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Earnings Call: Q1 2023

May 3, 2023

Candice Sun
Managing Director and Global Head of Corporate Communications, Janus Henderson Group

My name is Candice, and I will be your conference call facilitator today. Thank you for standing by and welcome to the Janus Henderson first quarter 2023 results briefing. All lines have been placed on mute during the presentation portion of the call to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's 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. In today's conference, certain matters discussed may constitute forward-looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from the projected in the forward-looking statement due to the number of factors including, but not limited to, those described in the forward-looking statements. The Risk Factors section of the company's most recent Form 10-K and other more recent filings made in the SEC.

Janus Henderson assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements made during this call. Thank you. It is now my pleasure to hand the call over to Ali Dibadj, Chief Executive Officer of Janus Henderson. Mr. Dibadj, please go ahead.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us today on Janus Henderson's first quarter 2023 earnings call. I'm Ali Dibadj. I'm joined by our CFO, Roger Thompson. In today's call, I'll start with some thoughts on the quarter before handing it over to Roger to run through the details. After Roger's comments, I'll provide a progress update against our strategic initiatives, then we'll take your questions following those prepared remarks. Turning to slide two. Market conditions have remained volatile and difficult to navigate. Recession fears, higher interest rates, banking sector worries, particularly regional banks, and increasing cautious market sentiment have all contributed to an uncertain market environment. Even with this market backdrop, we are pleased to have delivered a good set of results this quarter.

Assets under management increased 8% to $310.5 billion due to positive markets, FX, and $5.5 billion in net inflows. The quarterly flows are from improvements in all channels. Significant inflows into the institutional channel are the result of the hard work and dedication of teams across the firm, as well as nascent confidence among some of the most sophisticated clients and consultants in the world that our firm is on the right track. Last earnings call, I said that we would expect to deliver intermittent quarters of neutral to positive net flows as an indication that our strategic plan is taking hold, which is what happened this quarter. While we are encouraged by the net inflows, one quarter does not make a trend.

We are not at a point where we can consistently deliver positive flow results from quarter to quarter yet. For example, we need to rebuild our institutional pipeline, which takes time. Our retail flows continue to be negative. As part of our fuel for growth, there will be pockets of unprofitable AUM that we will look to exit, which will impact flows negatively. Again, there's reason to be encouraged by the efforts of our talented and hardworking Janus Henderson team as manifested by our flow result this quarter. There's still much work to be done to deliver organic growth over the long term consistently. We continue to expect one to two quarters of positive flows over the next one to two years. Turning to investment performance, it is solid in aggregate, with 70% of assets ahead of benchmark on a three-year basis.

It's during difficult times like these when our clients and their clients need our differentiated insights, investment discipline, and world-class service the most. We are in a period where money is no longer free and going forward, differentiating between the good companies and bad companies, the haves and have-nots will be the key to generating alpha. This is what our world-class investment teams in equities, fixed income, multi-asset, alternatives, and more around the world do. It positions us well to deliver the best possible investment outcomes for our clients and their clients. Net net, our financial results are good. Our strategy is starting to take hold. We have much work to do to become consistent. We have a strong and stable balance sheet. I'll now turn the call over to Roger to run you through the details of the financial results.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Thank you, Ali. Thank you again to everyone for joining us on the call today. Turning to slide three in investment performance. Investment performance versus benchmark is solid and improved over Q4, with at least two-thirds of assets beating their prospective benchmarks over all time periods. While we're pleased with the result, which includes the Balanced strategy moving back above benchmark on a one-year basis to go along with its strong long-term performance, the one-year fixed income performance still has work to do. Fixed income performance has improved over the first three months of 2023. The one-year number continues to be impacted by the historically tough year for bonds in 2022. Importantly, the longer term periods remain very strong.

Investment performance compared to peers continues to be competitively strong with 70%, 61%, 81%, and 90% of AUM in the top two Morningstar quartiles over the one, three, five, and 10-year time periods. Slide four shows company flows. As Ali mentioned, net inflows were $5.5 billion compared to $11 billion of net outflows last quarter. This is our best quarterly result in quite some time. Although we're pleased with the result, our goal is to deliver consistent organic growth over time, and we're not there yet. Turning to slide five for a look at flows by client type. Net outflows for the intermediary channel was $700 million, compared to $3.4 billion in the fourth quarter.

The improvement is attributed to significantly better results in the U.S., whilst EMEA declined compared to the prior quarter. We've told you that U.S. intermediary is a key pillar in our strategy of protect and grow, and Ali will give you some more detail and information about that later. This quarter, several strategies were positive, including the AAA CLO ETF, Global Equity Income, our Mortgage-Backed Securities ETF, Overseas and U.S. mid-cap growth. For U.S. mid-cap growth, we previously told you that performance was strong and this returned to inflows with the first quarter of positive flows since the fourth quarter of 2019. In the EMEA region, a risk-off sentiment and higher interest rates are impacting results, particularly in the U.K. Institutional net inflows were $6.9 billion.

Recall on last quarter's earnings call, I said that we are winning new business in institutional and that I had no new large redemptions to tell you about. The gross sales came from a number of sophisticated institutional investors into several different strategies, including $4.1 billion across a range of enhanced index mandates from a sovereign client, $1.7 billion into Australian fixed income from a large global reinsurer, and $1 billion into global multi-sector fixed income from another sovereign investor. Reiterating what Ali said, the quarterly fundings represent a meaningful portion of the late-stage pipeline, and the team is working to replenish and build a sustainable pipeline, but it will take time. In addition to the strong gross sales, the quarter included unusually low gross redemptions. We'd anticipate a higher redemption rate going forward, all else equal.

Finally, net outflows for the self-directed channel, which includes direct and supermarket investors, was $700 million. Slide six is flows in the quarter by capability. Equity net inflows in the first quarter were $3.3 billion compared to $7.5 billion of outflows in the prior quarter. As I mentioned on the previous slide, the result includes approximately $4 billion from an institutional funding into enhanced index strategies, which are part of our diversified alternatives capability. This was partially offset by continued but significantly lower equity outflows from our retail channels. Net inflows for fixed income were $3.6 billion compared to $1.9 billion of outflows in the prior quarter.

We are encouraged that despite the challenging short-term investment performance in fixed income, we have a breadth of product that is able to capture flows across multiple channels and regions. Several strategies contributed to positive fixed income flows in the institutional channel, including Australian fixed income, global multi-sector fixed income, U.S. buy-maintain credit, and multi-asset credit. In the intermediary channel, fixed income ETFs had positive flows of $780 million in the quarter, led by the AAA CLO ETF and our Mortgage-Backed Securities ETF. Total net outflows for multi-asset were $800 million, driven by the Balanced strategy within the retail channels. Whilst the net outflow is in part due to 2022 short-term performance, the medium and long-term performance remained very strong. As I said, the 1-year metric is now back above benchmark, adding to its very strong long-term numbers.

