🐋 StepStone Group (STEP): The $885B Private Market Juggernaut and the Great GAAP Optical Illusion

Illustration showing a giant blue whale labeled

StepStone Group (NASDAQ: STEP): Inside the Record Fee Engines, $40B Dry Powder Vault, and the Smart Money's Private Wealth Gold Rush

How Record-Breaking Fee-Related Earnings and a Massive Capital Machine Are Quietly Pushing StepStone Toward the Trillion-Dollar Frontier

NASDAQ: STEP
$42.52
+0.17
(+0.40%)
As of Jun-11-2026 4:00:00 PM ET


🎯  FunFund Index™ : 7.95 / 10 🎯

Tooltip: StepStone combines extraordinary scale, record fee-related earnings, and a $40 billion dry powder vault with accounting complexity and cyclical risks. The opportunity appears compelling, but investors must distinguish between economic reality and GAAP optics.

Why?

StepStone sits at the crossroads of several powerful secular trends:

✅ Explosive private wealth adoption

✅ Record fee-related earnings

✅ Massive scale

✅ Enormous dry powder

✅ Attractive forward valuation

✅ Strong institutional sponsorship

But investors must also contend with:

⚠️ Cyclical private markets

⚠️ Complex accounting

⚠️ Performance fee volatility

⚠️ Insider selling noise

⚠️ Dividend sustainability concerns

StepStone may be one of the most misunderstood financial stocks on the market.


🚀 FUNanc1al Atomic Statements

1️⃣ The Optical Illusion Principle™

"Headline losses sometimes tell you less about economic reality than the footnotes do."

— FUNanc1al Alternative Asset Research Desk


2️⃣ The Dry Powder Principle™

"Undeployed capital isn't idle. It's tomorrow's fee engine waiting for permission to ignite."

— FUNanc1al Private Markets Desk


3️⃣ The Private Wealth Migration Theory™

"Alternative assets are gradually migrating from institutions to individuals. The toll collectors may become more valuable than the roads themselves."

— FUNanc1al Wealth Democratization Institute


🐋 Meet the $885 Billion Whale

StepStone Group (NASDAQ: STEP) isn't exactly a household name.

Which is somewhat ironic.

Because the company sits at the center of one of the most important—and least understood—trends in finance:

The democratization of private markets.

As of March 31, 2026, StepStone was responsible for approximately $885 billion of capital across private equity, infrastructure, private debt, and real estate, including roughly $233 billion of AUM.

Its clients include:

🏛️ Pension funds

🐋 Sovereign wealth funds

🛡️ Insurance companies

🎓 Endowments

👨👩👧👦 Family offices

💰 High-net-worth individuals

Increasingly, StepStone is becoming a bridge between Wall Street and Main Street.

And that bridge may prove extraordinarily lucrative.


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💰 Trigger #1: The Smart Money Is Buying

Insider activity has been mixed.

But one transaction stood out.

On June 11, 2026, Head of Strategy Michael McCabe purchased 120,000 shares at approximately $41.85, investing over $5 million of personal capital.

That's not window dressing.

That's conviction.

Meanwhile:

  • CEO Scott Hart sold 10,000 shares in January.
  • Co-COO Jose Fernandez sold approximately 202,000 shares in June.

Those sales represented only small fractions of their existing holdings and appear consistent with normal wealth diversification rather than deteriorating confidence.

Executives sell for many reasons.

Large open-market purchases are rarer.

And far more interesting.


🐋 Trigger #2: Institutions Own More Than 100% Of The Float

Yes.

More than 100%.

Institutional ownership currently exceeds:

103.3% of shares outstanding

109.3% of the float

Held across roughly 368 institutions.

The shareholder registry reads like a hedge fund convention:

🐋 BlackRock

🐋 Millennium

🐋 Wellington

🐋 T. Rowe Price

🐋 Vanguard

🐋 Capital World

🐋 State Street

🐋 Citadel

Apparently, the smart money enjoys private markets.

Who knew?

For StepStone Group (STEP)'s Institutional Ownership breakdown, 🔍 see here


🐻 Shorts Are Hiding In The Mezzanine

Short interest remains relatively modest.

About:

  • 6.9% of float
  • 5.3 million shares sold short
  • Days-to-cover approaching five days

Hardly a powder keg.

But enough to create some mild squeeze dynamics should fundamentals continue improving.

Think of it as:

Not a volcano.

More of a respectable campfire.


📈 Trigger #3: Analysts See Considerable Upside

Wall Street remains broadly optimistic.

Consensus:

Moderate Buy

Average price target:

$71.43

Highest target:

$92

Lowest target:

$60

From current levels, analysts see nearly 70% upside.

Analysts are hardly infallible.

But when most of Wall Street agrees on something, it deserves attention.

Especially when they are discussing a company with:

  • Record fee earnings
  • Explosive fundraising
  • And nearly a trillion dollars of capital responsibility

📉 Trigger #4: Valuation Has Quietly Improved

At first glance, StepStone looks expensive.

