Greetings, and welcome to the StepStone fiscal third quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Seth Weiss, Head of Investor Relations. Thank you, Seth. You may begin.
Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. Joining me on the call today are Scott Hart, Chief Executive Officer, Jason Ment, President and Co-Chief Operating Officer, Mike McCabe, Head of Strategy, and Johnny Randel, Chief Financial Officer. During our prepared remarks, we will be referring to a presentation which is available on our investor relations website at shareholders.stepstonegroup.com. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that this conference call, as well as the presentation, contains certain forward-looking statements regarding the company's expected operating and financial performance for future periods. Forward-looking statements reflect management's current plans, estimates, and expectations and are inherently uncertain and are subject to various risks, uncertainties, and assumptions. Actual results for future periods may differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements due to a number of risks or other factors that are described in the Risk Factors section of StepStone's most recent 10-K.
Turning to our financial results on slide three for the third quarter of fiscal 2022. We reported GAAP net income of $126.3 million for the quarter ending December 31, 2021. GAAP net income attributable to StepStone Group Inc. was $48.3 million. We generated fee related earnings of $36.8 million, adjusted net income of $48.6 million, and adjusted net income per share of $0.42. The quarter reflected retroactive fees resulting from the final closing of StepStone's Tactical Growth Fund III and additional closings of our private equity co-investment fund that contributed $1.2 million to revenue and $1.1 million to fee related earnings and pre-tax adjusted net income. There were no material retroactive fees in the prior year's quarter.
I now like to turn the call over to StepStone's Chief Executive Officer, Scott Hart.
Thank you, Seth, and good afternoon, everyone. We delivered our strongest quarter to date on both an absolute and per share basis. We reported record results for Fee Related Earnings and Adjusted Net Income while growing our total assets under advisement and management to nearly $550 billion. Our private market solutions continue to demonstrate their value in what has been a turbulent period for public markets, marked by recent volatility in stock prices, a more inflationary environment, and a rising interest rate outlook. Our breadth and scale across all four of the private market asset classes provides the full spectrum of tools to allow our clients to thrive in every environment.
We construct balanced and customized portfolios that deliver attractive results to our clients, including consistent alpha generation from private equity, exposure to growth and the innovation economy through venture capital, income and yield enhancement from private debt, and natural inflation protection embedded in real estate and infrastructure. Furthermore, our business model is primed for steady growth and durable operating results that can withstand the peaks and valleys of cyclical economic patterns. We have deliberately invested in asset classes, strategies, and geographies that are benefiting from secular tailwinds while the long-term nature of our client relationships and the diversity of our asset class and geographic footprint provide stability to our Fee Related Earnings.
Turning to our results on slide 5, we generated $48.6 million in Adjusted Net Income for the quarter or $0.42 per share, up 50% from the prior fiscal year's third quarter on a per share basis. We generated Fee Related Earnings of $36.8 million, up 65% from the prior year quarter as we produced strong organic growth and benefited from the Greenspring acquisition. Accounting for the increase in our share count, we grew Fee Related Earnings per share by 41%. This was our first full quarter with Greenspring. The integration process is progressing well and early results are coming in ahead of expectations. The impact to our clients has been seamless and we are seeing positive interest from both legacy StepStone and Greenspring LPs in exploring the added breadth of StepStone solutions.
We produced another strong quarter of asset growth, finishing the quarter with $127 billion of assets under management and $71 billion of fee earning AUM. Excluding acquired assets, we have organically grown fee earning AUM by 28% over the last 12 months, with balanced growth across both asset class and structure. I'll now turn the call over to Mike McCabe to speak about our asset growth and fee related revenue growth in more detail.
Great. Thanks, Scott. I'll turn you to Slide seven. We generated nearly $16 billion of gross AUM inflows in the last 12 months, with about $4 billion coming from our commingled funds and roughly $12 billion in separately managed accounts. Slide eight shows our fee earning AUM by structure and asset class. For the quarter, we grew fee earning assets by $4.5 billion with balanced growth across commercial solutions. Commingled funds contributed about $2 billion, driven primarily by interim closings of our private equity co-investment fund and our venture secondary fund.
