Patria Investments Ltd
NASDAQ:PAX

Watchlist Manager
Patria Investments Ltd Logo
Patria Investments Ltd
NASDAQ:PAX
Watchlist
Price: 12.31 USD -0.57% Market Closed
Market Cap: 1.9B USD
Have any thoughts about
Patria Investments Ltd?
Write Note

Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2021-Q1

from 0
Operator

Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Patria First Quarter 2021 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Josh Wood, Head of Shareholder Relations. Please go ahead.

J
Josh Wood
Head of Shareholder Relations

Thank you. Good morning, everyone and welcome to Patria's first quarter 2021 earnings call. Joining on the call today are our Chief Executive Officer, Alex Saigh; and our Chief Financial Officer, Marco D'Ippolito. Earlier this morning, we issued a press release and earnings presentation detailing our first quarter 2021 results, which you can find posted on our Investor Relations website at ir.patria.com or on Form 6-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Any forward-looking statements made on this call are uncertain, do not guarantee future performance and undue reliance should not be placed on them. Patria assumes no obligation and does not intend to update any such forward-looking statements. Such statements are based on current management expectations and involve inherent risks including those discussed in the Risk Factors section of our Form 20-F Annual Report filed last month. As a foreign private issuer, Patria reports financial results using International Financial Reporting Standards or IFRS as opposed to US GAAP. Additionally,, we will report in refer to certain non-GAAP industry measures, which should not be considered in isolation from or as a substitute for measures prepared in accordance with IFRS. Reconciliations of these measures to the most comparable measures calculated in accordance with IFRS are included in our earnings presentation.

As a quick overview of the results, Patria has generated $13.1 million in IFRS net income in Q1'21. On key non-GAAP measures for the first quarter, fee-related, earnings were $17.3 million and distributable earnings were $17 million or $0.125 per share. In alignment with our policy, we declared a dividend of $0.106 per share payable on June 16 to shareholders of record as of June 2.

With that, I'll now turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Alex Saigh. Alex?

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Josh. Good morning everyone and thank you for joining us today. We are very pleased with our first quarter results, which reflect solid execution across our investment platform. We are not only on track, but also leveraging current opportunities to deploy and commit larger amounts of capital into new investments, which accelerates our progress on key growth drivers for the firm.

Our portfolio companies are performing very well, demonstrating the resilience of our investment approach and our ability to deliver outstanding returns to our LPs through many different environments. In Private Equity, we are delivering 750 basis points of outperformance relatively to the emerging markets benchmark and our portfolio companies have capitalized on recent opportunities from consolidation completing a total of 34 M&A transactions in 2020, for example. In Infrastructure, our investment opportunity is vast and we have lapped about $80 billion in long-term development needs across Latin America, especially in Brazil, Chile, Colombia and Peru. We are seeing record levels of government concessions and Patria is well positioned to be a selective bidder and win projects with very attractive return profiles.

Now, clearly, the entire world is emerging from a health and economic crisis, and Latin America is emerging along with it. The latest pandemic data shows encouraging trends suggesting that we may have turned a significant corner with new cases and deaths both receding significantly from their highs in late April. There has also been substantial progress in the immunization programs with over 110 million vaccines given in the region. There is no question the second wave and recent environment has been difficult for society and many businesses. And regional macro concerns have clearly weighted on Patria's shares in the last few months, alongside other companies with exposure to the region. While we cannot control these externalities, what can we do? We can continue to outperform.

I want to emphasize the fundamental resilience of Patria's business model, and impressive investment performance, we are delivering. Over three decades, we have been fundraising, deploying capital and generating attractive and in most cases top quartile returns for our LPs while navigating through many different environments. Over that time, we have faced, dealt and learned to take advantage of the volatility in Latin America. Our returns have enabled us to raise several vintages. For example, for our two flagship funds, we are in vintage number six for Private Equity and vintage number four for infrastructure. And we have been able to scale these funds significantly. So let's focus on the key drivers of the investments' lifecycle, fundraising, deployments and performance, and you can see why we have such high confidence in our ability to deliver value to our shareholders.

In order to raise larger and larger flagship funds every four years, we had effectively deploy the capital entrusted to us by investors. In our business, periods of volatility can present better opportunities to put money to work. And indeed, we are seeing that play out now. For Private Equity in particular, you can see in our presentation that Fund VI is now 68% deployed and reserved and quickly closing in on the 75% threshold that would allow us to launch the fundraising over the next month. With our investment pipelines as strong as ever, we now see the timing of the Private Equity fundraising cycle accelerating and we expect to be back in the market later this year with new investment activity transitioning to the new fund sometime in 2022.

