Skip to main content

TPG Inc. Q2 FY2023 Earnings Call

TPG Inc. (TPG)

Earnings Call FY2023 Q2 Call date: 2023-08-08 Concluded

Call artefacts

Transcript

Speaker-labelled transcript of the call.

Read transcript
8-K earnings release

Item 2.02 release filed around the call (2023-08-08).

View 8-K filing
10-Q filing

The quarterly report covering this quarter (filed 2023-08-08).

View 10-Q filing
Audio

Call audio is not captured yet.

Slides

A slide deck is not captured yet.

Transcript

Auto-generated speakers
Operator

Good morning, and welcome to the TPG Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. Please be advised that today's call is being recorded. Please go to TPG's IR website to obtain the earnings materials. I will now turn the call over to Gary Stein, Head of Investor Relations at TPG. Thank you, and you may begin, sir.

Gary Stein Head of Investor Relations

Great. Thanks, Chelsea. Welcome, everyone. Joining me this morning are Jon Winkelried, Chief Executive Officer; and Jack Weingart, Chief Financial Officer. In addition, our Executive Chairman and Co-Founder, Jim Coulter; and our President, Todd Sisitsky, are also here and will be available for the Q&A portion of this morning's call. I'd like to remind you this call may include forward-looking statements that do not guarantee future events or performance. Please refer to TPG's earnings release and SEC filings for factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements. TPG undertakes no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements, except as required by law. Within our discussion and earnings release, we'll be discussing certain non-GAAP measures on this call that we believe are relevant in assessing the financial performance of the business. These non-GAAP measures are reconciled to the nearest GAAP figures in TPG's earnings release, which is available on our website. Please note that nothing on this call constitutes an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to purchase an interest in any TPG fund. Looking briefly at our results for the second quarter. We reported GAAP net income attributable to TPG Inc. of $27 million and after-tax distributable earnings of $96 million or $0.26 per share of Class A common stock. We declared a dividend of $0.22 per share of Class A common stock, which will be paid on September 1 to holders of record as of August 18. With that, I'll turn the call over to Jon.

