StepStone Group Inc.

STEP
Investment Thesis · Updated May 29, 2026 · Coverage 2026-Q2
Free primer — Business model and recent catalysts as thesis context (steps 1 & 3 of 21). The full investment thesis, moat analysis, scenario analysis, and institutional/insider activity are available via the full research tier.

Business Model


source: coverage-next-full | ticker: STEP | step: "01" | created: 2026-05-29

Step 01 — Business Overview

Company Identity

StepStone Group Inc. (NASDAQ: STEP) is a global private markets investment firm providing customized investment solutions, advisory services, and data analytics to institutional investors and private wealth clients. The firm specializes in helping clients build diversified private markets programs spanning private equity, infrastructure, private debt, and real estate.

Mission and Positioning

StepStone occupies a distinctive niche in the alternative asset management ecosystem: rather than competing head-to-head with large commingled fund managers like Blackstone or KKR, STEP serves as the "outsourced CIO" or portfolio construction layer for institutional investors — pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, insurance companies, endowments, and family offices — who want curated, customized exposure to private markets without building in-house capabilities at scale.

Founding and History

Year Event
2007 Founded by Monte Brem, Jason Ment, and Thomas Keck (Monte and Jason had previously worked together at Aldus Equities)
2007-2015 Organic growth building SMA platform; early focus on PE and VC customized programs
2016-2019 Expansion into real assets (infrastructure, real estate); geographic expansion in Asia-Pacific, Europe
2020 IPO on NASDAQ (September 18, 2020) at $18/share; raised ~$358M
2021 Acquired Conversus Capital (private wealth access products); acquired Greenspring Associates (~$500M cash+stock, added VC/growth equity)
2022-2024 Continued organic AUM growth; expansion of private wealth channel (StepStone Private Wealth)

Leadership Team

Name Role Background
Monte Brem Co-CEO & Co-Founder Former CIO at Aldus Equities; Stanford MBA
Jason Ment Co-CEO & Co-Founder Attorney background; former COO at Aldus Equities
Thomas Keck Head of Research Co-Founder; oversaw research platform and data
David Park CFO (joined 2019) Former investment banker; oversees financial operations
Bob Long Executive Chairman (Board) Industry veteran, joined from StepStone advisory board

Founder Note: Monte Brem and Jason Ment remain deeply involved in operations and client relationships. Combined founder insider ownership (including associated entities) exceeds 30% of economic interest, representing exceptional long-term alignment.

Business Model

How STEP Makes Money

1. Separately Managed Accounts (SMAs) — Core Product

  • Client-by-client customized portfolios built to their specific objectives, risk tolerance, geographic preferences, and liquidity needs
  • STEP manages the program either discretionarily (makes allocation decisions) or non-discretionarily (advisory: recommends, client approves)
  • Fee structure: Management fee as % of committed/invested capital, typically 25-75 bps depending on strategy and size

2. Focused Commingled Funds

  • STEP-branded funds pooling capital from multiple LPs into a specific strategy
  • Examples: StepStone Private Venture & Growth, StepStone Infrastructure (SIRF), StepStone Real Estate fund series
  • Higher fee rates than SMAs; more scalable for smaller clients

3. Advisory and Data Services

  • Pure advisory engagements — STEP provides analysis, manager recommendations, performance monitoring without discretion
  • StepStone Private Markets Intelligence (SPI): proprietary data analytics service offering benchmarking, peer group analysis, and portfolio analytics
  • ~40-50% of total AUM is non-discretionary (advisory); these assets generate lower fee rates than discretionary management

4. Performance Fees (Carried Interest)

  • On discretionary vehicles with carry, STEP earns 5-10% carried interest above preferred return hurdles
  • Meaningful contributor to distributable earnings (DE) particularly in favorable PE/VC exit environments
  • Less predictable; can be lumpy quarter to quarter
AUM Summary (approximate, FY2024 ending March 31, 2024)
Category Amount
Total AUM ~$675B+
Discretionary AUM ~$100B
Non-discretionary (Advisory) AUM ~$575B+
Fee-Paying AUM (FPAUM) ~$100B

Key Insight: The gap between total AUM ($675B) and FPAUM ($100B) reflects the large advisory book, where fees are earned on a much smaller notional base or as a flat retainer rather than AUM percentage.

