Brookfield is one of the biggest alternative asset managers in the world, and it just had a quarter that says the spigot is wide open.
Fundraising hit $21 billion in three months, and the year-to-date number is already $67 billion. That is more than half of what the firm raised in all of 2025.
Where The Profit Came From
Two things drove the result. Money kept coming in, and the existing money kept paying fees.
Fee-bearing capital - the money the firm gets paid to manage - grew 12% from a year ago to $614 billion. The bigger that pile, the bigger the fee checks.
Fee-related earnings, which is the cleanest read on how the management business is doing, jumped 11% to $772 million for the quarter. Distributable earnings - the cash actually available to pay shareholders - rose 7% to $702 million, working out to 43 cents a share against the 42 cents Wall Street expected.
The Insurance Money Is Doing The Lifting
A big chunk of the new money is insurance dollars, which alternative managers prize because the capital is sticky and long-dated.
Brookfield won the Just Group investment mandate, a UK insurer's pension book that started flowing in Q2. That single mandate plus a private equity flagship first close are most of the year-to-date number.
The private equity flagship has already pulled in $6 billion. The sixth vintage of the firm's infrastructure flagship - its largest closed-end fund - also launched in the quarter.
CEO Connor Teskey, who took over from Bruce Flatt in February, told investors that 2026 should grow above the firm's long-term targets. The board declared a dividend of $0.5025 per share, payable June 30 to holders of record on May 29.
What To Watch
Brookfield deployed or committed $34 billion in the quarter and sold $8 billion of investments at strong prices.
The next test is whether the infrastructure and private equity flagships keep their fundraising pace through the second half. The firm now manages over $1 trillion in assets - the only question is how fast that number keeps growing.