Finally, net outflows in the alternatives capability were $600 million, primarily from the absolute return strategy in the U.K. and Continental European retail. Moving on to the financials, slide seven is the U.S. GAAP statement of income. On slide eight, we explain the adjusted financial results. Adjusted revenue decreased 5% compared to the prior quarter, primarily due to lower seasonal performance fees, which were partially offset by higher adjusted management fees. Net management fee margin for the first quarter was 49.8 basis points, which is lower compared to the prior quarter. The decline is due to mix shift resulting from the large institutional wins being at lower fees than our blended fee rate. In the near term, our success in institutional will impact our blended fee margin. Over time, we continue to anticipate a stable net fee margin as we execute our strategy.

Compared to the same period a year ago, the net management fee margin increased 4/10 of a basis point, which is counter to the fee rate declines at other peers. First quarter performance fees of -$15 million are due to U.S. mutual fund fees. Outside of U.S. mutual funds, we have minimal AUM subject to performance fees in the first quarter. For the second quarter, we estimate aggregate performance fees of - $5 million to - $10 million. This includes approximately negative $15 million from the U.S. mutual fund performance fees, which are partially offset by other performance fees driven primarily by U.K. investment trusts. Looking at the full year, all else equal, we estimate aggregate performance fees could range towards the more negative of our current range of - $35 million to - $45 million. This includes roughly negative $60 million from U.S. mutual fund performance fees.

Clearly, the result will be dependent on future performance. Continuing on to expenses. Adjusted operating expenses in the first quarter were $278 million, down 1% from the prior quarter. Adjusted LTI was up 17% compared to the prior quarter, largely due to seasonal payroll taxes triggered by annual vestings in the quarter. In the appendix, we provided the usual table on the expected future amortization of existed grants for you to use in your models. The first quarter adjusted comp to revenue ratio was seasonally higher at 50.1%. This higher rate is primarily due to the payroll taxes on annual LTI vestings at the beginning of the year, reset of payroll taxes and retirement contributions, in addition to lower performance fees.

Adjusted non-comp operating expenses decreased 8% compared to the prior quarter, primarily due to lower G&A expenses, partially offset by the anticipated increase in marketing spend. Lower than anticipated non-compensation cost in the quarter is due to timing of our expenses. Full year 2023 operating expense expectations remain unchanged. They are adjusted compensation ratio in the range of mid-forties. Adjusted non-compensation percentage growth of mid to high single digits compared to the prior year, which suggests significant acceleration in our non-compensation costs for the remaining three quarters of the year as we execute our strategy. Lower first quarter non-compensation expenses are temporary as savings realized to provide fuel for growth have occurred sooner than the reinvestment in the business.

Going forward, we anticipate non-compensation expenses to increase, reflecting areas of opportunity we discussed last quarter, including marketing and advertising in our U.S. intermediary business and investments supporting our other strategic initiatives. Additionally, we expect amortizing previously capitalized costs through the G&A line of our P&L related to the order management system transformation project once the project goes live late in the second quarter. Moving to adjusted operating income for the first quarter, that was $106 million, down 14% over the prior quarter. First quarter adjusted operating margin was 27.5%. Finally, adjusted diluted EPS was $0.55. The quarterly EPS benefited from mark-to-market on seed capital and other investments coupled with interest income. Skipping over slide nine and moving to slide 10 and look at our liquidity. Our balance sheet remains very strong during this period of market volatility.

Cash and cash equivalents were $830 million as of the 31st of March, which is down from the end of 2022, primarily from the payment of annual variable compensation. The first quarter cash position is typically our lowest given seasonal cash needs. Compared to the same period a year ago, our cash and cash equivalents are 6% higher, reflecting our conservative and purposeful approach to capital management in order to maintain balance sheet flexibility during this uncertain economic environment. We have a strong liquidity position and will continue to balance the capital needs and the investment opportunities of the business with returning capital to shareholders. Based on the ongoing market volatility and opportunities we see in investing in the business organically and inorganically, at this time, we do not anticipate buying back shares via an accretive program in 2023.

We will continue to return cash to shareholders through a strong quarterly dividend. The board has declared a $0.39 per share dividend to be paid on the 31st of May to shareholders of record as of the 15th of May. With that, I'd like to turn it back over to Ali to give you an update on our strategic progress.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Thanks, Roger. On slide 11, we provide an update on some of the progress made during the quarter against our three 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. In protect and grow, we've talked previously about the importance of protecting and growing our U.S. intermediary business. As Roger mentioned, we are encouraged by the early progress in the U.S. intermediary business, including the 1st quarter flow results. In April, we launched a national and local brand campaign. I know some of you have already seen or heard the advertisements that will span print, digital, and other media. Promoting the Janus Henderson brand is something new for us and a change from what we've done in the past. The data analyzed tells a compelling story that brand matters.

There are a lot of great funds out there, but if the brand isn't relevant, it's difficult to capture flows. The national brand campaign will be active through the end of the year, and we're excited by its potential. Additional progress made in U.S. intermediary includes selectively upgrading the talent and increasing wholesaler client engagement, including the acquisition and use of data. Under Amplify, we've talked about our institutional and diversified alternative businesses before. In the institutional business, we've been restructuring coverage to be more aligned to different client types, helping us to better serve their needs through greater specialization. We've already made some new appointments and other professionals are joining in the coming months. In diversified alternatives, which includes multi-strategy hedge funds and enhanced index funds, we talked last quarter about a strong pipeline entering 2023.

This pipeline translated to double-digit % growth in AUM compared to the fourth quarter of 2022. Turning to Diversify, we continue to look actively to buy, build, or partner. We have a strong pipeline of activity and the current environment is creating opportunities. As I said previously, we will be disciplined in identifying where to buy, build, or partner. We want people who are like-minded in terms of culture, investment mindset, and client service. Finally, underpinning our strategy are cost savings to provide the fuel for growth. We are committed and on track to deliver the $40 million-$45 million of the previously communicated cost savings and have concrete plans to reinvest the savings back into the business on behalf of our clients and their clients.

This includes the examples I discussed of the recently launched brand campaign in the U.S., selectively upgrading and adding talent across the firm, and better aligning our client coverage. As Roger mentioned, these expenses will accelerate in the coming quarters. In conclusion, I'm proud of the progress manifested this quarter. We delivered positive net flows, solid investment performance, good financial results, and continued to execute on our strategy, including providing the fuel for growth to reinvest back into the business. The quarterly flow results, while encouraging, is not an inflection point yet, and we still have much work to do. We are in the early days of executing our strategic plan, and the path to achieving consistent results will not be linear. Our focus continues to be on controlling what we can control to deliver desired outcomes for our clients, shareholders, employees, and all other stakeholders.