Geographic Presence

STEP operates globally with significant non-US exposure:

  • Americas: New York (HQ), San Francisco, Charlotte, Toronto
  • Europe: London, Zurich, Dublin, Madrid
  • Asia-Pacific: Singapore, Tokyo, Sydney, Seoul, Beijing
  • Other: Abu Dhabi, São Paulo

Global presence supports relationship depth with sovereign wealth funds (Middle East, Asia) and European pension systems.

Client Base

  • Pension funds: State/municipal pensions in US, Canada, Europe (largest segment)
  • Sovereign wealth funds: Middle East, Asia-Pacific
  • Insurance companies: US and European life/P&C insurers
  • Endowments and foundations: University endowments, charitable foundations
  • Family offices and private wealth: Growing segment via StepStone Private Wealth platform
  • Financial intermediaries: Asset managers, fund-of-funds seeking sub-advisory

Typical client relationship spans 10-30+ years; some legacy advisory relationships date to predecessor firms.

Competitive Differentiation

  1. Customization at scale: STEP's core differentiator is building truly bespoke programs — most large managers push clients toward commingled funds; STEP treats each client portfolio as unique
  2. Data advantage: 90,000+ fund investment history across 30+ years; proprietary benchmarking enables better manager selection and portfolio construction
  3. Manager access: Scale ($675B+ AUM) provides negotiating leverage and access to oversubscribed top-quartile managers
  4. Advisory model: Non-discretionary advisory creates alignment ("we advise you on the same investments we make") without agency conflict; also serves as pipeline for converting to discretionary
  5. Founder-led: Co-CEOs actively involved; cultural cohesion and client trust over multiple market cycles

Segment Revenue MixFY2024

  • Management and advisory fees77.5% of rev
  • Performance fees (carried interest)17.5% of rev
  • Incentive fees4% of rev

Top Competitors

  • Hamilton LaneHLNE
  • HarbourVest
  • BlackstoneBX

Recent Catalysts


source: coverage-next-full | ticker: STEP | step: "12" | created: 2026-05-29

Step 12 — Investment Catalysts

Near-Term Catalysts (6-18 months)

1. Carry Monetization Cycle

The 2015-2021 vintage PE/VC investments are reaching maturity as deal markets normalize. A recovery in M&A activity and IPO windows directly accelerates STEP's carried interest realizations, which could double DE/share in an active exit year (as seen in FY2022 when DE reached ~$2.20/share vs. ~$1.70 in more recent years). Any indication of accelerating carry realization pipeline is a positive catalyst.

2. FPAUM Acceleration

New large institutional mandates (sovereign wealth funds, public pensions) represent step-function increases in FPAUM. A single $5-10B new mandate from a Middle Eastern SWF or European pension could meaningfully accelerate FPAUM growth above the ~12-15% base rate and trigger Street estimate revisions.

3. Private Wealth Scale Milestone

The StepStone Private Wealth platform crossing $5B or $10B in AUM would confirm the retail channel is working. Given the higher fee rates on retail products (~100-125 bps vs. 45-55 bps blended institutional), private wealth AUM carries disproportionate fee revenue contribution. A visible acceleration in private wealth inflows would expand valuation multiple toward tech-enabled alternatives platforms.

4. Dividend Increase or Special Dividend

A dividend increase signaling management confidence in FRE trajectory, or a special dividend if carry realizations exceed expectations, would attract income-oriented investors and validate the payout growth narrative.

Medium-Term Catalysts (2-4 years)

5. FRE/Share Approaching $2.00+

If FRE/share compounding continues at ~15%/year, STEP approaches $2.00-2.25 FRE/share in FY2027. At 30x P/FRE (current multiple range), that implies a $60-70 stock price — roughly 40-60% above current levels. The catalyst is sustained FPAUM growth sustaining the compounding thesis.

