The share price of Partners Group closed Friday at €717, just 4.4% above its 52-week trough set at the end of June. With a year-to-date decline of 34% and a relative strength index of 26.9 — deep in oversold territory — the stock is flashing distress signals that few on the Street can ignore. Yet behind the technical gloom, the Swiss private-markets firm is pressing ahead with a splashy real estate project in Miami, committing roughly $220 million from client funds to a 70-story luxury tower branded by watchmaker Breitling.
The development, called B Residences, will rise in the Brickell neighborhood and contain more than 300 high-end apartments. German developer Empira Group is leading the project, with construction slated to start at the end of 2028 and completion expected in 2031. The investment signals that Partners Group continues to deploy capital even as its publicly traded equity suffers from a crisis of confidence rooted in its evergreen funds.
Those funds — open-ended vehicles that allow periodic redemptions — have come under intense scrutiny. In early June, one US private-equity vehicle received redemption requests far exceeding its quarterly cap, while the firm capped withdrawals from the $8.6 billion Global Value SICAV at 5% of net asset value. The liquidity crunch has spilled over from private credit into private equity, stoking anxiety among retail investors who make up roughly 20% of Partners Group’s $185 billion in assets under management. Chair Steffen Meister has suggested the firm may shrink the overall size of these evergreen vehicles to better align with long-term investor demand.
Compounding the pressure, short seller Grizzly Research published a critical report in late April alleging that up to 40% of the firm’s investments in these funds are overvalued. Partners Group has vowed to sue, but the reputational damage lingers. Several analysts have cut their 2026 and 2027 earnings estimates by 10% to 22%, and the stock now trades nearly 29% below its 200-day moving average.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Partners Group?
Insiders, however, are taking the other side of the trade. Since June, executives and board members have bought more than CHF 60 million worth of shares from their own pockets. That vote of confidence dovetails with structural steps the firm is taking: a new total-return strategy launched in late May offering an initial dividend yield of 5% to 8%, and a proposed split of its London-listed investment trust into a realization share capped at 30% of the total volume — roughly €250 million — pending shareholder approval.
The real test comes July 15, when Partners Group issues an update on assets under management. The market will watch whether robust institutional inflows — which account for over 80% of the client base and generated $8.3 billion in demand across all classes in the first quarter — can offset retail outflows. Management has flagged that the evergreen platform could drag net AuM growth by one to two percentage points in the second half of 2026 and again in 2027. For now, the firm is holding to its full-year guidance of $26 billion to $32 billion in gross new money.
If the AuM update shows total assets slipping below $185 billion, the pressure will intensify. The next major milestone after that would be September 1, when the formal half-year report is due — widely seen as the true stress test on valuations and performance fees. Until then, Partners Group remains caught between a deeply oversold chart that could spark a technical bounce and fundamental uncertainty that no amount of insider buying or Miami glamour can fully resolve.
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