Thanks, Gary. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin with an update on Angelo Gordon and our ongoing work to prepare for integration and to position ourselves to maximize the opportunities for the combined platform. I'll then share my thoughts on two areas within our core business where we have seen substantial activity in progress. The first is investment activity. Consistent with the observations I made in our previous earnings calls regarding our building pipeline, it feels to us that the market has settled into an attractive period for deploying capital across primary and secondary private equity, real estate, and impact investing. As I'll describe, our teams are capitalizing on the opportunity and have announced or closed a number of interesting and distinctive deals. The second is organic growth. I've reviewed several of our organic growth initiatives with you over the past few quarters, and I'm pleased to update you today on the meaningful progress we have made in fundraising, team building, and investing across these opportunities. On Angelo Gordon, we received HSR clearance in July and are anticipating additional required government approvals in time for our expected closing in the fourth quarter. Our overall integration planning effort has two objectives. The first is operational readiness and the second is business integration and revenue growth. More than 150 people across our two firms are involved in integration planning. Well in advance of signing the transaction, we stood up seven working groups focused on critical areas such as capital formation, people and culture, and firm operations. Each group is co-led by Senior TPG and Angelo Gordon Leaders and includes representatives from various business units and functions. Given the complexity of integrating our service functions, including finance and accounting, IT, and operations, we established a dedicated integration management office to bring project management rigor and expertise to those activities. On the revenue synergy and growth side, we stood up a senior team that is fully dedicated to identifying opportunities to leverage the combined power of our platforms. The group, which includes more than 20 business leaders from Angelo Gordon and TPG is scoping and fleshing out a series of combined growth initiatives and building execution plans around each one. While we are still in the early innings, we believe the opportunity set is even larger than we anticipated. We're prioritizing among those opportunities and preparing to execute in the quarters after closing. Overall, our working groups have made considerable progress on their objectives. Importantly, these working groups have also become a forum for engagement and relationship development between TPG and Angelo Gordon. From my seat as CEO, I've been encouraged to see how naturally our teams have engaged with one another and the clear compatibility of our cultures. I've grown even more confident around the scope of the opportunity for our combined firm post-closing, and there's a clear sense of momentum and collective enthusiasm. The connectivity and shared purpose across our firms is tangible and exciting. At the same time that we've been working towards the closing of the Angelo Gordon acquisition, we've been very active in our core business, and I want to provide you with an update on the strong progress we've made across several areas. On our last call, we noted that our transaction pipelines have begun to pick up considerably, and that trend has continued to accelerate. From our perspective, a few key factors are driving more favorable investing conditions. First, the bid-ask spread among buyers and sellers has now narrowed despite continued market volatility. After a prolonged period of buyers and sellers doing the same thing, sellers are increasingly showing more willingness to adjust valuation expectations in order to consummate transactions, including, in some cases, whole company take privates. We anticipate this trend will continue into the back half of the year. Second, corporations have become significantly more active in restructuring their portfolios, pursuing acquisitions, and divesting certain assets. Given the amount of time we spend working with strategics on relationship building and proactive sourcing, our activity around carve-outs and structured partnerships has picked up meaningfully. And third, many GPs are searching for ways to appropriately return capital to their fund investors, which is helping to increase the flow of attractive investment opportunities. This dynamic has driven both new investments as well as opportunities for us to invest in our existing portfolio companies to grow and strengthen their positioning in their respective markets. Our style of private equity investing, which focuses on transforming high-quality companies and accelerating growth is particularly well-suited for the environment in which we are operating. In particular, we have spent years building ecosystems of knowledge and relationships and developing conviction in the sectors, themes, and companies into which we want to invest. Accordingly, when actionable opportunities arise, we move nimbly and with the confidence of our full partnership to lean in. We've also established a strong track record of building high-growth, strategic businesses and structuring win-win relationships with corporate partners. Many of our unique strategic investments, such as our partnership with AmerisourceBergen to acquire One Oncology, which we closed this past quarter are distinctive within the realm of private capital. Recent activity in TPG Capital, our flagship bio fund highlights our investment style and ability to capitalize on the attractive environment. Among our recent deals are three corporate carve-outs, a proprietary partnership with a unique put-call arrangement, and a take-private we just announced. Last week, we signed a definitive agreement to acquire New Relic in a $6.5 billion take-private transaction. New Relic is a leading provider of cloud-based application performance management and observability software, which has been a long-running thematic focus area for our software and enterprise technology team, given its mission-critical nature and durable growth characteristics. In June, we agreed to carve out Forcepoint's global government and critical infrastructure business. This builds on our track record in cybersecurity and thesis on the secular tailwinds around government and commercial cyber spending. As I mentioned earlier, we closed our acquisition of One Oncology in the second quarter which we pursued jointly with AmerisourceBergen and the excellent management team that is currently in place. Although we only closed two months ago, we are already finding compelling opportunities to expand and grow the platform. Similarly, in Capital Asia, transaction activity has increased across the region. During the second quarter, Inova Pharmaceuticals, which we acquired in late 2022, agreed to carve out Mundipharma's Consumer Healthcare division. This strategic move is highly strategic for Inova, positioning the combined business as a leading Asia consumer healthcare platform of scale. This is a great example of how we build strong platform companies through both organic investment and targeted acquisitions. We have several other interesting deals near the finish line that we look forward to discussing with you next quarter. Consistent with our expectations, there has also been an uptick in secondary activity as GPs globally seek strategic liquidity solutions for their best-performing assets. We are generating greater deal flow globally through NewQuest in Asia and TPG TP solutions in Europe and North America. In the second quarter, we backed continuation vehicle funds in India, Germany, and the U.S. Notably, TPG was the lead investor in the continuation fund for IU Group, one of the largest and fastest-growing for-profit universities in Germany. We believe this is the largest single asset deal in Europe so far this year. This transaction was sourced through the Rise team's multi-year thematic focus on education. It’s also a great example of our successful organic growth strategy, where we build new platforms on the full chassis of TPG and create shared incentives for our investment professionals to source opportunities and collaborate across business units. Finally, within real estate, we are seeing signs of an improving backdrop for deployment, and we are well positioned with $6 billion of dry powder at quarter end and our latest opportunistic fund. The significant market dislocation is creating unique opportunities for us to acquire high-quality assets that rarely become available for sale. Our pipeline continues to build as we source investments across numerous geographies and within attractive subsectors such as life sciences, data centers, industrials, and student housing. During the second quarter, we completed the acquisition of a portfolio of assets for alloy properties, which is our life sciences real estate platform in the Boston area. This transaction highlights how we can play offense in a tough market and build value in our portfolio of companies through strategic add-ons. We were able to acquire these outstanding properties in the Boston suburbs on a proprietary basis as a direct result of our deep sector expertise. Just a few weeks ago, we closed a $1.5 billion transaction in partnership with Digital Realty Trust to recapitalize a portfolio of high-quality data center assets in Northern Virginia with more than 1 million square feet in total. The portfolio is located in one of the largest and most interconnected data center markets in the world, which also benefits from supply constraints due to structural barriers. Taking a step back, and consistent with the highlights I just shared, we are seeing a notable increase in transaction activity across our platforms, and we are well positioned to continue our momentum. We deployed $2.3 billion in the first quarter and $2.8 billion in the second quarter. And if we aggregate the investments that we have signed but not yet closed, this represents an incremental $5.5 billion of capital that will be deployed. In addition to our day-to-day focus on our core investment activities, we have also seen significant momentum across TPG in building new investment platforms with substantial growth potential. At the time of our IPO, we described how important organic innovation has been to our historic growth, and we also shared our expectation that it will continue to be a key driver for us going forward. Despite a challenging fundraising environment, we have already raised anchor capital in connection with several funds and have begun investing. Collectively, we have raised or have near-term visibility to raising more than $2.6 billion of capital for these first-time funds, and we believe each of these initiatives can drive significant and highly accretive growth for TPG over time. Our normal European and North American GP-led secondaries fund had a closing after quarter end, bringing total committed capital to approximately $750 million, and the fund is on track to reach $1 billion of capital. To date, the team has completed four deals out of its inaugural fund, all within sectors where TPG has deep expertise. We believe this is a marketing strategy that has the potential to scale meaningfully over time. Our Inaugural Life Sciences fund, which targets earlier stage opportunities across therapeutics, medical devices, diagnostics, and innovative services continues to raise capital and completed two investments in the second quarter. We've raised over $250 million of capital with clear momentum toward raising a $500 million fund. Turning to Treco, our private real estate credit strategy. We have visibility to raising over $750 million for the first close dedicated to the strategy, including notable anchor commitments from some of our most active relationships. And finally, we previously discussed the considerable amount of infrastructure capital required to address climate and energy transition globally. As a result of our leadership position with our Rise and Rise Climate Funds, we see a significant amount of deal flow and believe a dedicated climate infrastructure fund will extend our unique position in this market. We are in the process of lining up anchor LPs and look forward to sharing more with you in the coming quarters. As you can see, we've made meaningful progress and reached key milestones across each of these organic growth initiatives. We feel highly confident about the trajectory of our core business, and with the pending acquisition of Angelo Gordon, TPG is positioned to continue delivering strong performance and diversified growth for our investors. Now I'll turn the call over to Jack to review our financial results.