Commingled funds will continue to be a significant part of our growth engine as the addition of the Greenspring platform expands our menu of fund offerings in the highly sought after but access-constrained venture capital and growth equity sectors. We've included additional details on our fund families in the appendix of our earnings presentation as a new disclosure. Separately managed accounts contributed the remaining $2.7 billion of this quarter's fee earning asset growth, driven by a combination of re-ups and new client wins, as well as the successful deployment of fee paying capital across asset classes and strategies. As Scott mentioned, the breadth of our diversified offerings is a significant competitive advantage, which was particularly evident this quarter across real assets. Real Estate and Infrastructure offer portfolio diversification, income, and inflation protection, and are seeing the benefit from increased client demand.
We expect the positive backdrop for real assets specifically, and multi-asset class solutions more broadly to continue for the foreseeable future. Looking over the last 12 months and excluding the impact from acquisitions, we have organically grown fee-earning assets by over $13 billion or by 28%. While this is clearly an exceptional period of growth, it is consistent with the organic CAGR of 30% over the last four years. Being able to maintain our growth rate in fee earning AUM while at the same time monetizing investments for our clients is a point of pride for the entire organization. We continue to grow our evergreen product, C Prime, our private markets fund for accredited investors. As of February 1, 2022. We have grown C Prime to $390 million in net asset value.
A strong ramp-up since introducing the product less than a year and a half ago, and we are making progress across all distribution channels. Our undeployed fee earning capital stands at over $17 billion. This is down slightly quarter-over-quarter, given the strong deployment across asset classes, but remains near our all-time peak and provides visibility into growth driven by capital that has already been committed. Our undeployed balance also gives us considerable dry powder to tactically capitalize on market dislocations. Slide 9 shows the evolution of our management and advisory fees, where we are generating greater than $3.30 per share in revenues over the last 12 months, representing a CAGR of 25% since fiscal year 2018. We generated a blended management fee rate of 52 basis points, which is stable compared to the last three years.
Now, before turning the call over to Johnny, I'd like to take a moment to speak about expenses and long-term operating leverage. We remain disciplined in managing our spending while also steadily investing for growth. This approach has served us very well over our 15-year history, and we will continue to prioritize growth in what we view as a multi-decade opportunity for expansion within the private markets. Examples of just a few areas in which we have invested include the build-out of deep and experienced real estate, infrastructure, private debt, and venture capital teams to complement our original private equity capabilities, a broad geographic footprint with investment professionals operating in local markets where we invest and serve, and the creation of a nearly 30-person dedicated retail team.
The development of proprietary technology that enables our clients and investment teams to optimize their investment decisions by accessing private market data through user-friendly SaaS-based software. We pride ourselves on a technology stack that is state-of-the-art. While many incumbent financial services peers are spending significant sums of money to update their systems, we have built an infrastructure that is modern, efficient, and flexible, creating a strong foundation that will serve both our company and our clients well into the future. Recognizing the durability and scalability of our platform, we remain committed to investing in our platform well ahead of growth. While this may result in a trade-off with margins in the near term, each of these areas is scalable and creates an environment for operating leverage over the longer term. I'd now like to turn the call over to our CFO, Johnny Randel.
Thank you, Mike. I'd like to turn your attention to slide 11 to touch on a few of our financial highlights. We are reporting strong organic top line and bottom line growth, and we benefited from a full quarter of the Greenspring acquisition. We generated record results for management and advisory fees, adjusted revenues, fee-related earnings, adjusted net income, and ANI per share. Our FRE margin for the quarter was 35%, up 300 basis points year-over-year. We benefited from retroactive fees in the quarter, which contributed 70 basis points to the FRE margin. We also benefited from variations related to year-end bonus accrual that favorably impacted this quarter's compensation expense and margin. As Mike mentioned, we see a significant pathway for continued growth, and we will invest appropriately to pursue that growth.
For the near term, that likely means increases in compensation expense as we grow the team and fill open positions. Additionally, we expect a higher level of T&E as we move through the coming year. T&E expense, while trending higher, still remains at levels below what we would consider normal. We continue to view a near-term FRE margin of about 30% as a reasonable expectation, with some variability quarter to quarter based on the timing of expenses and the cadence of large commingled fund closings. Over the long term, we continue to expect our margins to migrate to the mid-30s as we balance profitability with sustainable growth. Gross realized performance fees were $66.6 million for the quarter, our highest period ever, reflecting a continued elevated level of realization activity driven by a positive market environment for exits and strong underlying investment performance.