The most critical elements of our long-term success is of course investment performance. And we believe Patria's approach to investing in the region is really a differentiator. In Private Equity, we are most investing in smaller companies at attractive valuation multiples. And building them into market leaders through consolidation and a relentless focus on fundamental value creation. Our two most recent Private Equity funds are performing phenomenally with Fund V at a 32% net IRR in US dollars as it begins this harvesting phase, and Fund VI at a 19% net IRR in US dollars, while still in its investment period. In Infrastructure, we are not typically buying mature assets, but rather building new platforms or companies from the ground-up to fill critical needs for society, which the government often does not have the means to address. Here we are seeing a vast range of opportunities to deploy capital into development projects. And we are in a position of strength to be a selective bidder.

Across both strategies, we focus on resilient sectors of the economy that are linked to basic human needs like healthcare, food, transportation and energy, which have lower correlations to economic cycles and GDP growth. Over time, we believe our approach has led to more consistent returns and provided stability through market cycles.

In our country-specific strategies targeting local investors currently focused in Brazil, the question we hear recently is, with interest rates now reversing course, is the theme of the financial deepening in danger? Here, I think you have to step back and appreciate the magnitude. In Brazil, for example, the interbank rate has ranged from 10% to 20% for most of the last 20 years. Since 2016, we saw a plunge from 14% to 2% and now recently reversing back to 3.5% as the Central Bank looks to tame rising inflation. If anything, a modest rise in rates should continue to stabilize local currency, which we are currently seeing. With $18 trillion of negative yielding debt across the globe, we don't see the longer-term trend of low interest rates ending anytime soon. And we don't see moderately higher rates lowering in the flow of capital into alternative assets. Indeed, we think the financial deepening in the region is well intact and will be a long-term trend that impacts Patria positively.

I'll wrap up by reiterating these very simple points. Number one, our story for near-term fee-related earnings growth depends on our ability to deploy the remaining capital in our current flagship funds, and go back to the market to raise new and larger funds. We have extremely high confidence in our ability to do that and we are seeing that process accelerate. Number two, we believe the expansion of our country-specific strategies will be a steady to organic growth engine for FRE as well, as these strategies achieve a more material scale over the next few years. Number three, we are actively exploring opportunities to use our IPO capital for strategic M&A which we view as upsides to an organic growth profile that is already very compelling. Number four, and lastly and most importantly, we are cautiously aware that our growth ultimately depends on one thing, great investment performance. If we continue to deliver strong returns, LPs will commit larger sums of capital to us and for shareholders, the investment performance can generate substantial levels of performance fees. Considering those factors, it should be no surprise that we believe Patria's stock presents an attractive valuation at current levels and we believe our financial performance will make that clear over time.

I'll now turn the call over to Michael for a deeper dive on the numbers. Michael, please.

M
Marco D'Ippolito
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Alex, and good morning. Financial performance was solid for the first quarter and very much in line with our expectation and our key business drivers are all progressing nicely.

Fee-related earnings of $17.3 million in Q1'21 were up 14% from $15.2 million in Q1'20, driven by a 20% increase in total fee revenues. Management fee of $31.3 million in Q1'21 were up 31% compared to Q1'20 largely driven by fee earnings AUM inflow from Private Equity Fund VI and Infrastructure Fund IV. Personal expenses of $10.3 million were up from $7 million mostly due to the shift in compensation structure, post IPO. FRE margin was 57% from the first quarter, reflecting very strong profitability. Patria's FRE margin is among the highest in our broader peer group and exceeds the margins of global managers many time our size on an AUM basis. Fee earnings AUM for the Q1'21 rose to more than $8 billion, up 4% from the last quarter and 14% from one year ago. Keep in mind that our reported fee earnings AUM reflects the basis that it's generating management fee in the current quarter.

Since our flagship funds call for management fees semi-annually at the beginning and middle of the year, the increase in fee earnings AUM from Q4 to Q1, for example, is mostly attributable to capital deployed or reserved in the second half of 2020. There is now $2.8 billion of pending fee earnings AUM, which is not yet generating management fees as of the first quarter and will drive top line growth over the next several quarters.

In our earnings presentation, we have added some additional details to show you that approximately $500 million has already been committed in the first quarter, mostly from Private Equity Fund VI, which will flow into fee earnings AUM and begin to generate management fee in the second half of '21. We are seeing attractive opportunities to invest in this environment and our pipelines are very active. Actual capital deployments to our portfolio companies in the first quarter was $277 million, which includes amounts that were reserved in prior quarters. We noted that Private Equity Fund VI was active in reserving capital for new investments in the first quarter taking that Fund from 51% to 68% committed, and moving us much closer to the 75% threshold for launching a new next fundraising campaign. This acceleration should allow us to go back to the market later this year, sooner than expected, and begin to accrue new capital into our fee earnings AUM sometime next year.