Thank you, Jon, and thanks to all of you for joining us today. Our second quarter financial results were in line with our expectations and reflect broader industry dynamics and the current macroeconomic environment. All the numbers I'll be discussing are for TPG on a stand-alone basis and do not include Angelo Gordon. We expect to publicly file a comprehensive information statement around the time of the transaction closing, which will include historical financials for Angelo Gordon and pro forma financials for TPG and Angelo Gordon on a combined basis. We finished the second quarter with $139 billion of assets under management, up 9% year-over-year. This was driven by $15 billion of capital raised and value creation of $7 billion, partially offset by $10 billion of realizations over the past 12 months. Fee-earning AUM was $79 billion at the end of Q2, which grew 17% from a year ago. AUM subject to fee-earning growth totaled $11 billion, of which $9 billion was not yet earning fees. Management fees totaled $257 million in the second quarter, which grew 15% year-over-year. As expected, transaction and monitoring fees rebounded to $17 million in the quarter, and we expect this will further normalize as our pace of deployment increases. Total fee-related revenue for the quarter was $286 million, up 8% sequentially and 12% compared to Q2 '22. We reported fee-related earnings of $125 million in the second quarter, which increased 23% year-over-year. Our FRE margin for the quarter was 44%. This margin improvement from the first quarter is a result of increased management fees, higher capital markets revenue, and continued strong expense discipline across the firm. After-tax distributable earnings for the second quarter were $96 million or $0.26 per share of Class A common stock. This was impacted by a couple of items. First, our net realized performance allocations continue to reflect our moderated pace of realizations. While we will selectively monetize investments in this environment, and we have several in process, our priority continues to be driving growth across our portfolio of companies. Second, similar to last quarter, we incurred non-core expenses related to the Angelo Gordon acquisition. These costs reduced our distributable earnings by $15 million this quarter. Excluding these expenses, our after-tax DE would have been $111 million or $0.31 per share of Class A common stock. Turning to our non-GAAP balance sheet. We had $578 million of cash and $450 million of long-term debt as of June 30th. Our net accrued performance allocation balance was $760 million, which represents the 20% allocation to the TPG Operating Group. This increased 7% from the first quarter, driven by $58 million of value creation. This value creation was a result of our aggregate portfolio appreciating 2% in the second quarter and 9% over the last 12 months. Our companies are showing continued resilience in this period of economic uncertainty with average revenue growth over the past 12 months of 22%. Finally, on fundraising. We raised $1.5 billion during the quarter and $15 billion over the last 12 months. As you'll recall from last quarter, we updated our targets for our flagship funds given the challenging fundraising environment. We're continuing to manage our business toward these revised targets, and we're pleased with the quality and breadth of the dialogue we're having with LPs. While we continue to make good progress in our LP discussions, there is a more pronounced barbell effect across the industry, where the middle period of campaigns has been elongated. Therefore, we expect the remainder of our flagship fundraises to be weighted toward the end of these processes. As we work towards completing these flagship campaigns, we're also actively engaging with LPs to capitalize on the organic growth initiatives that Jon described. We've made tangible progress and are now actively investing in a number of those strategies. In addition, at the end of the second quarter, we began raising our sixth growth fund. Looking forward, I want to reiterate the compelling growth we see ahead for TPG. Through the addition of Angelo Gordon and our various organic growth initiatives, we're entering what we believe will be the next leg of significant growth across our franchise. We're confident in our ability to generate additional fee-earning assets and build long-term shareholder value. Now I'll turn the call back to the operator to take your questions.