Slide 24 in the appendix provides quarterly and last 12-month performance fee trends. Slide 12 illustrates our continued strong growth rates across all key revenue measures. We have grown overall adjusted revenue per share by 64% in the first 3 quarters of the fiscal year, and by a 34% compounded annual growth rate over the longer term. The revenue growth is driven by consistent growth in fee earning assets and has been bolstered by the recent period of very strong realized performance fees. Shifting to our profitability on slide 13, we've grown fiscal year-to-date fee related earnings per share by 17%. As a reminder, we earned an unusually high level of retroactive fees in fiscal 2021. Our fiscal 2022 year-to-date growth comes against a high comparison.
Looking over the longer term, we have achieved a CAGR of 48% in Fee Related Earnings per share since our fiscal 2018 period. We have grown our Adjusted Net Income per share by 98% for the year-to-date period, and by 46% over the longer term, reflecting both continued increases in FRE and a period of strong realized net performance fees. Moving to the balance sheet on slide 14. Gross accrued carry continues to increase, driven by strong underlying investment performance, ending the quarter at over $1.3 billion. This is up 11% from the prior quarter and up 112% over the last twelve months, despite a high level of realizations.
On the bottom chart, our own investment portfolio ended the quarter at $99 million, up 9% from the prior quarter and up 56% over the same quarter in the prior year, reflecting both market appreciation and net contributions. Unfunded commitments to these programs were $73 million as of quarter end. We manage a large pool of over $51 billion of performance fee eligible capital. This capital is widely diversified across multiple vintage years in approximately 150 programs as of December 31. 58% of our unrealized carry was tied to programs with vintages of 2016 or earlier, which means that these programs are largely out of their investment periods and have entered harvest mode. 61% of this unrealized carry is sourced from vehicles with deal-by-deal waterfalls, meaning realized carry may be payable at the time of investment exit.
Lastly, a quick note on our leverage. We have $65 million outstanding on our revolver after reducing the balance by $50 million over the course of the quarter. We view this as a relatively small amount of debt considering our earnings and cash generation. Line of credit gives us flexibility on top of our significant normal cash flow to support growth initiatives, including future GP commitments. We anticipate maintaining a modest level of debt going forward and would expect some variability in the outstanding balance period to period. This concludes our prepared remarks. I'll now turn it back over to the operator to open the line for any questions.
Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question is from Ken neth Worthington with JP Morgan. Please proceed with your question.
Hi, good afternoon, and I guess happy New Year, if we can still say that. For Scott and Mike, as we start the new calendar year, I was hoping you could reflect on management's top goals for growing the business in calendar 2022. To the extent that you're focusing more resources in one element or aspect of the business versus another, what are you most excited about for StepStone when thinking about the growth outlook ahead?
Sure. Thanks, Ken, for the question and a belated happy New Year to you as well, there. Look, as we look ahead to 2022 and fiscal 2023 for us, to some extent it is business as usual. I think back to the first six quarters out of the gate that we've had as a public company, one of the things I think really highlights the strength and the diversity of the platform is that each quarter it's been a different part of the business driving our outperformance, starting initially with the final closing of our Real Estate commingled fund. Followed by a couple of quarters of strength, specifically in the Private Equity and Private Debt asset classes.
More recently, if you look at the last couple of quarters, real strength from the Infrastructure side of the business, both in terms of re-up activity on the separate account side as well as deployment and finally Private Equity commingled funds. There's a variety of different factors driving our growth and success. I think we've really set up a platform to capitalize on continued growth opportunities that lie ahead of us. As we look ahead to the new year here, clearly the focus on commingled funds will continue to be quite important.
You would have seen in our new disclosure an outline of some of our historic commingled funds, as well as those that are in market between our private equity co-investment, private equity secondaries, and a number of venture funds associated with the Greenspring acquisition. That is clearly a high priority in the year ahead. Re-ups, you know, will continue to be a high priority for us and have a number of vehicles that as investment activity has picked up over the last 12 months, have been pulled closer to those re-up decisions. That will clearly be a high priority as we look to continue growing with our existing client base.