Infrastructure Fund IV remains at 56% invested and reserved. While we see that Fund taking a little longer than Private Equity to come back to the market, we are also seeing a very active pipeline for deployment with a record level of government concessions expected in the region for this year. Fundraising in the first quarter of $147 million was driven by our first Infrastructure core fund, which is recognized as part of our country-specific strategies, as it is a publicly traded evergreen vehicle focused on local investors in Brazil. This type of fund typically must allocate capital quickly and we have high visibility on the pipeline for this initial capital raise. We will have the opportunity to grow the fund through follow-on offerings once the initial capital is fully deployed. Demand for our country specific strategies remained strong and we expect to have opportunities to raise new capital in credit and real estate vehicle as the year progresses.

Turning now to performance fees, the net accrued performance fee balance was $253 million at the end of the first quarter compared to $276 million last quarter. The decrease was driven by local currency depreciation, a trend which spanned last year and continued into the first quarter of 2021. While this movement was clearly a headwind for our USD-denominated fund performance, the modest impact to our accrual balance demonstrates an impressive resilience. Also, it is important to recognize that the accrual is a snapshot in time and with the change of direction in interest rate in April and May, we have now seen a significant stabilizing effect on local currency with the Brazilian real reversing course and appreciating against the US dollar. At current levels, all other things being equal, our March 31 net accrued performance fee would have been approximately $300 million, if you accordingly, adjusted the unrealized fair value in US dollar terms. While that is of course a theoretical estimate, it does give you an indication of where the balance could go, if the currency remains at today's level or even improves further. We acknowledge that it's easier to be a buyer than a seller in the current environment, but we're seeing good progress toward monetizing our accrual.

As Alex noted, Private Equity Fund V performance continues to be outstanding with a net IRR of 32% and $182 million of net accrued performance fee. This is a fund with nine investments, one of which now has an exit agreement at 2.4 times invested capital. The companies are mostly mature and two have filed for an IPO. While we need more exit in the fund to realize performance fees, there are multiple opportunities across the portfolio. In Private Equity III, the net accrual of $45 million is supported by receivables from prior exits and one unrealized publicly traded investment, which we believe remains undervalued at its current share price, with significant potential to improve. In the end, realized performance fees will always be a product of the return we generate for our LPs and thus we will always sell investments when it is the right time for our LPs.

So how does all these translate to our earnings outlook? What we want to convey more than anything is the outlook for fee-related earnings is completely intact irrespective of any macro perception about the region. Remember that our capital is locked up and we enjoy the flexibility to be patient when necessary and also aggressive when the time is appropriate.

Near-term FRE growth is substantially driven by the deployment of our pending fee earnings AUM alone. If anything, today's environment is accelerating our growth path, as we deploy capital faster and bring forward fundraising. We continue to expect nominal growth in FRE for '21 compared to $71 million generated in 2020, at margin in the mid-50% range. This should be driven by very strong fee revenue growth north of 20% year-over-year. While exit transactions may be incrementally more difficult at the moment, we continue to feel great about the quality and the performance of our portfolio.

We are still in the first half of the year and see significant opportunity for the backdrop to improve, especially, if the economic reflation accelerates in the coming months. While that trajectory may have an impact on the level of performance fee, we realize this year versus next, our ultimate performance expectations are unchanged. Altogether, you should take away the message that Patria's growth story is highly intact, and exciting opportunities lie ahead. As a newly public company, we recognize that the market is carefully evaluating our ability to execute. We have high conviction that we can deliver and presuming we do we see considerable value in our shares at today's price.

Many thanks to all of our shareholders for your support and to potential shareholders, we hope you will also consider joining us as partners on this journey.

We're now happy to take your questions.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Craig Siegenthaler with Credit Suisse. Your line is open.

C
Craig Siegenthaler
Credit Suisse

Good morning, Alexandre, Marco. Hope you're both doing well. I wanted to come back to Slide 11, we can see that 41% of Private Equity Fund VI is now reserved for future transactions. And my question is, is all of the binding in reserve capital in the 41% based on transactions that have already been announced, and what are the major investments embedded in this 41%, and should we expect them to close over the next six months?