Operator

And our first question will come from Ken Worthington with JPMorgan.

Speaker 4

I wanted to focus on fundraising, probably not surprising. You talked about the flagship funds needing about $7 billion to get to your newer target last quarter and you sort of talked about that guidance again. I assume that your confidence in reaching these targets is somewhat based on LP verbal commitments that they're making to you. Are there consequences for LPs that tell you one thing on fundraising and then deliver something else? And then along the lines of fundraising, the Financial Times reported that GPs are offering sweeteners to secure fundraising commitments and included TPG in its reporting. What are the incentives that you are offering? And what are you seeing in the broader marketplace?

Ken, it's Jack. Let me start there and others can join in. First, I want to make one small correction. In the last quarter, when I discussed our revised targets, I mentioned needing to raise $5 billion to $6 billion to achieve those targets. I believe you referred to $6 billion to $7 billion. As I noted during the call, we are still working towards these objectives and expect the remaining amount to be raised in the second quarter to be concentrated towards the end of the campaigns. Regarding your question about consequences for LPs who don't fulfill their commitments, we maintain long-term relationships with many of these LPs, and during our fundraising discussions, we generally do not find this to be an issue. On the question about incentives, I believe everyone in the industry recognizes that the largest LPs are valuable partners in establishing new businesses, and this can take various forms. We view this as a favorable approach to growing new ventures similar to what Jon described.