Finally, no surprise that the retail opportunity continues to be one that we are quite focused on.
Great. Thank you for that. Just maybe a bit more on Greenspring. Now that you've been sort of an owner of the business, you know, and have probably a better feel than you did when you were buying it, how are you progressing and thinking about growing their offering, you know, in the coming year?
Sure. No, I mean, I think you're exactly right that you certainly, you know, get to know the team even better than you could possibly throughout the due diligence process. We've been spending a tremendous amount of time with the Greenspring team, myself included, having just come back from Baltimore with the team there. Look, I think things are going well, and some of that is anecdotal, in terms of what we're hearing from the team and really, some of what we anticipated would be the case during diligence now playing out real time.
Whether that is gaining access to investment opportunities or due diligence insights that would not have been, you know, possible previously but now as part of a combined, you know, market leading platform, are things that we are seeing day in and day out. Part of that is driven by specific data points. And, you know, there are only, you know, a limited number of data points, you know, so far here a few months in. With the venture-focused secondaries fund recently surpassing $2 billion and performing well and ahead of our expectations, and the timeline around some of the other funds in market, I think similarly outperforming from a timing standpoint here.
Look, I think it really is just trying to make sure that we are capitalizing on the combined strength of the platform here, continuing to listen to our clients and what the needs of those clients might be as we think about what, products, or vehicles may be, you know, may be of interest to them going forward.
Okay, great. Thank you very much.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Alex Blostein with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, good afternoon, guys. Thanks for taking the question as well. You know, first question maybe a little bit more industry focused given the benefit you have looking and speaking with so many LPs around the world. You know, heard your comments loud and clear about appetite for real assets, obviously given the inflationary outlook. What about private equity? Given just the significant amount of deployment the industry has seen over the last couple years, relative to maybe a slower pace of realizations, how are people thinking about tactically allocating to private equity as an asset class over the next 12-18 months?
Sure. I will, Alex. I'll start. Others may wanna jump in here as well. Look, I think one of the biggest challenges that we're hearing about from LPs as they think about allocating to the Private Equity market is really just the pace at which managers have been returning to market. When you talk about trying to tactically allocate the asset class, the reality is many LPs have had their plates full, just working through a re-up pipeline with their existing managers. It's really been a focus on, you know, how do we selectively re-up with those managers while also freeing up capital to allocate to other parts of the market.
I think we are continuing to see, you know, no surprise, a tremendous amount of interest in the venture and growth space. Clearly, secondaries have had a, you know, tremendously active year in 2021. We expect some of that to continue into 2022 here, as well, b ut again, it's really working through, you know, those re-up pipelines given all the activity. The only other thing I would add is that, you know, given the recent volatility in the markets, I think look, the one concern that has been on people's mind for an extended period of time has just been around valuations.
As we think about the amount of dry powder available or new commitments that are being made, you know, I think many hope that with the recent decline in the public markets, it actually may create buying opportunities over time. You know, we would expect that takes some time as buyer and seller expectations need to come back into line here, some looking at this as an opportunity.
Got it. Great. Helpful. And then a follow-up question, Johnny, probably for you around FRE margin. So 30% year term FRE margin, obviously, you know, meaningfully lower versus what you guys done recently, but understanding the pace of investments, et cetera. How should we think about this over the next, you know, several quarters, right? Is 30% the right number for kind of calendar 2022, and that's more of an investment year, and beyond 2022 we should resume sort of a positive margin expansion trajectory, or this could be a multiyear spend? Just a clarification, within that 30%, are you assuming any retro fees or retro fees would obviously help that 30% number?
Thanks for the question. I think we think of retro fees as sort of helping it. We're kind of focusing on the core operation part of it. I think, you know, the timing of when we might be a little bit above, a little bit below will kind of be driven more by those kind of episodic fund closings and the timing of when we bring on some of the positions or some of the people we're planning to bring on to target some of that growth. You know, we kind of think about it as, you know, kind of around 30 is reasonable kind of expectation for the next few quarters.