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Hi Greg, this is Alex here. Thanks for your question. Yes, I think we -- on the 41%, we have two-thirds of that already not only committed but deployed. We have on -- in the beginning of the Fund, we did take advantage of the COVID, where listed stock prices did suffer and we did deploy capital buying the shares of two listed companies, one is the gas distribution network, gas stations, and the other one is a health club, a healthcare trade. So with that, they were not only committed but deployed. Then we did commit capital to a healthcare initiative in Latin America starting in Colombia, it's an integrated healthcare company starting with now HMOs, healthcare management organizations in Colombia, there we committed a substantial amount of money but we deployed a part of that, and we also then committed to others thesis along this second quarter, one into a thesis in the fast-moving consumer goods distribution business and the other thesis in the cyber-security business.

With that, yes, we are then beefing our commitments. By the third quarter, we should have -- by the end of actually this quarter, the second quarter, surpass the 75% threshold, which enables us to market and actually have a first close of our next fund Private Equity Fund VII and we should have around 40% of the fund deployed. By the end of the year, that 40% will go to be closer to 50%, 60% deployed. I hope I answered your question there.

C
Craig Siegenthaler
Credit Suisse

Great, Alex. Sounds very clear. Just for my follow-up, the interest rate backdrop is constantly changing in Brazil and it's now looking like rates are going to move higher maybe faster than we thought three, six months ago. I know most of your clients are outside of Brazil, but how does this evolving interest rate backdrop change the domestic migration to equities and alternative thesis, which could impact flows in the products like your infrastructure core find inside of Brazil?

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

So, thanks for the question again, I think very good question. I think we have to take a look first of all on the magnitude of things, right. I think we -- to be honest, 2% interest rate in Brazil was way too low. We do have some inflation in the country and of course during the COVID months -- in the months that were affected by COVID of course not but now things coming back, economies rebounding, we do have some inflation, which is good actually for the economy, and central governments not only Brazil are putting up interest rates to cope with that, but we're talking about now inflation being, if you extract from the inflation number risk in Brazil, the commodity prices increase, but they did increase significantly over the last month. Inflation is basically on target, we have a inflation targeting system in Brazil and the midpoint of that is 4%. So we see that ex-commodity prices, we see that it's pretty much in control and the Central Bank in Brazil and other countries in Latin America are seeing the same thing, commodity prices pushing up inflation numbers, when you extract commodity prices increase, the other items that compose inflation numbers indices are pretty much behaved. But nevertheless, of course, inflation versus last year that had no inflation because of the crisis.

So the hike up in interest rates is actually in our view positive given the magnitude that we're talking about. We see in Brazil 5% to 6% by year-end, we are now at the 3.5%, and that also helps to be honest Greg for us to pass on to prices inflation on our costs. On the Private Equity side, we do invest in very resilient and inelastic in nature businesses -- industries and businesses like healthcare, for example. We also do have a lot of investments in the agribusiness that now do follow the commodity prices, so we had a really hype up in prices in these businesses because of the, again the increase in commodities, agribusiness specifically. On the Infrastructure side, even more so, because of most of the revenues that we have on the Infrastructure side are contracted and corrected by inflation. So, some inflation for us is actually good, and most of our funds in Brazil, as you mentioned here, our core infrastructure fund, they are denominated in inflation-plus returns. Why? Because the revenues of these businesses are contracted and corrected by inflation. So our infrastructure core aims at an inflation-plus 6% return. So if inflation goes to 4%, it's around 10% nominal; if inflation is 3%, it's around 9% nominal.

So, the 6% above inflation is what investors look for, and normally the Brazilian Central Bank actually in a now same temperature, same pressure do position interest rates at a 2% above inflation target, so inflation targeting around 3.5%, 4%, interest rates will be around 5.5%, 6% and that's what the market actually predict if you look at the forward yield curve. So actually, it's very, very positive be honest in this magnitude. It actually gives some oxygen to the economy, it means inflation also means that things are coming back, that now businesses are coming back, that we've been able to pass on to prices some of the inflation on our costs, basically the increase in commodity prices do affect some raw materials in some industries, not the ones that we are exposed to, this healthcare and other items are not really exposed to raw materials that by no whatever commodities like iron ore or whatever, but yes, everything looks more natural, more normal with the 4% inflation and a 6% interest rates. And again, our businesses in Brazil in local currency is inflation plus. I forgot to mention our REITs, our real estate investment trusts, they trade also the same way that infrastructure investment trusts trade, as I just explained, investors look at that yields at an inflation plus yields.

