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apo
Apollo Global Management
NYSE: APO
-0.30 (-0.24%)
125.07
USD
At close at Feb 13, 21:33 UTC
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Jobs and CPI Test Borrowing Costs for Apollo Global Management and Private Equity Deals

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Cashu
5 days ago
Cashu TLDR
  • Apollo Global Management sees delayed jobs and inflation reports as a test of borrowing conditions for leveraged buyouts.
  • Apollo uses bank loans, high-yield bonds and CLOs to finance acquisitions, so data affect market psychology and funding costs.
  • Apollo's large credit platform and CLO exposure make it sensitive to secondary loan trading and underwriting shifts.
apo Logo
APO
Apollo Global Management
-0.24%

Macro data release tightens focus on borrowing costs for private equity

Apollo and Private Equity Face Deal-Making Test as Jobs, CPI Arrive Together

Apollo Global Management and its peers in private equity see the delayed U.S. jobs and inflation reports, now slated for release in the same week, as a proximate test of borrowing conditions that underpin leveraged buyouts and credit-driven strategies. The simultaneous arrival of January nonfarm payrolls and the consumer price index thrusts the Federal Reserve's near-term policy path back into the spotlight, with implications for loan markets, covenant structures and the cost of financing new deals that large managers routinely rely on.

The payrolls report is expected to show the U.S. added 60,000 jobs in January, while the CPI is projected to rise 0.29% month-over-month and 2.5% year-over-year. For Apollo, which uses a mix of bank loans, high-yield bonds and collateralised loan obligations to finance acquisitions, those readings matter as much for market psychology as for formal rate guidance. Stronger-than-expected data would support Fed vigilance on inflation and keep rates higher for longer, raising funding costs for sponsors and potentially slowing the pace of buyouts and refinancings.

Conversely, softer labour or price readings could reinforce market bets on easier policy, loosening credit spreads and reviving appetite for leverage-heavy transactions. Apollo's large credit platform and CLO exposure make the firm sensitive to shifts in secondary loan trading and underwriting standards. A volatile data-driven week can prompt repricing across syndicated loan books and create windows for opportunistic acquisitions or restructurings that Apollo often targets when dislocations widen.

Policy backdrop and market pricing

Markets are pricing in two rate cuts in 2026, more than the Fed signals, and the reports arrive after a somewhat hawkish January FOMC meeting. The nomination of Kevin Warsh to lead the Fed when Jerome Powell’s term ends in May adds further uncertainty to the policy outlook that asset managers are monitoring as they set leverage and capital deployment plans.

Downside risks to the labour market also shape strategy

Warning signs such as ADP’s report of just 22,000 private payroll gains in January, the highest January layoffs since the global financial crisis and Fed Governor Christopher Waller’s view that 2025 employment may be revised down, could tilt the outlook toward more policy easing. For Apollo and peers, weaker labour data could ease funding pressures but also raise credit-quality concerns within portfolio companies, complicating asset management decisions.

The content provided here is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Investing in stocks carries risks, including potential loss of principal. Always do your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions. We are not responsible for any losses or damages resulting from your use of this information.

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