Let me turn the call back over to the operator to take your questions.

Candice Sun
Managing Director and Global Head of Corporate Communications, Janus Henderson Group

Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, it is star followed by two. As a reminder, in the interest of time, questions will be limited to one initial and one follow-up question. Our first question comes from the line of Mike Brown of KBW. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Mike Brown
Equity Research Analyst, KBW

Great. Thank you for taking my questions. Ali, you noted that the pipeline of M&A activity is robust here. Can you just contextualize, you know, what you're seeing there, what you're thinking about, you know, from a strategic perspective in terms of opportunities and how are seller expectations progressing here? It sounds like the opportunity set is quite good, just, you know, curious how those conversations have been evolving this year. Thank you.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Thanks, Mike. Yeah, the M&A activity is quite high these days. There was a little bit of a lull, I think I mentioned that a couple of quarters ago. Now very much to your point, there is a lot of opportunity that's out there. Expectations are becoming a little bit more realistic, not everywhere, not for everybody, but certainly we're seeing some opportunities out there. Now remember, we're going to be looking at many things, almost everything that comes through. There's probably not a deal that happens that we don't at least know about. We're gonna be very disciplined in deciding what we buy, what we perhaps build internally, or certainly what we partner with external folks as well.

The reason for that isn't just, you know, to make sure we deliver for our clients, to make sure we deliver for our shareholders as well. It's very, very importantly make sure we are client-led in our M&A plan. You've heard me say that before. We wanna make sure that we diversify where we have the right to win, and that's really gonna be client-led. It is robust out there. It's tough to obviously determine what timing something will happen. We are hopeful that, you know, something matches what our client needs are and what our abilities are, and so we'll bring that forward. Now, I don't want to suggest that M&A in and of itself is a strategy. It most certainly is not.

It's supporting our strategy around the protect and grow, amplify and diversify. What's really important and really exciting is we don't need M&A to grow. We don't need M&A over time, right? Again, set this quarter aside, but we don't need M&A to get to where we wanna be in terms of our growth trajectory. That's because we have great businesses internally. Think of our U.S. equities franchise that we have as an example, that has shown extraordinarily good performance over short, medium, and long term. We can build that business and improve that. M&A is a useful tool to support our strategy, but we have a great set of core businesses we want to expand and grow, and you're seeing signs of some of that right now.

Mike Brown
Equity Research Analyst, KBW

Okay, great. Just switching gears to the, you know, the outlook on the fixed income side for the industry. You know, clearly we're seeing flows picking up there. How are you thinking about that opportunity for Janus? How are you positioning the firm to win your fair share of industry flows?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Sure. I can start, and I'll pass over to Roger for more details. You're correct. Fixed income is a big topic of conversation with our clients. If you think back historically, there really have always been three reasons why one would invest in fixed income. One is diversification, two is for, you know, regulatory or capital charge perspectives, particularly if you're an insurance company, and three is yield. Now, for a number of years now, we all know that yield was not one of the drivers of investing. Now it is. It's exciting. It's an exciting time for us that has a very high performing, particularly over the medium and long term, performance measures, fixed income business.

Our clients are asking us about it, we have a broad suite of products across the board in fixed income to deliver on our clients' needs, whether it be in a short duration form like JAAA or VNLA ETFs, whether it be in core plus areas like Flexible Bond Fund, developed world bonds, even JMBS, which is another ETF that is a CMBS, RMBS type or just riskier assets, multi-asset credit, Multi-Sector Income, those types of forms. We have a panoply of products to deliver on our clients' need in a world where fixed income is becoming much more relevant. We are very much positioned to deliver that to our clients in our strategy.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Yeah, I don't think there's a lot more to add on that, Ali. As you say, there doesn't seem to be a sort of common thread on where we're seeing demand from clients. The great news is that we've got products that align with their demand in many areas.

Mike Brown
Equity Research Analyst, KBW

Okay, great. Thank you for taking my questions.

Candice Sun
Managing Director and Global Head of Corporate Communications, Janus Henderson Group

Thank you. Our next question comes on the line of Patrick Davitt of Autonomous Research. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Patrick Davitt
Partner, Autonomous Research

Hey, good morning, everyone. Ali, I thought your comments on the redemption rate being abnormally low was interesting, which is not exactly what we've seen from some of your comps. What do you think drove it looking so much lower? Then why are you so confident it's gonna get worse again?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Look, it's a great question. If you take a step back and disaggregate the quarter, and the drivers of what we see, it was clearly from a flow perspective a solid quarter. And you can disaggregate that in a few ways. Some things will be repeatable, some things, you know, we don't think will be repeatable until we are consistently delivering on everything that we need to deliver for our clients. You know, one of them, as you mentioned, is very much lower outflow rates. We have to just look at our history to see what we've been outflowing, and you can do that as well as I can, and this quarter was a little bit better.

Is it, is it all because of all the great hard work that we're doing from a business perspective and we have been doing the hard work, we have been improving our interactions with our clients? I think you could say that. For sure, there's some element to that, but one has to admit that there's some serendipity in that as well. Serendipity in terms of timing of inflows, but also serendipity in terms of clients in some ways waiting and seeing. waiting and seeing what we're doing from a business perspective

Patrick Davitt
Partner, Autonomous Research

Mm.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

what the new strategy is gonna bring. I would say that some of the benefits of the inflows came from clients who were waiting to pull the trigger. Waiting to see if the strategy is on track. I think, you know, at least in this quarter, they've decided that some of the folks who are waiting, that our strategy is on track and they're willing to pull the trigger. Look, we'll see what the go forward suggests. We're not suggesting that, as I mentioned a moment ago, that one quarter creates a trend, but we're pleased with the hard work across our firm. We're pleased with the interactions we have our clients, the activity levels.

We're seeing some improvement in some of the underlying markets from a market share perspective, but it's gonna take some time.

Patrick Davitt
Partner, Autonomous Research

All right. Cool. Helpful. A broader question. I'm sensing in my conversations over this quarter that Australia's coming up a little bit more in money in motion, or Australia's becoming a bigger and bigger opportunity, but with a lot more barbelling between passive and alts. I think Janus is kind of uniquely positioned to take part in that. Are you seeing the same thing? What products do you think are best positioned to benefit from that? On the other hand, any large back books of AUM there that you think could be at risk from that money in motion? Thank you.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Patrick, yes. We are seeing Australia have money in motion. You know, we wanna make sure we capture our fair share of that. We do have both local, so to speak, products that are catered to that marketplace. Think about our Australian fixed income business. Think about some of our sustainable products that are down there as well, and others. We think we can certainly deliver on some of the needs and take advantage of some of that money in motion, and we're getting some of that money in motion. To be fair, we're also getting some of those products being exported to very sophisticated clients outside of Australia as well, given the strength of the skill sets that we have from an investment perspective in Australia.