So my example, for the infrastructure investment trust was inflation plus 6%, let's say that it's an inflation plus 6% again for the real estate investment trust ABC. So if inflation goes up as will the yields, because in Brazil, we have rents also corrected by inflation. So again, it's a long answer to your question. But for me, and as I look into the businesses and the magnitude that we're talking about now around the 4-ish kind of level inflation and the 6-ish kind of level interest rate is actually positive for our businesses, and for the economy in general.

C
Craig Siegenthaler
Credit Suisse

Thank you, Alex.

Operator

Our next question comes from Mike Carrier with Bank of America. Your line is open.

D
Dean Stephan
Bank of America

Hey guys, this is Dean Stephan on for Mike. I know it's always difficult to forecast, but can you provide some additional color around the performance fee outlook for the remainder of 2021, if you expect any performance fees to be generated over the next couple of quarters and maybe what percent of previously expected performance fees could be delayed into next year?

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

Thank you very much, Dean, and thanks for participating in our call. This is Alex again here. Our performance fees for 2021 is basically composed by or derived from two funds, Private Equity Fund III and Private Equity Fund V as you know. On Private Equity Fund III, our main asset there, which is 90% of the remaining net asset value or the NAV of the fund is one listed company which is an imaging diagnostics company. They had called Alliar, you can check that, if you want to, it is a listed company in the Brazilian Stock Exchange B3 and it had a great quarter, it had a great first quarter of 2021 and the results actually did please investors as the stock went up by 25% versus how the stock closed by the end of 2020. So great performance there because this company it is an imaging diagnostic company, but it does -- it did negatively impact -- it got negatively impacted by COVID because the elective surgeries were canceled, with the rebound in the fourth quarter and the first quarter, you can see the results of the company coming back and you can see now the results are great and the stock prices were up. So, we were expecting to see that because, of course, we are a major shareholder of the company and we expect this company to actually continue performing extremely well this year, as we see the vaccination programs in the region, as mentioned, over 110 million people already vaccinated, it's a 500-and-something-million region -- people region, so 20%, and the vaccination programs on a daily basis speeding up. So, as that happens, we see actually then a good second and third quarter for that specific company.

In addition to that, as I mentioned in my last question, Dean, with interest rates going up a little bit in Brazil and other regions in Latin America, we have a stabilization or even a strengthening of the currencies in the region, because investors, international -- local, international come back and they want to invest in the local fixed income market in order to find some yield, which is not something hard to find around the world. So, the increase in interest rates actually helps to stabilize the currencies in the region or even strengthen plus we have a record-high increase in commodity prices, as you know, if you look at the data from -- you can see one data to the other data, but approximately a 50% increase in commodity prices from their lows sometime last year and that benefits the region as well because the some of the economies in the region do benefit from high commodity prices, copper in Chile, agribusiness, iron ore in Brazil, oil in Colombia at $70 a barrel, as you know. So all of that push is pushing on one side, on the macro side the rebound in the region, which we look very positively, the commodity prices helping GDP growth that helps the major economies in the region. The interest rates now small hike which actually stabilizes the currencies in the region and in addition actually strengthen the currency in the region since investors come and invest in these currencies in these markets to get some yields. On a micro level Alliar which is the imaging diagnostic company for Fund III performing extremely well with a 25% rebound on its share price this year.

So as we look into the year, we're still here in May, we see that sometime this year, we want to divest from the company but I think it was great that we actually waited to see that rebound. And I think we want to wait for the second wave to go through and in now third quarter, fourth quarter to do that divestment in order to actually write all of these positive things that I just mentioned on Alliar stock. But even if we do sell the stock at the current prices, because of a catch-up in country which now we can go offline explaining a little bit that all of the actually resources, most of the resources from the sale of that stock actually goes to pay our performance fees because we have a full catch up on Fund III. So, even if we did sell the stock at this moment, it won't affect much the overall number of performance fees for our Private Equity Fund III. On Private Equity Fund V, no it's not only the returns are just starting as far I'm concerned, now 32% net IRR in US dollars as of the first quarter of this year. But out of the nine companies, seven of them, I think are ready to go to an exit mode, two of them, we filed for an IPO, one of them is another healthcare company, an HMO integrated with hospitals, and the other one that we actually just filed today or yesterday is a network of gyms or fitness centers.