Operator

Our next question will come from Glenn Schorr with Evercore.

Speaker 5

This might be a bit detailed, but Rise III was somewhat unusual. It currently has a 1.1x gross, but there was a significant negative net NIR IRR. Was there a fee involved? Did something change unexpectedly? Was there a loss? I'm just curious about this, as it's an important line of business.

Glenn, it's Jon. I'm not sure what you're looking at.

Speaker 5

We can return to that later. I'll address another topic for now.

We'll follow up with you on that one because I'm not sure exactly what that is.

Speaker 5

So you're showing a lot of feet. You laid out a lot of numbers, almost too many for me to write down. What does it all add up to in terms of the line-of-sight commitments that you have on the combination of the new organic builds and the Fund II, Fund III, and Fund IVs that you have in motion. Do you have any metrics without including Angelo Gordon on what we could be looking at over the next 12 to 18 months on the fundraising side?

You're talking about the new initiatives in particular, Glenn?

No, he's referring to both. I believe he is trying to.

We announced that we raised $1.5 billion in the second quarter out of the $5 billion to $6 billion we need. As we discussed last quarter, our goal is to secure between $5 billion and $6 billion to reach our updated targets. We've raised approximately $1 billion to $1.5 billion of that, which leaves us with $4 billion to $5 billion remaining. If we succeed in meeting our flagship fundraising goals by early next year, when most campaigns wrap up, that will represent the remaining amount. Additionally, we recently launched our growth fund, aiming for $4 billion, which reflects a roughly 10% increase from the previous fund. Furthermore, the initiatives Jon referred to have the potential to raise about $2.6 billion, which is only the beginning for those projects. We anticipate more fundraising opportunities for these initiatives moving forward. Excluding Angelo Gordon, those are the main fundraising opportunities I would point out.

Speaker 5

And Angela Gordon is on the line regarding Angelo Gordon.

Yes, we're going to be disclosing more complete financial information about Angelo Gordon that matches what we talk about with TPG around the time of closing with a comprehensive information statement, then we'll have more to talk about.

Operator

Our next question will come from Alex Blostein with Goldman Sachs.

Speaker 6

So you guys talked about a pretty meaningful pickup in deployment pipeline. You started to kind of allude to that last quarter, and I think there's more evidence of that. Can you spend a couple of minutes on maybe the composition of that pipeline what does that look like between take privates versus kind of strategic and sponsor sales? And I guess, more importantly, as you sort of settle into our higher borrowing costs for the industry, have your expectations for sort of prospective returns changed at all? Or the purchase multiples do you think have adjusted low enough where you could still generate, call it, a high-teens to 20% IRR?

Why don't you take that across private equity.

Sure, I appreciate the question. To begin with an overall view of some of the deals Jon mentioned, we have noticed, in line with Jon's observation, a significant increase in corporate discussions, which for us has led to several carve-outs. This includes the Forcepoint deal, Elite, and additional carve-outs related to our Asia platform in consumer healthcare, where we acquired an appealing asset as a carve-out. We are experiencing much more activity in this area, and as previously discussed, we feel particularly well positioned for these carve-outs due to our operational expertise and the relationships we've established with potential strategic partners. Additionally, we've seen situations that resemble corporate partnerships, which is a unique area where TPG excels compared to our competitors. A notable example is the partnership with AmerisourceBergen around One Oncology. In our pipeline, we continue to evaluate various transactions that fit into both carve-outs and partnerships, with the latter being less clear-cut regarding buyers and sellers, as both parties aim to create value together. Regarding take-private opportunities, we have observed an increase as some valuations we set have declined. For instance, in the software sector, valuations in lower growth categories have decreased by 20% or more, and in higher growth segments, the reductions are even larger. This has created a more favorable climate for take-privates than we have seen in the past few years, resulting in our recently announced take-private deal. There are more promising opportunities in the pipeline, which are still in the early stages but look interesting and may offer a compelling valuation proposition. Overall, we feel that the potential for deployment is growing. In response to your question about whether the same returns are attainable, the answer is yes. We are accommodating the higher cost of capital in our model. We have been quite cautious with our exit multiple assumptions in relation to our entry multiple throughout this entire cycle, possibly a bit overly conservative relative to the economy's ongoing strength. As a result, we have been investing in high-growth, secularly growing businesses, and we maintain a strong belief that the prospects for solid returns are present, with some opportunities appearing better than they were two or three years ago.