There's clearly gonna be areas where we're gonna lose out on that as well. We're gonna lose out on folks looking for other things than what we have. We think the net-net of it is that Australia business is extremely strong. We continue to deliver on where our clients' needs are, and we do see opportunity of money in motion, particularly at our market share in that region.

Our next question comes from the line of Daniel Fannon of Jefferies. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Daniel Fannon
Managing Director and Research Analyst, Jefferies

Thanks. Good morning. wanted to follow up on your comments about exiting some unprofitable AUM and maybe talk about what strategies or regions that that's coming from. Also, given the kind of success in the institutional channel this quarter, and you mentioned lower fee, but if you could put some, you know, framework around how to think about the some of these mandates in terms of that relative to the overall fee rate.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Sure. Thanks, Dan. First on the, on the culling, so to speak. Look, we've always had an ongoing discipline at Janus Henderson of looking at different mandates, different pieces of the business and getting a sense of whether they're profitable, whether they're as efficient as they should be, and looking at that very carefully over the years. I think as you've heard from us before with fuel for growth, which is creating fuel to be able to invest back into the client, we wanna make sure that we're even more disciplined on that, even more focused on the ongoing review of profitability and efficiency across the firm for different mandates.

We are going to be surgical, we're gonna be deliberate. We wanna call it out as it's not something that's insignificant. To your point, does it have a fee rate correlation to it? It, it might, but it also depends on how much co-it costs to service some of these functions and strategies. We just wanna be mindful of that and call that out for y'all.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

I think just to add to that, Dan.

Daniel Fannon
Managing Director and Research Analyst, Jefferies

You also-

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Sorry, but, a s you said, the decline is due to, you know, these large fundings from some sophisticated institutional clients into some lower fee products, which is where we are today. You know, over time, we expect to see that continued success in institutional. That will be in a blend of products, as we see continued growth in our intermediary business over time, we'd expect to see our fee rate normalize or stabilize as it has done. Again, I'd just remind you that over the full year, our fee rate is actually up 4/10 of a basis point from this time last year.

Daniel Fannon
Managing Director and Research Analyst, Jefferies

Understood. Thank you. I guess, Roger, just a follow-up or clarification on the guidance for performance fees. Are you assuming the performance is flat from here as we think about the full year guide, or is there some assumptions of, you know, beta or improvement?

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

We assume relatively flat performance from here. Yeah, the performance will be what it'll be during the year, but that assumes basically flat performance.

Daniel Fannon
Managing Director and Research Analyst, Jefferies

Understood. Thank you.

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Craig Siegenthaler of Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Craig Siegenthaler
Managing Director, Bank of America Merril Lynch

Good morning, Ali. Congrats on the strong flow quarter. Can you walk us through the plan you've developed to build the institutional pipeline? Like, what I'm looking for is have you reallocated resources between different client verticals? How are you interacting with consultants differently? Have you tweaked product pricing? Also, which funds or retail funds have you relaunched into the institutional channel?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Hey, Craig. Thanks for the question. Yeah, institutional is a big focus of us from a strategic perspective, and we most certainly have changed the way we tackle institutional. The great thing is, and I'll kind of answer the last part of your question first, we have a great set of products that we can bring to the institutional channel. They're institutional quality investors. They're institutional quality performance processes, long-term track records that we just didn't take to the institutional channel in a, in a, you know, disciplined manner, particularly in North America. Seeing that opportunity, seeing that opportunity to amplify those strengths based on our U.S. equities franchise, our fixed income franchise in the U.S., elsewhere around the world, looks like an interesting opportunity.

Not one that turns overnight. You all know the sales cycle and the development of a client relationship cycle takes a while, but certainly, something that we're very focused on and very excited about. You've seen some of the fruits of that labor come through in this quarter. From a more practical perspective, you're exactly right. We have reorganized that business, reorganized the regions. We've brought in extraordinarily strong new talent to the team over the course of the past, call it roughly a year. People with relationships, people who've been doing this for a while, people who can get us in front of institutions who, I'll give you a very clear example, say, "Geez, I didn't know that you had these products in institutional.

I didn't know that you could take these products. I thought of you more of a retail business," almost a direct quote from a client. We ended up winning that mandate with the institutional client. You are seeing a lot more of an organizational structure that is conducive to bringing some of our products that we've had for a very long time to institutional. You're seeing that in our activity levels. Our activity levels are up quite significantly in institutional. We talked about that actually, I think, last quarter or so, That continues. The word is getting out there. The word is getting out there among our large sophisticated institutional clients, and consultant partners that we have something that can deliver on clients' needs, We are starting to deliver that.

Again, we are very energized by what we're seeing so far from the team.

Craig Siegenthaler
Managing Director, Bank of America Merril Lynch

Thanks, Ali. Just as my follow-up, how are you viewing the dividend now? I know you're covering the dividend, but dividend coverage is on the low side of the market decline last year. This is somewhat impacting your ability to build excess capital, which I think you wanna do and opportunistically buy back stock when it's low.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Do you wanna start on that one, Ali?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Sure.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Yeah. As you say, I mean, our dividend is full and well covered. Dividend yield is strong. Our dividend methodology or our capital methodology is unchanged. We have a hierarchy of needs, which is to ensure that we have the regulatory and working capital that we need. We then invest in the business both organically and inorganically. Should we not have a better use of capital, we'll return it to shareholders. As you say, we've successfully had both a strong dividend and a buyback over the last few years. You know, as we stand here today, the dividend, as I say, remains well covered.

We're seeing some opportunities, in what Ali's been talking about, both in terms of organically and inorganically investing in the business. And also particularly given the volatility of the markets, you know, we're very happy with the dividend as it stands, and as I said, have not put forward for a buyback for this year. Should those things not come about in terms of that investment needs, then we would obviously be looking to return cash in that consistent manner.

Craig Siegenthaler
Managing Director, Bank of America Merril Lynch

Thanks, Roger.

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Nigel Pittaway of Citigroup. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Nigel Pittaway
Managing Director in Insurance and Diversified Financials Research, Citigroup

Oh, great. Thanks for taking my questions. Just, just first of all, on the LTIP expense, I hear what you're saying about, and it's usual obviously, about the first quarter having that tax imposed. It does sort of strike me at around about a third of what you're expecting the full year expense to be. It is relatively high. Is there any particular reason for that, or?