So both of them, I think will look into the year and now using again all of the upsides and good news and I see the region announcing over the next quarters now not only IPO, the IPO includes some secondary trade for Fund V, but also during the year, we could do follow-ons and whatever. So as I stand right now, I think I'm pretty positive on Fund III and Fund V, Private Equity Fund III and Private Equity Fund V in generating that performance fee. It might be a case, there are some, I know it's in third quarter and fourth quarter there's now another wave of COVID, or if something strange happens and diverse us from the track that I am describing right now, it has been, as you know, very volatile during the last months. Thank God, the second wave in the region has not been that bad and the vaccination programs are advancing but who knows what can come up, now another variants of the virus and whatever, but given the same temperature and the same pressure here, I'm positive on generating the fees this year. And more so, I'm very positive on FRE, I know that that was not part of your question, but if I can use the answer here to comment on FRE. Marco and I mentioned I think during our call today, how we have been able to deploy more capital in our flagship funds which increases then the fees that we charge and also how we have been able to control expenses extremely in a disciplined manner. So, we see an increase in revenues, we see an increase in FRE above our expectations and we see mid-50% margins, then in the first quarter, we posted 57% FRE margin. So not only, I see -- I'm pretty positive on the FRE side, as I am on the performance fee-related side as well, given where I just sit.

Finishing up here, I think when we look into the very short term, which is 2022, I mentioned that, but Marco also mentioned, sorry to be redundant and emphasizing this, but as we do deploy more capital and with these kind of very, very strong performance that we're posting for Private Equity Fund V and Fund VI, Fund VI is 18% [ph] net IRR in US dollars. We are looking to anticipate the fundraising of Private Equity Fund VII, which in our projections was way back in late '22. And looking into having that fundraising happens late this year, beginning of next year. So that also will generate now fees for us to charge in '22, which was not expected not for us at least in our projections. So all of this, I think there is now a group -- a great set and group of good news on the performance fees as well. Hope I answered your question. Long answer here, I'm sorry, but hopefully I was able to answer.

D
Dean Stephan
Bank of America

Yes, that was, very helpful, thanks. And I guess just as a follow-up, given one of your peers announced a share buyback program yesterday, and your comments on the call today about the current stock valuation. Just wondering if we could get your thoughts around capital priorities. If you guys have thought about share repurchases and how you're kind of balancing capital return versus M&A and investment in the business? Thanks.

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

Yes, great question as well. I think we have to address that. As we see our share price right now around $15 per share, it is, disappointing, of course, approximately a 50% drop from the IPO price. We all wanted it to be of course the other way, right, but I think it's too early to make the call on a share buyback program as of today. We have so many amazing opportunities on the M&A front in addition to everything that I said on the FRE front and the PRE front, the performance fee earnings front, generating good distributable earnings. We see FRE now this year better than our expectations, we see our margins better than our expectations in the mid-50's. We see everything that I just mentioned on the performance fee side, so now deploying some of the capital we raised into these new ventures here. So it's now a great momentum for Patria Group. It will be a great momentum for the stock as you guys follow us and actually see us performing, as I just mentioned. So I think that the stock will be organic growth of what I just said, should reflect that sometime soon, hopefully.

So, I would like to actually reserve as of now the capital that we raised in the primary issuance for the reasons that we raise it, which was primarily for acquisitions and we have so many interesting things that we are talking and we'll use signs that we are analyzing such great things again. But again, I'm always with -- very sensible to the share price. Now, of course, we own 60% of the company -- six zero as Brazilian shareholders and founder shares. So any uptick in that price is extremely, extremely positive for us and we'll keep a very open eye on, but as of today, I think it's too early to say, given now the momentum that we have for Patria on the organic side and given the great opportunities that we have on the M&A side. But I'm sensitive and I'll -- let's see what happens in the near future and we might come back to this subject, but not as of now. Thank you.

D
Dean Stephan
Bank of America

Got it, that was very helpful. Thanks, again.

Operator

Our next question comes from Tito Labarta with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

T
Tito Labarta
Goldman Sachs

Hi, good morning, thanks for the call and taking my questions. Maybe a couple of questions or so. Just first on the accrued performance fees, how much of the decline was related to simply to the FX and with the FX sort of coming back since then, should those good performance, you kind of just go back to where you were at year end, just to get some color on the FX volatility and the impacts. And then my second question, I guess just given the underperformance in the stock and has anything changed from your expectations since the IPO. And my sense from what you've been saying I'll call so far as maybe FRE ahead of expectations with possible upside, maybe the performance fees, a little bit of uncertainty there, but just want to confirm that's that consistent with how you're seeing if anything may have changed since the IPO given the volatility in the market and in your stock. Thank you.

M
Marco D'Ippolito
Chief Financial Officer

Hi Tito, this is Marco. Good morning. So related to your first question about net accrued performance fee, I made a comment on my initial remarks. The number -- hypothetical number, if you do not consider the FX of our net accrued performance fee would be at around 300, but that's just a hypothetical number. So the straight answer to your question is around $50 million. When you look quarter-over-quarter, you'll see the detail fund by fund. And when you see the number being basically NAD [ph], that's how much the NAV went up and match to how much the currency depreciated, that it's around 10% in the quarter.