Yes. I think Alex also on the real estate side, as I mentioned, there are a couple of opportunities that we thought were very attractive that we've taken advantage of. And given what's going on in the real estate market where there's meaningful dislocation, financing obviously has become much more difficult there overall. The nature of our strategy in real estate part equity partners being opportunistic and having obviously a fair amount of dry powder as a result of our capital reserves put us in a pretty opportunistic position to be able to do some interesting things, both with our existing portfolio as well as beyond that. So I think we very much kind of like that opportunity. And clearly, there's been an uptick in the nature of the dialogue there, where there are, in some cases, funds or owners of assets that have to do something based upon needing to sell certain assets, sell assets that are high-quality assets in certain cases because those are the ones they can sell. So we feel pretty good about that opportunity that's in front of us there. And if you look at, I mean, you obviously follow the banks and follow the M&A activity that's going on in the market. If you look at what's going on in the market, there has been a very substantial uptick in corporates optimizing their mix of businesses, and that really is very much in our sweet spot. That's been a core part of our investing across the platform now whether it's capital, whether it's our growth franchise, whether it's our impact franchise. And so that reach and the nature of that dialogue for us that I think is putting us in a position where we're seeing some interesting things, and it's kind of right in our power alley in terms of historically what we've done well.

One last comment I'd set to mention just on the secondary front. That platform for us has been very busy. And in some ways, the fact it's been a little harder for the sponsor community to find liquidity has created, I think, even more of an opportunity there. So that platform has been busy, it's been busy in Europe, it's been busy in the U.S., and the pipeline has picked up pretty significantly, if you look over the last six to twelve months. So that's another, I think, area that we think will be fruitful in the next few quarters for certain.

Jim Coulter Chairman

Chelsea, just hang on for one minute. Back to the question of Rise III for, this is Jim Coulter. Over the many years of the private equity industry, we had something called the J-curve, which tells you that early in a fund, you get anomalies in IRRs that don't reflect the ongoing progress in the fund. I think today, we will name a new phenomenon, which is the on the line anomaly, which essentially as funds are set up to draw capital on the line. When they draw their first capital call essentially, during that period, if you annualize the short-term effect of that quarter's first draw, taking down expenses and as you put in the ground, the first investments the annualization of that brief quarterly moment creates anomalies in the numbers. And that's what happened here is Rise 3 got to its one-year anniversary and started to call capital that had previously been called on the line, you get a near-term effect, which will ameliorate over time. So early in fund LPs and GPs now understand that the effect of the line will create swings around the long-term phenomenon. Those are not indicative of the progress, which in the fund is quite good.

Okay. We're ready for that question.

Operator

Our next question will come from Michael Cyprys with Morgan Stanley.

Speaker 8

I wanted to circle back to some of your commentary on Angelo Gordon. I think you mentioned that the opportunity set is larger than anticipated. I was hoping you could elaborate on that. What areas are larger, how you might sort of quantify that, how you came to that view? And then if you could just update us on your latest views around the cost and revenue synergies, how that's evolving.

