cost base (operations, compliance, distribution infrastructure) + variable investment team profit-sharing
- Operating leverage: each $1B increase in average AUM → ~$680K incremental revenue at current fee rates, most flowing to operating income above fixed costs
- Operating margin: 33–35% in normal conditions; ranged 31–44% across FY2021–2025
Corporate Structure
Multi-class equity: Artisan Partners Holdings LP (operating partnership) has three economic classes:
- Class A common stock (publicly traded, ~65–66M diluted EPS shares, but 81M total registered)
- Class B & C shares (limited partner units converting over time to Class A)
- Class D common (management/insider-held)
This structure means:
- GAAP EPS refers to Class A economic interest only (~80% of total economics in FY2025)
- Dividends are variable pass-throughs (>100% payout ratios are normal, not distress signals)
- "True" distributable cash per economic unit is more relevant than GAAP EPS alone
Subsidiaries:
- Artisan Partners Holdings LP (operating subsidiary)
- Artisan Partners Limited Partnership (investment adviser — the regulated entity)
- Artisan Funds, Inc. (registered investment company)
- Artisan Partners Global Funds plc (UCITS platform, Ireland-domiciled)
Revenue Mix by Segment
APAM reports as a single operating segment (investment management). Key revenue sub-components [S3]:
- Management fees: ~97–99% of total revenue (AUM-based, recurring)
- Performance fees: ~1–3% in normal years; elevated in strong-performance years
- Other fees: Minimal
Headcount & Operating Model
~750 associates as of FY2024 end (per 10-K MD&A) [S3]. This is lean for $180B in AUM:
- ~$240M revenue per employee (among the highest in asset management)
- Investment talent (~60–80 portfolio managers + analysts across 12 teams)
- Distribution team (~100+ covering global channels)
- Operations/compliance/corporate functions
Source Index
| ID | Source |
|---|---|
| [S1] | SEC 10-K FY2024, FY2025; investor presentations Q4 2024, Q2 2025; retrieved 2026-06-15 |
| [S2] | SEC EDGAR XBRL companyfacts; retrieved 2026-06-15 |
| [S3] | SEC 10-K FY2022/FY2023/FY2024 summaries; retrieved 2026-06-15 |
| [S4] | StockAnalysis.com APAM financials; retrieved 2026-06-15 |
Recent Catalysts
source: coverage-next-full step: 12 ticker: APAM date: 2026-06-15
Step 12 — Bull vs. Bear Catalysts: APAM
Note: Earnings transcript analysis was NOT performed (coverage-next-full path). Bull/bear debate is inferred from consensus notes, press releases, SEC filings, and analyst research (Goldman Sachs Sell at $34, Jefferies Buy at $54, Evercore Hold at $38).
The Core Debate
The analyst debate on APAM centers on a simple question: Is the 11% dividend yield a value trap or a high-yield total return opportunity?
Bull view (Jefferies, $54): APAM's performance track record (99% of AUM beating benchmarks over 10 years) is durable, intermediated wealth growth is re-accelerating, and the 9× P/E + 11% dividend yield prices in excessive pessimism about flows. Alternatives expansion (Grandview) and active ETF optionality provide upside optionality.
Bear view (Goldman, $34): Net outflows are structural and accelerating (Q4 2025: -$12.7B). Fee compression will continue to erode revenue even as AUM grows. At the current payout ratio, any sustained AUM decline will force a dividend cut — and a dividend cut on a "yield story" stock triggers significant multiple compression. The stock is a value trap.