Relative to your second question, all the fundamentals and key drivers of the business continue to be very solid. So if anything, we've been able to deploy capital at the faster pace, that it's resulting in a -- on a view that our fundraising perspective for the flagship funds will accelerate. There is also the fact that the underlying portfolio performance has been very solid. I think in part of the fact that we have exposure to sectors that are performing quite well over the pandemic, namely agribusiness and logistics and service -- service-related factors, they are the ones that are receiving most of the cash that have been coming through the governments to help in the pandemic. And that of course gives us a good perspective in terms of the performance fee.

So on the fee-related earnings side, we can expect an increasing amount of fee-paying AUM. I indicated in my presentation that during the first quarter we have deployed or reserved about $500 million, but this amount will flow into our fee earnings AUM only in the second half of the year because of the way we draw the line to charge our fee earnings AUM. That's a very positive news, and if you tie that to the information that last year we deployed $1.5 billion, it gives you an indication of how much more money we are deploying over this year, that will turn into revenues on the second half. I hopefully -- I hope I have answered your question.

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

Yes, maybe I can get the second part of the question here on the general macro view that you mentioned, I think, yes, for the first part, I think of your question, I think we are optimistic on the FRE front versus our expectations. Yes. from all the reasons that I think we covered here for the deployments and et cetera, and very disciplined control in expenses et cetera. And on the performance fee side, now I think all of the data points as of today are there. That's a major performance fee coming from our Private Equity Fund III, where the most important asset there is an imaging diagnostics company that the stock traded 25% up, and we also see the real strengthening. Now, as of today, be it BRL520, BRL530 versus BRL550, BRL560 [ph]; so as of now, May 20, I think now things are progressing in the right direction in order to realize that performance fee from Fund III and a good share of reais per share, and on Fund V, the companies are performing extremely well, and of course, it's also very important to say that the sector selection which is key in our view, in my view to do well in equities in the region in Latin America.

In Fund V, it's amazing, we see not only the companies are doing well, but it starts with the sector selection, healthcare, agribusiness, logistics, all of these sectors were extremely benefited from COVID, on the contrarily, what are all negatively affected, they were positively affected. Now the HMO business that we have, which is a major asset in the Fund V was positively affected because now we continue to receiving the payments for our private payers. Now we just serve the private side of the market, we don't serve the government for this company. So everybody was paying, but there was no elective surgeries. So now the margins of the business and EBITDA of the business was extremely benefited last year and continued to be this year. We have a major agribusiness company in this Fund V, which now is a distributor of agribusiness products. We buy from [indiscernible] Dow and whatever, and we sell to farmers, now what happened with the commodity prices, agribusiness prices in Brazil, farmers think never saw the kind of margin that they're seeing in their business today. Now soybean mushrooms in reais is three times the price they were three years ago besides productivity gains. And our business of course benefits from that.

So the businesses that composed Fund V are doing extremely well. So, at the right time here, we are going to be able to sell them at very good prices. And also, the strengthening of the real. So I think we position ourselves in a good place to be, and as of May 20, things are working our way. Of course when I look at the FRE, I have a lot more certainty because it's -- I know how much I'm deploying, the funds already raised and with the kind performance we have and see support from our LPs for us to raise our Private Equity Fund VII and on the performance fee side, there is also more uncertainties on when you're going to sell it and whatever, but, so, as of today things are good for the year. So, I hope I answered your question as well.

T
Tito Labarta
Goldman Sachs

Yes. It's very helpful, Alex and Marco. Thank you very much.

Operator

Our next question comes from Robert Lee with KBW. Your line is open.

R
Robert Lee
KBW

Good morning. Thank you very much. Thanks for taking my questions. A lot of them have been asked and answered, but one or two that I had is, I'm just curious, this relates to realizations, but clearly there is a growing secondary market appetite participation and I know in the past you had kind of discussed that there been some parties that maybe you're interested in some type of strip transaction that may could have potential, I guess, accelerating some realizations. I mean, can you maybe update us if those kind of discussions are ongoing or this maybe just not the right time to consider something like that? Just curious where that stands?