You know, if fundraising on some of our commingled funds come earlier, then you'll see, you know, a lift on that, b ut you know, I think the timing is what's the challenge. I think as we get kind of into the next round of fundraising on commingled funds is where we would think some of that expansion would come.
Great. All right. Thanks very much.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Michael Cyprys with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Scott, I wanted to come back to some of your comments earlier around investing in the platform for growth. Could you just maybe expand a little bit on, you know, how much are you planning to expand headcount by over the next 12 months? What are the top areas across the firm where you're adding headcount and some of the top initiatives? You could just maybe expand a bit on that there.
Sure. Look, I mean, I think, you know, Mike talked a little bit about where we've been investing during the prepared remarks. And again, to my earlier comments, some of it is just, you know, continued business as usual as we continue to grow the asset class teams, as we continue to expand our geographic footprint. You've heard us say in past quarters that, you know, to some extent we're seeing certain of the asset classes evolve in similar ways to what we've seen in the private equity market.
Whether that's the development of a more active secondaries market in asset classes like infrastructure, or as we look to expand some of the sourcing and deployment opportunities in private debt outside of areas like traditional direct lending. You know, we will continue to add to each of our asset class teams. I think more specifically, you know, you heard us reference the 30-person retail team clearly continues to be a continued area for growth in headcount. And look, frankly, continue to build out areas like our human resources team. You know, there's no secret that it's been a competitive market for talent.
You know, we are very focused on being able to continue to not only attract, but retain and develop our talent over time. We've made a number of important additions to our human resources team in recent months.
Great. Just maybe a follow-up question, if I could, on the retail C Prime product. Clearly some very exceptional investment performance there. Can you just talk about some of the steps that you're taking to accelerate flows into the product? I think you mentioned a 30-person distribution team. Where do you see the size of that team in 12-24 months? Maybe talk a little bit about the platforms, how many you're on today, how many more platforms do you expect to add? You know, what's that progress like from a distribution standpoint and build?
Thanks, Michael. Jason here. We're approved on over 100 platforms now between RIAs, IBDs, and some of the international platforms. A lot more are in diligence. A number are preparing to launch in the coming days and weeks, including really great progress with some of the U.S. wires. The growth in the team size, I think you'll see some continued growth as we.
Michael I'm sorry. I think we went on mute there for a second inadvertently. So I'll just start over here. We're approved on over 100 platforms today across RIAs, IBDs, and a couple of international platforms. A number of other platforms are preparing to launch, and a number behind that are in diligence for later this year. So continued progress with additional wires. Sorry, additional RIAs, IBDs, and then the wires as well. In terms of the headcount growth, we're gonna be adding additional folks here in the U.S., as we continue to build out our U.S. map, but also starting to pivot toward non-U.S. team build on the sales force there.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you. Our final question comes from Adam Beatty with UBS. Please proceed with your question.
Good afternoon. Thank you for taking the question. Firstly, on the management fee rate, noticed that there's a bit of a mix shift toward a higher percentage of commingled funds. I'm assuming some of that has to do with Greenspring. Year to date, it looks like your fee rate is fairly flat around 52 basis points. I'm assuming the offset there was some of those catch-up fees that Johnny was talking about in fiscal 2021. Maybe check my understanding on that. Maybe more importantly, looking ahead, given that shift toward commingled, you know, should we expect some fee rate accretion from here? Thank you.
Yeah, maybe I'll start there, Adam. Scott, and then Johnny can jump in on the specific. Specifically with the addition of the Greenspring platform, which was much more heavily weighted towards commingled funds. You will see a bit of mix shift that's starting to play out with one full quarter in the books here, but will continue to work its way through the numbers going forward here. So as a reminder, given that mix of commingled funds, the Greenspring platform had a higher overall fee rate than our 52 basis points.
Within commingled funds, recall that they have strategies including primaries, secondaries, and co-investments or directs, whereas historically the StepStone commingled products were really much more weighted towards higher fee co-invest and secondaries in particular. Yes, we will continue to see a shift towards commingled funds that ought to help the overall blended rate slightly. You may have also seen a slightly lower commingled fee rate for this quarter. With that, Johnny, anything else that you'd add specific to Adam's question?