Yes, Mike. I'll share a few thoughts and then see if anyone else wants to weigh in. First, I want to emphasize an opportunity we see in expanding the capital base at Angelo Gordon. They are investing and identifying opportunities that could support a significantly larger capital base. Historically, we have close to 600 institutional LP relationships, while Angelo Gordon has about 500, with around 100 overlaps. This presents a real chance to leverage both sets of relationships. Additionally, TPG's LP base size, along with their product capabilities, brings a unique opportunity to enhance our relationship base. Secondly, we see potential to tap into channels that our product offerings have previously limited. We've discussed the insurance sector in our industry, and before the merger with Angelo Gordon, we had some interactions with insurance players but were constrained by our focus on credit and yield products. Now, we can offer a full product suite and have already begun discussions about strategies in this area. We've also received proactive outreach from some insurance entities, further stimulating our engagements. A third area of opportunity lies in the mass affluent retail channel. We believe that a combined TPG and Angelo Gordon brand will serve as a strong partner in this space. There are opportunities to broaden our partnerships with channel partners and enhance Angelo Gordon's product capabilities to include semi-liquid alternative products. Turning to our various businesses, we see interesting prospects in direct lending, particularly through Angelo Gordon’s Twin Brook platform, which focuses on lower middle market lending. We can expand the capital base by holding more of what they originate, and there’s potential for growth as their borrowers scale over time. In Credit Solutions, the current market presents intriguing opportunities in the middle to upper segments of the capital structure. We've had discussions between our private equity and Credit Solutions teams to explore these avenues further. We’re optimistic about forming hybrid capital structures to capitalize on these opportunities. Regarding real estate, our two firms approach the market from different directions. We are raising a fund focused on real estate credit opportunities, and there's positive momentum in our fundraising efforts. Collaborating on real estate equity and credit is particularly timely given current market dynamics, with tangible evidence that connects our strategies. Lastly, in structured credit, Angelo Gordon recently raised over $1 billion for their asset-backed fund, reflecting the growing importance of private credit in providing specialty asset-based financing, especially with changes in liquidity from regional banks. Overall, we are enthusiastic about the range of opportunities ahead.

Operator

Our next question will come from Mike Brown with KBW.

Speaker 9

Maybe just a narrowing on the investment income line a little bit. So the $15 million of Angelo Gordon related costs this quarter, can you just unpack those a little bit and then maybe share some thoughts on how we should think about the second half here? And then I guess, underneath that, it looks like investment income would have been negative, excluding those costs. So could you just expand on maybe what's the drivers there, and how we should think about that excluding those costs for the second half as well?

Sure. Thanks for the question, Mike. First of all, that line, as you point out, is not just the $15 million of Angelo Gordon expenses. The $23 million of kind of costs running through that line include those. They also include another $4 million or so of other non-core expenses, and there are $4 million of investment losses running through there, largely tied to a couple of legacy companies from older funds that we wrote off during the quarter. On the Angelo Gordon expenses, most of that is related to due diligence and integration work, things like third-party spending on lawyers and consultants. We expect some of that to continue, but it will come down a fair bit in Q3. And then in Q4, when we close the transaction, we'll pay the adviser fees that will also run through that line, but that line will be tapering off from its current run rate.

Operator

Our next question will come from Brian Bedell with Deutsche Bank.

Speaker 10

If you could switch the conversation back to the Impact platform, two-part question. First on Rise Climate, it looks like that's 44% deployed as of now. Maybe just some commentary around how you're seeing the pace of deployment continue to progress there and what stage deployed would you begin to start talking to LPs about Rise Climate 2? And then on the climate infrastructure product, I realize there's more to come there. But should we be thinking of that broadly similar to a lot of your peers with fairly large infrastructure funds and Rise Climate itself being quite large? Should we be thinking of the potential size of that fund in that vein? So maybe not quite as big as the classic capital funds, but second largest basically.