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

Hi Robert, this is Alex. Now, thanks for the question. I think it is the right time to consider it well and the secondary market, as you know, is very, very liquid, now huge funds were raised by several very important and players in that market and I think we have great assets, and I was mentioning Private Equity Fund V, and definitely we have been -- it's something that we will consider, it's something that we are considering. We were approached by several of these players, as they look into everything that I said, now, they look at the rebound in the region, they look at the strengthening of the currencies, because of the commodity prices increases and the effect of commodity prices do have in the economies of the region is beneficial, is positive. They also see the companies that we have in our Private Equity Fund V exposed to the right sectors, as I mentioned, healthcare and agribusiness, logistics, we have also in Fund V a last mile food logistics business and of course did very well and it continues to do very well as people stay more home and ordering more food and et cetera, from home.

And yes, we were approached and we will definitely consider and we are considering, and some of these you know that GP-led transactions in this market have been increasing more over the years. I think it was -- don't take me for this data here, but I think last quarter I think we have more GP-led transactions than LP-led transactions in the secondary market. So yes, I think we were approached. We are considering, it looks good, I think we should pursue seriously in doing something for that and Fund V is a good candidate, given everything that I've said. Thank you.

R
Robert Lee
KBW

Actually, that was my only question. Thanks for taking the time.

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Rob.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Craig Siegenthaler with Credit Suisse. Your line is open.

C
Craig Siegenthaler
Credit Suisse

In our follow-up, we just wanted to circle back on corporate M&A. Can you remind us your appetite to acquire private markets businesses outside of Brazil and adjacent markets, and I'm thinking like Chile, Colombia, Mexico.

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

Yes, hi. Thanks, Craig. The appetite is high. I think we see these economies -- these adjacent economies, as you call them, going through very interesting moments, different moments and each one of these economies but, yes diversifying some of the Brazil risk, or the currencies, or the nature of the economies, so the answer is yes. I think we're looking in to expand our product offering and expand our geographic footprint in the region. So we do, we are looking at the same time to expand the product offering for our Brazil-centric products to target the true Brazilians in BRL raising BRL investing BRL like the REITS, in the real estate investment trusts like the infrastructure investment trust that I mentioned, but also looking to expand throughout the region with other general partners that do manage other products or similar of ours, but in these countries that you mentioned. There are now great managers in the region, they're doing extremely well, and that would add, I think, extremely well to our portfolio; so the answer is yes.

And I think it composes our portfolio is that diversifies country risk, diversifies currency risk. These economies by themselves they are not very correlated with other economies of the world, that's something that's helped -- now we always do show to our limited partners that investing in our funds that have exposure to the countries that you mentioned, Craig, the economies of the region here is not really correlated with the US economy or European economy. So it's a good add for them, they're buying returns with very little correlation. So that actually adds to their portfolio high sharp ratios which everybody looks for, right. So having Chile, having Colombia, having other countries in the portfolio adds to the whole theme of giving them exposure to the region, not just to a country, and the region has economies that are not correlated where most of our LPs are based, US, Europe and Middle East and Asia. Second, we diversify currency because the currencies of these countries that you mentioned are less volatile than the BRL, which is the Brazilian currency, so it's all a lot of advantages. Lastly, I think the Brazilian market is more mature and advanced in some shapes and we see going into these countries that we have, I'm generalizing now, assets at more attractive valuations, because the industries in these economies have not performed as well or completed or added sophistication to these industries as we see it in Brazil.

So, there's great opportunities that through these local managers, you can find businesses at very, attractive valuations that can add to the whole through a Latin American consolidation. So it's pretty positive, we are having -- we already have very interesting exposure to these economies. I'll give you one example, Private Equity Fund V, which should be 60%, 65% Brazil and 35% 40% other countries in South America, which basically shows the math of the GDP composition. Now if you add the GDP of all of the countries in the region, including Mexico, Brazil is around 40% of that region, South America around 60% of the GDP. So, I'm just doing a plain math here and our fund is going to be more or less 60%, 65% exposed to Brazil and some of these companies that I consider part of the 60% do have businesses in other Latin American countries close to direct exposure of 35%, 40% of the Fund to these other countries. So -- and we saw a significant plus in better returns because we can go in at better valuations and diversification of country risk and currency risk and a bigger appetite from our LPs to have a regional exposure versus a country-only exposure. Thanks.

C
Craig Siegenthaler
Credit Suisse

Thank you for that.

Operator

There are no further questions. I'd like to turn the call back over to Josh Wood for any closing remarks.

J
Josh Wood
Head of Shareholder Relations

Thank you everyone for joining us today. If you have further questions, please reach out to us at the contact information provided in our earnings presentation and on our website. We look forward to talking with you again soon, and have a great day. Thanks.

A
Alex Saigh
Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, everybody. Stay safe, and thank you very much.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.