6. Valuation Re-rating to Hamilton Lane Parity

STEP trades at a slight discount to HLNE on P/FRE basis. If private wealth acceleration validates STEP's data/distribution story more fully, multiples could converge. A 3-5x turn re-rating adds ~$10-18/share.

7. International Expansion — New Sovereign Relationships

STEP is still building its Middle Eastern and Asian LP base. New sovereign wealth fund mandates in the region would demonstrate geographic diversification of the revenue base — a quality improvement the market may reward with a higher multiple.

Macro Catalysts

8. Interest Rate Normalization

Lower long-term interest rates are broadly positive for private markets: (a) improves PE exit valuations; (b) reduces LP opportunity cost of illiquidity; (c) accelerates fundraising for new STEP mandates. A Fed rate cutting cycle in 2025-2026 is a macro tailwind.

9. Private Credit Secular Growth Continuation

Private credit (direct lending, infrastructure debt, ABF) is one of the fastest-growing segments in private markets. STEP's private debt/credit FPAUM has been growing at 20%+ annually. Continued structural shift from banks to private lenders benefits STEP's credit advisory mandates.


Bull Case

  • Carry monetization surges as 2015-2021 vintage PE and VC investments harvest in a normalized M&A/IPO market, pushing DE/share well above $2.50 and driving a special dividend cycle similar to FY2022
  • Private wealth platform ramps faster than expected, contributing $15-20B of higher-fee-rate FPAUM by FY2027 and structurally expanding FRE margins toward 45%+
  • A major new sovereign wealth fund mandate ($8-15B) from the Middle East or Asia accelerates FPAUM growth to 18-20%+ for 2 consecutive years, triggering Street estimate upgrades and valuation re-rating toward Hamilton Lane's 35x+ P/FRE multiple

Bear Case

  • Private equity deal markets remain suppressed for 3+ years (structural, not cyclical), keeping carry realizations near zero and DE stuck at $1.50-1.70/share, removing a key valuation support
  • A large institutional client ($8-12B mandate) terminates or significantly reduces its STEP advisory relationship, triggering FPAUM contraction and raising concerns about concentration risk; stock re-rates to 22-24x P/FRE
  • Aggressive private wealth product competition from Blackstone, KKR, and Apollo limits STEP's retail channel growth to sub-$5B, disappointing the growth premium embedded in the current valuation and prompting multiple compression to 26-28x P/FRE

Moat Analysis

Narrow

Long-duration client switching costs and proprietary 90,000+ fund data history create a narrow moat, constrained by replicable services and fee compression risk.

Bull Case

Advisory AUM conversion to higher-fee discretionary mandates, FRE margin expansion toward Hamilton Lane levels, and carry monetization could drive substantial multi-year upside.

Bear Case

Current valuation already prices in growth expectations, while carry uncertainty and competitive pressure from large GPs building advisory arms could limit upside.

Top Institutional Holders

As of 2026-05 · Total institutional: 65%
  1. Vanguard Group9% · 7M sh
  2. BlackRock / iShares8% · 6M sh
  3. FMR (Fidelity)5% · 4M sh

Full Investment Thesis

The full research tier ($2.00) adds 7 dimensions that constitute the investment thesis proper.

Moat Analysis
Durable competitive advantages, switching costs, network effects, and moat trajectory.
Investment Thesis
Variant perception, key assumptions, what has to be true, and why the market may be wrong.
Bull / Base / Bear Scenarios
Three discrete scenarios with probability weights, catalysts, and price targets.
Risk Register
Macro, competitive, execution, and regulatory risks with materiality ratings.
Management Quality
Capital allocation track record, incentive alignment, and tenure analysis.
DCF Valuation
10-year DCF with sensitivity matrix across revenue growth and margin assumptions.
Institutional & Insider Activity
13F holder concentration, insider Form 4 transactions, net selling/buying trends, and ownership-structure context.
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