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Both Q4 and Q1, Nigel, includes some mark to market as obviously the markets has risen. The full year number which we've given you in the appendix assumes flat markets from here. Other than that, yeah, it is just the calendarization of that first quarter. It was about $4 million of mark to market in the first quarter as well.

Nigel Pittaway
Managing Director in Insurance and Diversified Financials Research, Citigroup

All right. Okay, thanks. Maybe just coming back to one of the previous questions just on performance fees. You know, previously you said that you do have a number of funds at or above their high watermarks. It, it seems as if you're not allowing for much in terms of performance fees over and above, you know, the negative drag from the fulcrum fees. Do you think you've been sort of Is that a sort of conservative assessment, the guidance you provided today on full year performance fees or?

You know, do you think-

How should we view that?

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

I'd say Yes. As I say, you know, things could go either way. There's, we saw some very strong things come through late in the second quarter, in the second half of last year, in terms of performance fees where our excellent investment teams delivered some very strong performance. obviously that can happen. you know, we have significant AUM in performance fees in the second quarter, particularly in the CK range and the absolute return strategy in the U.K. OEIC. Most performance there is sort of at or around benchmark and high water marks at the moment. you know, we're not currently anticipating that based on current performance. There's only a couple of months to go, so it would be a pleasant surprise.

I think, you know, it's the correct answer to achieve relatively, you know, relatively low performance fees from those this, from in Q2. Obviously, there's the Q3 is then a relatively quiet period, and then we have some performance fees that come due in the fourth quarter. Obviously, that's a little bit further away, and we'll update in future quarters.

Nigel Pittaway
Managing Director in Insurance and Diversified Financials Research, Citigroup

Okay. Thank you.

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrei Stadnik of Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Andrei Stadnik
Executive Director of Equity Research in Financials, Morgan Stanley

Thank you. Two quick questions. Can I ask firstly, around the timing of the institutional flows? You know, did they come, you know, early or late in the quarter? Just in terms of helping us to think about the base, the management impact.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Um, they were-

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Well, they.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

blended through the quarter really.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Yeah.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Sorry, Ali.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

No, I was gonna say the same thing. They were several of them. They came throughout the quarter. I don't know if that helps you.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Probably, thinking about it probably a little bit earlier. There's probably there was more in January. That does make that performance that fee impact through the quarter.

Andrei Stadnik
Executive Director of Equity Research in Financials, Morgan Stanley

Excellent. Thank you. My other question was around how long, you know, were you in discussion for with the various mandates that you ended up winning? You know, were they in a fairly recent or, you know, were you talking to some of them, you know, for half a year or even longer? Like, how long were they in the pipeline for?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

It varies. When you look at what's come in, I think if you wanted to disaggregate it more broadly, there was certainly a certain amount of serendipity of things falling into the same quarter, there's no question. There were folks who were new and funded relatively early, and we could, from operational perspective, given some of the improvements that we've done, certainly fulfill that for them. There was a subset, exactly as you described, Andre, that were, as I mentioned a little while ago, wait and see. They saw and they didn't wait, and so they pulled the trigger, so to speak, to trust us with their capital. I'm not sure there's a perfect answer to this.

Generally speaking, these things are, I don't know, call it nine months in the making, typically, in terms of when you actually hear to when you actually go through in the funding. Some of these relationships are, you know, three, four, 10 years old. There's not a great answer to that question. These were a mix of all.

Andrei Stadnik
Executive Director of Equity Research in Financials, Morgan Stanley

Cheers. Thank you.

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Blostein of Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Alex Blostein
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Great. Thanks. Good morning, everybody. Ali, a little bit of a strategic question for you. When you guys talk about buy, build a partner, it sounds like the activity rates on the buy side are picking up. If you were to think about in the next kind of 12-24 months, which one of these areas are you likely to be most active in? I think we can all kind of picture what buy looks like, but when you're talking about build a partner, what are some of the key areas that you're looking to do that in?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Sure. Thanks for the question, Alex. Look, first and foremost, our priority is to grow the business that we have. That's what the protect and grow and amplify legs of our strategy are all about. We talked about institutional, we talked about some of the improvements in US intermediary, et cetera. Then of course, yes, you're right. There's a diversified piece which is the buy, build or partner. Look, I would argue that the build and particularly the partner areas are looking relatively fruitful. An example of kind of a combination of a buy or build is what we did with our emerging market debt team. Remember we brought them on board in September.

They had zero assets, so it was kind of an acqui-hire, so to speak. Then we're close to over one and a half billion dollars, almost $2 billion of committed capital to that. That's an example of the type of thing we could do that sort of melds the buy and the build. There's some really interesting opportunities to partner as well. I think our strengths are very, very clearly that we have a phenomenal client base and world-class investment acumen, and we can marry that to deliver on our client needs in a partnership form as well, which could be quite interesting.

Alex Blostein
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Got it. Okay. A clarification question on the institutional pipeline. When you guys are talking about rebuilding it, given strong fundings this quarter, can you help quantify where the institutional pipeline, of won but unfunded mandate stands today and the composition of that pipeline?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

We don't actually talk about the pipeline historically at Janus Henderson. What I will say is that, I guess three things. One is there are many things in the pipeline, and as I mentioned in an answer to another question, we're all very enthusiastic about the team that's there and the activity levels that are there, bringing our best-in-class investment strategies to the clients. That being said, Alex, it's gonna take time, especially as a certain amount of clients who are waiting did pull the trigger this quarter as you saw, in Q1, as you saw. And it's gonna take a little bit of time to rebuild that.

There's a lot of interest, whether it be in kinda global or international businesses that we have, in emerging market debt, as I mentioned a second ago, in liquid alternatives and fixed income. We have a real great palette to offer our client base there. We're excited about the opportunity as institutional to continue over time.

Alex Blostein
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

All right, great. Thanks very much.

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ken Worthington of J.P. Morgan. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Ken Worthington
Senior Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Maybe first, you're having improved success, excuse me, in your ETF business, particularly fixed income ETFs. Are you seeing success on particular platforms, and if so, why? Then what are you doing from a marketing perspective here to sort of continue and broaden the success that you're having?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Thanks for the question, Ken. There's no particular platforms that I'd say that are disproportionately driving some of those flows. What it really comes down to is we have marriage of a really unique set of investment capabilities around the securitized world in particular, whether it be JAAA, whether it be JMBS, others, VNLA, and then matching that to our client needs. Client needs, particularly in an environment on the short-term duration side for most of the needs here, in this fixed income environment. It's a great marriage that we can deliver through partnerships through our U.S. intermediary platform partners in particular. On the marketing side.