I think when you do look at that fiscal 2021 period, there was some elevation in there from those retro fees. I think just as we kinda see the portfolio grow, we don't anticipate it moving much from where it is, but you know, it can move quarter to quarter based on the timing of when new business comes on.
Great. Thank you for those nuances. Appreciate that, guys. Then just I wanna get your thoughts around, kind of the environment that you're seeing right now, specifically the GP managers that you guys deal with and partner with and invest with. You know, we've had the pandemic, you know, some dislocation there, some point to sort of consolidation of accounts among LPs wanting to deal with kind of fewer providers. Now we've got some market dislocation and, you know, rate hikes on the horizon. Are you seeing any signs of, you know, kind of disturbance in the GP communities that you deal with, certain things that you're watching out for or doing maybe a little bit additional due diligence? Any color there would be helpful. Thank you.
Yeah, no, I mean, I don't think any specific disturbance in the GP community. Again, if anything, I think one of the biggest trends we've seen, Adam, is just again the pace at which managers have been coming back to market. It's clearly been a very active period of time from a new investment standpoint. I think 2021, you know, record year, you know, across a number of different areas. It's resulted in, you know, just a rapid pace of fundraising. Look, we may be seeing some shifts in where exactly the interest of LPs lie.
You know, again, we referenced, you know, real assets during the prepared remarks as investors do get to be ready for a rising interest rate environment, you know, looking for inflation protection. I think we are seeing some shifts in exactly where efforts are being focused within each of the asset classes, b ut again, no overall disturbance in terms of GP relationships. You know, again, even the trend towards more consolidated relationships. Look, we would tell you that we continue to approve, just even in our private equity business, well over 100 new fund commitments per year. So there's just a tremendous amount and number of managers in the market specializing in a variety of different areas.
Frankly, that's one of the areas that our clients look to us to help them navigate.
Great. That's positive. Thank you, Scott.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Michael Cyprys with Morgan Stanley.
Hey, thanks for taking the follow-up. Just wanted to ask about the dividend. Saw you guys more than doubled the dividend. I guess just how do you think about what the right level of the dividend should be for StepStone, how you think about setting that as a dividend ratio or a percentage of FRE? You know, should that be growing with the fee-related earnings over time? Just any sort of thoughts around that. As cash flow builds, you know, are we getting closer to the timeframe where you might be able to buy in a bit more ownership of the subs?
Hi, Michael. This is Mike McCabe, and thanks for the question. No, I think we are gonna continue to look to our peer set for the payout ratio, and we'll continue to peg our ratio to be in line with our peer set in the industry. I think you can continue to see us looking at the dividend as an opportunity to add value back to our shareholders over time as we increase our cash flows. As to capital allocation, you know, we used $50 million this quarter to pay down debt. As Johnny mentioned in the revolver, we left a balance of about $65 million. The goal here is to keep a flexible balance sheet and a flexible capital structure to be opportunistic.
As it relates to the integration of the subs and buying in of the NCI, you know, we're in regular dialogue with each team on this topic of integration. At the moment, there's nothing to report. I think longer term, as we've discussed in the past, look, we see a fully integrated company. You know, the in between may see some incremental steps in that direction, but at the moment, there's nothing to report. We are very pleased with the balance sheet, its flexibility, and our ability to work opportunistically as and when opportunities arise.
Great. If I could just squeeze one last one in here just on M&A. You know, clearly just executing the Greenspring transaction. I guess as you kind of look ahead over the next 12-24 months, you know, do you see the possibility for another transaction? Where might M&A help fill some product or distribution gaps and, you know, access some opportunities that you see?
Yeah, thanks. You know, as evidenced by the successful acquisition and integration of Greenspring, you know, we do see M&A as an opportunistic way to accelerate our growth by augmenting something we're currently doing, whether it's related to an asset class or something like distribution or perhaps a strategic location. You know, the key to success here is a cultural fit and the value proposition for our clients. Certainly, we've demonstrated a track record and certainly a capability to attract very interesting, you know, very creative additions to our platform, and we'll continue to be on the lookout for such opportunities.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the floor back over to Scott Hart for any closing comments.
Great. Well, as always, we appreciate your time and your interest in the StepStone story, and we look forward to continue to update you on it as we move ahead. Thank you.
This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.