Bull Case Arguments
B1. Performance track record is genuinely exceptional and durable
- 99% of AUM outperforming 10-year benchmarks (gross of fees) as of early 2026 [S1]
- 76% outperforming 5-year benchmarks (gross of fees) — even net of APAM's premium 68.6 bps fee, many strategies deliver net alpha
- Non-US equity is structurally harder to index (less analyst coverage, less information efficiency) — APAM's "edge" in international value/growth is structural
- If performance continues, institutional redemptions should slow and organic growth can return positive
B2. Intermediated wealth channel is growing at 13% CAGR
- 61% of AUM now in intermediated wealth (vs. ~55% in 2019) — the stickier, less outflow-prone channel [S1]
- Channel shift reduces the sensitivity of net flows to institutional mandate terminations
- Wealth management industry consolidation (fewer, larger RIAs) could concentrate APAM on more favorable terms
B3. Valuation is undemanding
- P/E (TTM): 9.0× — near the low end of the historical 9–15× range
- Dividend yield: ~11% on a variable structure that has never cut dividends below earnings
- P/AUM: ~1.6% ($2.91B market cap / $180B AUM) vs. 2–3% for premium active managers historically
- If flows normalize and earnings grow mid-single digits, a re-rating to 12–14× P/E implies 33–56% upside
B4. Grandview and alternatives expansion open a new AUM flywheel
- Private real estate is a structurally fee-rich ($80–120 bps management + carried interest) asset class vs. liquid equity
- If Grandview's next flagship fund raises $2–3B and subsequent vehicles grow to $5–10B, the economics are material
- APAM has a demonstrated ability to recruit top-performing investment talent at Franchise #12 — there could be franchises 13, 14, 15
Bear Case Arguments
B1. Net outflows are structural and likely accelerating
- FY2024 net outflows: -$3.7B | Q4 2025 alone: -$12.7B — the trend is worsening, not improving
- Passive substitution has removed $386B+ from active equity in 2025 systemically; APAM is not immune
- The $5.7B sub-advisory mandate termination (June 2026) is exactly the type of institutional mandate that is permanently leaving active for passive index
- Even flat or slightly positive flow in intermediated wealth cannot offset the scale of institutional redemptions
B2. Fee compression structurally erodes earnings power
- Weighted-avg fee has declined from 70.9 bps (2016) to 68.6 bps (2025) — 2.3 bps in 10 years
- At $180B AUM, each 1 bps fee decline = -$18M revenue, -$6M EBIT
- International equity (APAM's core) faces direct fee pressure as ETF alternatives (at 10–20 bps) expand
- Active ETF launches by competitors in international value (e.g., Cambiar International Value ETF) at lower fee points will eventually cap APAM's pricing
B3. The dividend yield is a trap
- Payout ratio consistently >100% on a GAAP basis; only sustainable due to the LP pass-through structure
- In a sustained AUM decline scenario (20–30% bear market + continued net outflows), distributable earnings could fall to a level requiring a meaningful dividend reduction
- Dividend cuts on high-yield stocks historically drive 20–40% stock price declines as "income investors" exit
Neutral/Bridge Observations
- The stock has underperformed the S&P 500 significantly since the 2013 IPO; at $35.88, it trades near its 52-week low ($34.37) — sentiment is already extremely negative
- International equity strategies have historically outperformed in late-cycle/value-rotation environments; a style rotation away from US tech growth could materially benefit APAM's flagship strategies
- Q1 2026 performance data (74% of AUM outperforming 3-year benchmarks, 76% 5-year) shows no performance decay, which is reassuring
Bull Case — 3 Bullets
- Track record is durable: 99% of AUM beating 10-year benchmarks gross of fees reflects structural investment process advantages in international/global equity, not luck.
- Intermediated wealth is the growth engine: 61% of AUM in the faster-growing, stickier channel at 13% CAGR; if institutional flow noise normalizes, net flows could turn slightly positive.
- Valuation is extreme pessimism priced in: At 9× P/E and 11% dividend yield on a variable but never-cut payout, the market has fully discounted the bear case; any earnings stability re-rates the stock materially.
Bear Case — 3 Bullets
- Net outflows are secular and worsening: Q4 2025's -$12.7B outflows and the $5.7B mandate loss in June 2026 illustrate that active equity AUM consolidation is accelerating; the passive substitution trend has no natural end.
- Fee compression is permanent: The 2.3 bps weighted-avg fee decline from 2016–2025 will continue; at $180B AUM, each bps = $18M revenue, compounding into a material earnings headwind.
- Dividend yield is a trap: >100% GAAP payout ratios leave no margin of safety; a prolonged bear market or accelerated outflows would force a dividend cut, triggering multiple compression on a yield-driven stock.
Source Index
| ID | Source |
|---|---|
| [S1] | Artisan Partners investor presentations; retrieved 2026-06-15 |
| [S3] | SEC 10-K; retrieved 2026-06-15 |
| [S6] | Industry research; retrieved 2026-06-15 |
| [S7] | Analyst ratings (Goldman $34 Sell, Jefferies $54 Buy, Evercore $38 Hold); retrieved 2026-06-15 |
Full Investment Thesis
The full research tier ($2.00) adds 7 dimensions that constitute the investment thesis proper.