Ken Worthington
Senior Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Okay

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

L ook, there are a few things, right? Number one, and I'll mention this more in a second, we are doing the broader brand marketing, which we'll get to. From ETF perspective, a lot of it is about education, so to speak, right? Education in an environment where yields are where they are, and the uncertainty is where it is. We have the opportunity to bring, again, these clients, through the, through our U.S. intermediary partners, the opportunity to invest in these types of products, which are quite unique to us. It's a lot of education. That being said, going to the first point, we have spent time on marketing.

It's again, something that's a little bit different than we used to do in the past, as you heard in kind of our earlier, more prepared remarks. What we found from the data perspective is that, you know, Janus Henderson has a great amount of brand recognition, but we have to get into a little bit more of the consideration set for decisions made by advisors and partners that we have, other consultants or institutional or U.S. intermediary partners. Part of what we're trying to do with this marketing view is go, "Gosh, we have something to say now." We have something to say. We're a great firm. We have differentiated insights. We have disciplined investments. We have world-class service.

We wanna, as our purpose statement says, invest in a brighter future together. The data suggests that if we get that in front of folks, the consideration set becomes broader for our client base. Brand actually does matter is what the data would suggest. The last thing is, we're doing this, to be fair, as a little bit of an experiment. We have analytics behind what we're doing from a marketing perspective to try to get a best sense of what the ROI is, how we're gonna use it, where we're gonna use it, what products, to your point, Ken, are gonna be benefited by some of these brand marketing. We're gonna iterate and test and learn on that in a rather sophisticated manner, actually, going forward.

Ken Worthington
Senior Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Great. Thank you. Then, institutional, you know, win rate increased this quarter. How does the fee rate on the one business this quarter kinda compare to your overall institutional fee rate? Is this business coming in at sort of like, you know, similar? Is it higher? Is it lower? Is price a factor in sort of winning business? Just wanted to throw that out.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Yeah, it's a great question.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

As you said.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Go ahead, Roger.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

I was gonna say, as we said, you know, there was some very, very strong mandate wins this quarter from sophisticated institutional clients, which were in areas of lower fee products, particularly around enhanced index. That, yeah, that is, you know, what has come through the pipeline this quarter. That is what has brought the fee rate down a little bit this quarter. As I said, that broad pipeline Ali's been talking about, what we've been building, the persistency in that is what we've gotta build out. That's a, that's a blend of product. Our alternatives, our liquid alts business is a, is a mix of a multi-strategy business and an enhanced index business.

This quarter, we saw some very sizable flows coming in enhanced index, but multi-strat is an area where we've seen, and we've talked about this previously, where we've seen and are seeing a lot of client and consultant interest around the world, and that obviously is a higher fee business. We've got a range of things in that pipeline. This quarter, yeah, there was a range of enhanced index and fixed income product from as I say, from larger clients in the institutional space at lower fee. It's at a lower-

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Roger said it well.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

than our institutional rate.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Roger said it well, Ken.

Ken Worthington
Senior Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Yeah.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

You know.

Ken Worthington
Senior Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

I hear that. What I was really after is, I hear the mix and you get high fee products and low fee. Did you have to, or, you know, are you using price to win business? Is that, you know, part of the strategy? Were the products priced the right way before or maybe they weren't priced the right way before and you're using price as an adjustment? I wanted to just maybe take the conversation beyond just the mix.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Absolutely not, Ken. I appreciate now I understand where you're trying to get at. No, there's no new or different apples to apples fee pressures at all. It's all based on mix. There's a natural mix effect, as you mentioned, of ebb and flow between channels in particular, and that showed up in the quarter. Over time, we should continue to expect that our fee rate will be flat to going up. If you were to look at the fee rate over a longer period of time, Q4 had a little bit more, I guess, ebb than flow in some of these lower fee rate mandates, and this quarter had a little bit more flow than ebb, so to speak, on some of the channels that drove the fee differential.

To answer your question very directly, pricing is not part of our strategy, to get more business.

Ken Worthington
Senior Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Awesome. Thank you.

Thank you. Our next line. Our next question comes from the line of Brian Bedell of Deutsche Bank. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Brian Bedell
Director, Deutsche Bank

Great. Thanks. Good morning, folks. Thanks for taking my questions. Maybe just you back on the institutional side. different set of questions, but as you're marketing to the institutions, do you see them shifting money from other either asset classes or rather is it switching from other managers in terms of your success and the role of consultants also in the channel versus your direct effort? Then I guess sort of more broadly, given the enhanced or the improved traction in the institutional channel versus the AUM that you do intend to exit, that obviously is less profitable and lower fee.

Should we be thinking of this as sort of a net growth, avenue on the institutional side even, considering the, you know, the culling of some of those unprofitable mandates?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Thanks for the question, Brian. Let me disaggregate that into three areas. One is, first, what's happening from our client base and what are they looking at. I think one of the most important themes that our clients are thinking through right now, is this view that the past 10 years were extremely easy to just ride the wave, particularly based in kind of pure passive mandates, and deliver pretty good performance. On the go-forward basis, all of our more sophisticated clients, and I'm sure others of our competitors as well, are saying, "Gosh, we need to figure out how to create alpha out of the haves and have-nots in whatever we invest in, whether it be equities, whether it be fixed income, whether it be some alternative areas.

How do we accentuate the alpha creation between the haves and have-nots?" The good news for us is that that's what we do all day at Janus Henderson. That's why we have 340 people on our investment teams to pick the haves and have-nots. Perhaps less relevant over the past few years where money was free, but increasingly relevant among our clients and the broader asset management industry going forward. We're very, very clearly seeing, to answer your question very specifically, a shift from many clients who were relegating a lot of their assets to passive to actually coming back to folks like us, and I'm sure some others, but folks like us to get into the differentiation of haves and have-nots.

Some of that is manifested through things like a product we have called Enhanced Index, i.e., it's kind of a passive underlying or index underlying, and then it's an alternative overlay onto that effectively, which has been very successful for a number of years. That's kind of dipping the toe in the water. And then we have folks who are going even further, whether it being fixed income, whether it being equities, whether it being other places of our business, and realizing that the go forward is not going to be the same, most likely from a market performance perspective versus the go behind. That's one of the major first topics I just want to raise that very important question, Brian. The second thing is, you mentioned consultants.

You know, it's a little bit of an answer to the question that Craig asked earlier as well. We didn't really have a concerted consultant servicing and partnership effort at the firm until relatively recently. We didn't have a global head of consultants. We didn't have a long tenured North America head of consultants. We have a great one. Partnership with consultants is an extremely important thing for us. It's important because it delivers better results for our clients. That's exactly a place that we are focused on and those relationships don't turn overnight, obviously. Over time, they do, and we're seeing some of the fruits of that labor already start to play out.