Jim Coulter Chairman

First of all, in terms of deployment, I think there's a bit of on the line effect to in your number of 40%. The actual fund deployment is closer to 60% on a gross basis. And fundraising documents typically allow fundraising for the next generation to start as you get to 75% deployed. So we're approaching a period where it would clearly make sense to launch Rise Climate 2. And generally, that would probably make sense to think about it as we begin 2024 for 2024 allocations. So you note that it's getting to be that time is exactly right. And the marketplace remains very robust, both in terms of opportunities and in terms of LP interest in this particular part of the market. In terms of the assets portion of the business, you're right that infrastructure opportunities do scale. By their nature, they require large capital pools. We are not at a position yet to announce targets for either of the funds. But you could imagine that we would want to approach the market together with them from a timing point of view. And while it takes a while to build a new product, our aspirations here would be in the range you're talking about, where it's a fund size, it should, over time, reflect what's happening in private equity.

Operator

Our next question will come from Brian McKenna with JMP Securities.

Speaker 11

So you noted that fundraising for your next growth fund commenced right at quarter end. And if I look at growth 5, the fund has generated a net IRR of 22%. So given this performance, coupled with the macro environment more broadly for fundraising, what's the expectation around the size of this fund? Do you think you can surpass the predecessor fund size, which totaled about $3.5 billion? And then how long do you think this one will be in the market for?

Yes, it's Jack. I think I mentioned earlier that we have announced LPs a target for that fund of $4 billion. The opportunity set in growth equity investing has gotten much more interesting now. And we think there's plenty of interesting investment activity to warrant that kind of fund size, and we have confidence that we'll hit that target. We're just starting. We haven't had a first close yet. We launched, as you mentioned, toward the end of the second quarter. And I think you should expect that fund to be in the market through 2024 and probably into early 2025 when you take into account when our first close will take place.

Operator

Our next question will come from Luke Mason with BNP Paribas.

Speaker 12

Could you elaborate on the exit pipeline and what needs to occur in the market for the pace of realizations to pick up? Additionally, I noticed that a significant portion of your accrued performance fees, amounting to $760 million, is tied to funds from 2017 and earlier. Are there any discussions regarding those funds, and when might they be seeking more capital back?

Speaker 13

Sure. To address your question about the exit pace, it's important to note that during 2020 and 2021, we were significant net sellers, capitalizing on attractive multiples while also deploying capital at a strong rate as we identified promising opportunities. This strategy was intentional, particularly as we sold every software company in TPG 7 and earlier funds. Now, we find the current landscape more appealing, so we've shifted to being net buyers. However, even though we've sold many investments from our portfolio, we're actively working on several exits and have made some headway in those discussions. We hope to have more updates in the coming quarters. We remain open to exits when the timing is right, especially as the growth and transformational efforts with our companies start to yield results. It's a blend of market conditions, strategic activities, and the performance of our individual investments that drive our focus on exits. Currently, we have some promising prospects and will continue to seek opportunities for exits while primarily focusing on growth. We will keep our investors informed.

On your question, it's Jack, just to add a little bit. As Todd mentioned, we were much more aggressive than most of our peers in 2021. So that's one of the reasons you see our dry powder as a percentage being as high as it is. We did sell a lot back in 2021. That was very intentional. If you focus on our buyout business, our 2015 vintage fund, TPG 7, is about two times capital returned to investors. So there's definitely a lot of pressure on GPs in the market who have not returned a lot of capital and have a lot of unrealized investments in their fund. And you're seeing, as I think Jon mentioned during the call, some of that play through to our secondaries business that we're building to help those GPs realize investments. We honestly don't feel a lot of that pressure because we were so aggressive at selling back when multiples were higher. We've got a younger portfolio than average in the industry, and we're focused on building value in that portfolio more so than selling. That being said, the market to sell is picking up a little bit. We have several in process, as Todd mentioned, but we don't feel the pressure that you're alluding to.

Operator

This concludes the Q&A portion of today's call. I would now like to turn the call back over to Gary Stein for any additional or closing remarks.

Gary Stein Head of Investor Relations

Great. Thanks, operator, and thanks again, everyone, for joining us this morning. If you have any follow-up questions, please feel free to circle back with the IR team, and we'll look forward to speaking to you again next quarter.

Operator

Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's TPG's second quarter 2023 earnings call and webcast. You may disconnect your line at this time, and have a wonderful day.