Apollo had its best quarter ever. CEO Marc Rowan spent the call warning about the next one.
The firm just crossed $1 trillion in assets under management. Fee-related earnings hit a record. Stocks are at all-time highs.
Rowan, who co-founded Apollo in 1990, says he's more worried about an outside shock to the economy than at any point in his four decades on Wall Street.
The Hedge Apollo Is Building
Rowan put the odds of an "exogenous shock," meaning something unexpected hitting the system, at 30 to 35%. That's well above the usual base rate of risk he sees. He's not alone in flagging it. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has voiced similar worries this year.
So Apollo is positioning for a different setup than the headlines suggest. The firm has:
- Moved up the credit quality of its bond holdings
- Cut exposure to riskier sectors like software
- Stockpiled around $40 billion in cash inside its insurance unit
"We're investing with an eye toward protecting our capital," Rowan said. He noted that Apollo wants to ride through the corrections it now expects.
Why He's Worried
Rowan listed three risks stacking up at the same time. First, what he called a "total geopolitical reset." Second, U.S. policies he sees as inflationary, a clear nod to Trump tariffs and immigration changes.
Third, the AI cycle itself. Rowan thinks it will bring "blue-collar ascendancy and white-collar stress" as nearly every job gets reshaped.
His take on inflation was direct. He said cutting the flow of trade and labor is inflationary in the short term, even if the official numbers don't show it yet.
Companies and consumers still have strong balance sheets. Government finances do not. Rowan flagged that gap as one of the things he watches most closely.
It's a different setup than past cycles. In 2008, the consumer balance sheet broke first. This time, Rowan thinks the public balance sheet is the weak link.
The Insurance Industry Warning
Rowan saved his sharpest comments for rival insurers. Apollo runs Athene, the annuity arm Rowan built in 2009. It gives Apollo a steady pool of capital to invest, much like the model that made Berkshire Hathaway famous.
Not everyone in the industry is being careful, Rowan said. He flagged "egregious" practices at unnamed competitors. He pointed at offshore Cayman structures, complex collateralized loans, and aggressive credit assumptions.
Translation: some balance sheets look better than they actually are. "We do worry about contagion," Rowan said. He meant stress could spread through the industry and force regulators to step in.
What To Watch
Rowan isn't calling a top. He's positioning for one.
Apollo's playbook is now more defensive than the headline AUM number suggests. The firm has shifted into higher-rated bonds, lighter exposure to volatile sectors, and a thicker cash buffer.
That mix should hold up better in a sell-off. It also drags returns when markets keep climbing.
When the CEO of a $1 trillion firm builds a $40 billion cash buffer at the same time markets hit highs, that's the trade he's making with his own balance sheet.