Your last question, if I kind of parse through it, you know, it's tough to tell what our flows are gonna be. Obviously, for the quarter, we're pleased by the results on the institutional side of things. There will continue to be ebbs and flows, as Roger said earlier, and it was brought up in a question as well. I would say that the outflows were lower than one would see from a run rate perspective from us. I'd rethink what the go forward should be to be more like a historical outflow level as well. We're watching and trying to service our clients as best as we can.

The proof will be in the pudding over time, again, not overnight, but over time in terms of delivering for our clients' needs.

Brian Bedell
Director, Deutsche Bank

Okay, great. Just quickly on the advisor side, this has been asked, but a little bit of a different question. Are you gaining more traction, do you think, within the individual advisors, at the firm, or is the future growth more about onboarding either to new platforms or adding products onto those platforms? And then on the branding campaign is, I imagine it's targeted broadly, but is there a retail component to that as well so such that retail investors would say, you know, they would gain brand recognition of Janus, and they may be asking for Janus product as a result of the branding?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

I guess, yes, let me tackle those. First, it's both. We have very broad reach to many U.S. intermediary clients, for example, or global intermediary clients, but they typically don't have many of our products on their platform. We're known for a few things. Most importantly, however, we're known to be a trusted partner. We're known to have great investment acumen, and that very much opens the door for us to step into product two and three and hopefully beyond. That's something that the team is very focused on and has had good success in doing that. It also is that we don't have as broader reach as we could across the advisor base. It really is a driver of both of those.

I'd like to think that over time, we can gain share through both of those vectors of growth. I will say here that the U.S. intermediary team, as an example, where we've made some changes, some personnel changes, is really showing some signs of improvement along both of those dimensions, which we should be very proud of and shareholders should be grateful for. The second thing to your point from a marketing perspective, yes, absolutely. Look, we are, as I mentioned, experimenting. This is a little bit of a Petri dish, and we're measuring everything. For those of you who know me know that I do that. We're measuring everything, and we're seeing how we can test and learn and get a better understanding of where absolutely an advisor sees us and says, "Hey, I recognize that name.

Sounds like they have something to say. Let me actually pick up the phone or respond to an email that I've received, or take that one-on-one meeting with investor or a salesperson. In fact, Brian, we're seeing that play out. We're seeing that happen. There are clear anecdotal at this point, examples of that, and we think we can continue to do that. Again, we're gonna test the ROI. We're not a, you know, pure B2C company, but we certainly think that there's opportunity to create a reminder of our brand in people's minds, both intermediary and institutional.

Brian Bedell
Director, Deutsche Bank

That's great. That sounds, that sounds very encouraging. great. Thank you.

Thank you. Our next question come from the line of Ed Henning of CLSA. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Ed Henning
Banking and Diversified Financial Equity Analyst, CLSA

Thank you for taking my questions. Just the first one, just to clarify, did you say you only expect one to two quarters of positive flows over the next two years? In that, can you just highlight where you think the biggest headwinds on the flows will be for your business over the next two years?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Sure. Our guidance, Ed, hasn't changed. We've given indication that we would expect the hard work that we're doing from a strategic perspective, whether that be the marketing that we talked about before, whether that be the personnel changes and continue to build a world-class team, whether that be the reorg that we've done to make decisions faster, whether it be the strategies that we played in, protect and grow, amplify, diversify, et cetera, we believe to show traction or proof that that is showing traction, the strategy is showing traction would be one to two quarters of positive flows over the next, yes, one to two years. Now, we just had one, and we still think we can get one to two quarters, including this one, over the next one to two years.

It takes time, as you all know, as students of this industry, to really get to consistently positively flowing businesses in this industry. That ties to your second question, which is if you look at the growth rate for this industry, it's not a rapidly growing business. The major headwind, to be fair, is the underlying growth rate from a net flows perspective in this industry. We are overcoming our self-created headwinds. Again, that will take time, but we continue to face the headwinds of the industry from a net flow perspective, at least on the active asset management side. Hopefully, that helps, Ed.

Ed Henning
Banking and Diversified Financial Equity Analyst, CLSA

Yeah. Do you expect to still see outflows in equities and potentially inflows in fixed income? Like are you seeing this broad outflows from actively managed money still into ETFs or into private equity or other asset classes as a headwind for you and the industry, that is?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Look, from an industry perspective, as I mentioned a second ago, I do believe, we do believe that the go-forward methodology of delivering capital to our clients and our clients' clients, delivering performance to our clients and our clients' clients will not be the same as it has been over the past 10 years because money won't be free going forward, i.e. haves and have-nots differentiation will be much more important. Does that suggest that there's a wholesale shift from passive to active? Gosh, I would certainly hope so. I do think that our most sophisticated clients, which is usually the kind of leading indicator are looking at that question very acutely and beneficial to us. They're entrusting us with that point of view of haves and have-nots.

They're entrusting us with the brighter futures of their client base.

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

I think to add to that, Ed, yeah, we've talked a lot about institutional. I think, you know, another thing to, to make sure that, you know, you, you've, you're aware of is the improvement in the, in the U.S. intermediary business. Ali's talked about some of the, the things that are coming further to that in terms of the brand campaign, et cetera. Some of the, some of the biggest improvements in U.S. intermediary were actually in equity. We've talked over the last, over the last year probably about the significant improvement in the, in the performance of mid-cap growth, which had some fantastic long-term numbers, but had a tough 2020, beginning of 2021. Had a fantastic 2022.

Flows take a little bit of time to recover. In Q1, we saw that happen in our U.S. advisory business. We saw a dramatic turnaround in Enterprise, which is that U.S. mid-cap growth strategy, as well as improvements in Overseas and Global Equity Income. We are seeing some strong flows into equity.

Ed Henning
Banking and Diversified Financial Equity Analyst, CLSA

Okay. No, that's helpful. Just to go back on it, where do you see the outflows? Is it just across the business and across just industry trends, before, you know, it's just the not getting the gross inflows, so you've just got natural outflows that they're gonna drive it for the next couple of years?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Look, I think we are looking to stem the tide of the industry trends, which overall have not been extremely fast-growing business.

Our next question comes from the line of Bill Katz of Credit Suisse. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Bill Katz
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Thank you so much. Good morning, good afternoon, everyone. Just coming back to expenses for a moment. As you think through your initiatives to reposition the platform across your three initiatives, where are you in terms of that spending cycle? Is that something that you would expect to complete this year, or would you expect that spending pace to continue into next year? If so, how might you fund that?

