The Swiss wealth manager is pushing ahead with a $220 million luxury residential tower in Miami’s Brickell financial district even as it scrambles to contain a redemption crisis in its flagship fund. The 70-story skyscraper, branded “B Residences” with a nod to watchmaker Breitling — another Partners Group portfolio company — will house more than 300 luxury units, a private club and rooftop pools. Construction starts at the end of 2028, with completion slated for 2031. Partners Group acquired the developer, Empira Group, last year.
That long-term bet on Miami’s high-end property market stands in sharp contrast to the immediate liquidity headache that has hammered the stock. Early June saw the company cap withdrawals from its largest Evergreen vehicle, the Partners Group Global Value SICAV, a $8.6 billion fund. Redemption requests hit 9.8% of net asset value, nearly double the contractual 5% limit. A Delaware-based vehicle also saw requests around 6%. The market reacted savagely: shares now trade at €705.20, down roughly 35% year-to-date and just 3% above the 52-week low of €686.80. The distance from the August 2025 high is nearly 42%.
The stock’s technical picture looks bruised. The relative strength index sits at 25.1 — deep in oversold territory — while annualized 30-day volatility has soared to 52.76%. That nervousness reflects a fundamental question: can Partners Group restore confidence in its retail-facing Evergreen model while still hitting its ambitious growth targets?
Management has moved decisively to signal faith. Insiders have bought more than 60 million Swiss francs worth of shares since June. The company also reaffirmed its 2026 gross new client demand guidance of $26 billion to $32 billion, arguing that the redemption cap will only shave 1% to 2% off net AuM growth in the second half of 2026 and through 2027. The first half of this year, it says, should still show net inflows into the Evergreen funds.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Partners Group?
Bulls point to the institutional backbone: over 80% of Partners Group’s clients are institutional, and they generated more than 80% of inflows in the first quarter. Those investors treat liquidity gates as structural features, not red flags. The broader private-equity market may also help — deal activity is slowly recovering, and capital is concentrating with top managers like Partners Group.
The bear case is just as compelling. Once shattered, retail investor trust does not mend quickly, and Evergreen products were a key channel to reach that audience. A net AuM growth drag that stretches 18 months is not trivial, especially in an environment of higher interest rates and slower exit activity. PwC has already flagged a decline in deal volumes for the first half of 2026. Should Evergreen outflows accelerate, the earnings hit could deepen. The stock is already 19% below its 50-day moving average and nearly 30% below its 200-day average — far from any technical springboard.
The next real test comes on July 15, when Partners Group reports second-quarter assets under management. That data will reveal whether gross inflows truly outpaced redemptions in the Evergreen suite. If the numbers confirm management’s sunny outlook, the current valuation could prove an overreaction. If not, the 52-week low at €686.80 will look less like a floor and more like a waypoint.
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