Roger Thompson
CFO, Janus Henderson Group

Yeah. It's a good question. Thanks, Bill. I think first of all, as I've said, and hopefully I've been clear that our expenses, particularly in non-comp, are low in Q1. The guidance we've given of an increase of mid-tier single digits year-on-year still stands. Which means we'll accelerate in quarters Q2 to Q4. That's because we've realized our what we call our Fuel for Growth savings, where we've looked to be more efficient in our business, the $40 million-$45 million of cost saves that we talked about in the summer of last year. We've realized much of that, and that's a little bit ahead of where we've been investing in these strategic initiatives.

As Ali said, this important brand campaign actually kicked off in April. You'll see that acceleration coming through in Q2 to Q4. I think your broader question is, are we then done? Yeah, we will look to continue to fund through efficiency. You know, if we continue to see, and as Ali said, we're testing and learning through this. If we are looking to spend more money, it's because we're seeing success. I think, you know, we're making the investments this year. If we see success in that, then we can continue to invest. Otherwise, we're probably, w e're at a good level is where we are. There are other things out there as well.

You know, it's an inflationary environment, as we all know. You know, the dollar has come off its extremely strong highs. We're seeing some cost acceleration elsewhere, but that's all built into that guidance.

Bill Katz
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Okay. Thank you. Ali, maybe one for yourself. Just you mentioned a couple times throughout the call in the Q&A that the M&A pipeline sort of seasoning nicely. If you were to sort of think about maybe two or three key areas of focus for you to complement your existing book of business, what might that be? And then how, you know, how should we be thinking about sizing or maybe seasoning of that specific line of portfolio, pipeline, excuse me. Thank you.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Sure. Thanks, Bill. Our view on M&A hasn't really changed. I'll answer the back half of your question before the front half. Our view on M&A is that acquiring things that our clients want from us is a good game plan. What generally that means is that clients don't look for us necessarily to just have scale of size, right? Just being bigger in something, buying things that overlap with things that we already have doesn't generally serve the purpose of what a client wants. We already have it. It's already very good. We can deliver that to the client with our world-class client service and investment acumen. However, if it's something that we don't have, something that clients want from us, we can acquire to build our scale of skill.

The emerging market debt example is a great example and a test case for us on that front. We're not looking to get bigger for the sake of getting bigger. We're looking to get bigger because we can bring more skill sets to our clients to build off of the very strong foundation that we already have, which we are very, very positive on and can continue to improve. If you think about where clients are giving us the right to diversify, it's very clearly around a few areas, which most importantly under the privates rubric. Take private credit, for example. From a private credit perspective, there are many different flavors.

Obviously, private credit, we're being very judicious given this market environment about what we should and could do for our clients. They're seeing us from a fixed income perspective, having a very good franchise underlying what we do in fixed income from a performance and process and people perspective. Can we augment that in the private world where a lot of our clients are looking at? We are very clearly looking at that. The benefit would be to, you know, buy or partner with a group of folks who want to grow their business, not just to tick the box, but grow their business and really fit into our extraordinarily robust and increasingly strong distribution pipes, so to speak, to deliver on our clients.

That's one of the big areas of an example that we've talked about before, there are other possibilities, right? We are unlikely, for example, to go into the pure kind of private equity world on the flip side of privates. Could there be ways that we participate in that growth cycle over time? We could. We have to think about other and creative ways to buy and partner as well as build internally. The main focus right now, Bill, is around the broader privates landscape for us.

Bill Katz
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Thank you for taking the questions.

Candice Sun
Managing Director and Global Head of Corporate Communications, Janus Henderson Group

Thank you. Our final question of the day comes from the line of John Dunn of Evercore. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

John Dunn
Equity Research Analyst, Evercore

Thank you. Maybe just a quick one, on ETFs. Is there an outlook for maybe more launches giving how well AAA and MBS have gone? Maybe outside of ETFs, any other launches on the horizon, you would highlight?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Sure. Let me start there. On ETFs, as you know, at over $6 billion of AUM within ETFs in a relatively short period of time, we are very pleased with the success there and expect continued success in that area. Our philosophy is, again, I'll be a broken record on this, but it's really important to be client-led. If we have a set of investment skill sets, that can be utilized to the benefit of our clients, and if the client wants it in form X versus form Y, sometimes I call it if they want it in pink or if they want it in yellow, we should be able to deliver it in pink or in yellow.

An ETF is one of those wrappers, vehicles that we can provide to our clients, in particular our clients right now, disproportionately in the retail world, who can get access to things that they can't get otherwise. These are institutional-level products that we're bringing to the retail environment, similar to what we're doing from a retail set of products that are institutional level that we're bringing to institutional. In ETFs, the broader scope of it is around some of the securitized skill sets that we have internally in our fixed income landscape and bringing that to our client base. Have we filled out the suite? No, we haven't filled out the suite that we could fill out, but we're seeing a lot of success and a lot of focus on the ETFs that we have right now.

I would anticipate more launches there, building on the success that the team here has built. Will there be new launches otherwise outside ETFs? To the second part of your question, the short answer is yes, right? We have to be innovative in what we deliver. We did launch, I believe, two new products in Q1 around the world. We will continue to drive new products. Again, we're not throwing spaghetti at sticks at the wall and seeing what happens. We're gonna be very disciplined, very diligent with the capital and the effort that's required to do that because we have a great foundation of businesses already, investment processes and acumens already that we can already expand and bring to our client base.

Yes, there will be more, but we'll be judicious in delivering to our clients' needs based on the foundation that we already have.

John Dunn
Equity Research Analyst, Evercore

Got it. Then just maybe regionally, you mentioned a pickup in U.S. intermediary and maybe a more muted in European retail. Can you just frame Asia channel-wise, maybe outside of Australia?

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

I'd say relatively steady in that marketplace. There's a little bit of a wait and see from a geopolitical perspective that we hear from our clients out there. I don't think there's massive money in motion at this point. We are, again, in the desire of growing our business. We are very much looking to deliver for clients in those regions. We see an enormous amount of opportunity which will come over time again. Market share for us is gonna be part of the name of the game in that marketplace.

John Dunn
Equity Research Analyst, Evercore

Thanks very much.

Candice Sun
Managing Director and Global Head of Corporate Communications, Janus Henderson Group

Thank you. As there are no additional questions waiting at this time, I'd like to hand the conference back over to Mr. Dibadj for closing remarks.

Ali Dibadj
CEO, Janus Henderson Group

Well, thanks, Candice. Thanks, everybody, for joining. Hopefully, this quarter's results suggest that the team here at Janus Henderson, who I'd like to thank, is working extremely hard, aligned with our strategy, making changes to deliver for our clients, our shareholders, our other stakeholders. Over time, we'll continue to deliver progress like this. Thanks very much, everybody.

Candice Sun
Managing Director and Global Head of Corporate Communications, Janus Henderson Group

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the Janus Henderson first quarter 2023 results briefing. Have a great day ahead. You may now disconnect your line.

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