Trailing P/E:

73x

Which tends to scare people.

Understandably.

But forward estimates tell a very different story:

Forward P/E: ~17

Half what it was a year ago.

Other metrics tell a similar story:

📉 Price/Sales:

1.69

📉 EV/Revenue:

1.84

📉 EV/EBITDA:

16.5

Meanwhile, the stock trades roughly:

45% below its all-time high of $77.80

That doesn't guarantee upside.

But it certainly changes the risk-reward equation.

And unlike many financial firms, StepStone's growth engine remains very much alive.


🌱 Why This Story Matters

Most investors think they understand asset managers.

StepStone isn't a traditional asset manager.

It is a toll collector sitting at the intersection of:

🏗️ Infrastructure

🏢 Private equity

🏘️ Real estate

💳 Private credit

🚀 Venture capital

And increasingly:

👨👩👧👦 Individual investors seeking access to private markets.

Which raises an intriguing question:

If trillions of dollars eventually migrate from public markets into private assets—

Who gets paid to facilitate that migration?

StepStone appears determined to volunteer.


🔍 Trigger #5: The Great GAAP Optical Illusion

At first glance, StepStone's fiscal 2026 results appear alarming.

The company reported:

GAAP Net Loss:

$(743) million

And a net loss attributable to Class A shareholders of:

$(536) million

Not exactly the stuff dreams are made of.

Or is it?

Because alternative asset managers inhabit one of Wall Street's stranger accounting universes.

The headline losses stem largely from:

  • Non-cash equity compensation
  • Profit-interest adjustments
  • Fair value modifications
  • Technical accounting treatments

In other words:

The front page looks ugly.

The engine room looks considerably better.


💸 The Non-GAAP Reality

Once you move past the accounting noise, an entirely different picture emerges.

Fiscal 2026 Revenue:

$1.99 billion

(+70%)


Q4 Adjusted EPS:

$0.57

(beat expectations)


Full-Year Adjusted EPS:

$2.16


Q4 Adjusted Net Income:

$69 million


Record Quarterly Fee-Related Earnings:

$105 million

For the first time in company history.

And perhaps most impressive:

FRE Margin:

40%

That is a beautiful number.

Because fee-related earnings represent the closest thing alternative asset managers have to recurring cash flow.

Crossing $100 million in quarterly FRE isn't merely symbolic.

It's evidence that StepStone's machine is scaling.


🚀 The $40 Billion Dry Powder Vault

Perhaps the most fascinating number in the entire fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2026 earnings report isn't revenue.

Or earnings.

Or even assets under management.

It's this:

Undeployed Fee-Earning Capital:

$40.1 billion

That's dry powder.

Committed money.

Capital waiting patiently for deployment.

Which means:

Tomorrow's fees have already been promised.

They simply haven't been activated yet.

 👉 Want the full picture? Dive into StepStone Group (STEP)'s financials here.


The Dry Powder Principle™

"Undeployed capital isn't idle. It's tomorrow's fee engine waiting for permission to ignite."

— FUNanc1al Private Markets Desk


🌱 The Trillion-Dollar Frontier

StepStone now oversees:

$885 billion

in total capital responsibility.

Within that:

$233 billion

of AUM

and

$652 billion

of assets under advisement.

That's approaching trillion-dollar territory.

Quietly.

Without CNBC discussing it every afternoon.


👨👩👧👦 The Private Wealth Gold Rush

One trend stands above all others.

Private wealth.

Historically, private equity belonged almost exclusively to:

🏛️ Institutions

🐋 Sovereign wealth funds

🎓 Endowments

Today, the walls are coming down.

StepStone's SPRING platform alone gathered:

$1.2 billion

during the quarter.

And the firm raised:

Nearly $38 billion

during fiscal 2026.

Apparently, investors rather enjoy access to SpaceX, Databricks, and elite private assets.

Who knew?


💰 Dividend Checks Continue Arriving

Despite those terrifying GAAP losses, StepStone somehow found enough spare change to declare:

$0.28 regular dividend

plus

$0.55 supplemental dividend

For a combined:

$0.83

per share.

Nothing says

"our cash flow may be healthier than the headlines suggest"

quite like writing shareholders large checks.


⚠️ Risks Worth Respecting

No story is perfect.

Investors should keep in mind:

⚠️ Private market cycles

⚠️ Exit activity slowdowns

⚠️ Performance fee volatility

⚠️ Complex accounting

⚠️ Potential CH Equity obligations

⚠️ Insider selling noise

⚠️ Dividend sustainability concerns

And perhaps most importantly:

Alternative asset managers are complicated.

Complicated businesses occasionally confuse markets.

And confused markets occasionally create opportunity.

💡💡💡 Curious about another deep oil exploration play? (joke)
Check our takes on UnitedHealth Group or even Oscar Health.


😂 A Dash of Private-Market Humor

Joke #1

Managing $885 billion while reporting a giant GAAP loss is the accounting equivalent of driving a Ferrari and explaining to the IRS that you're technically broke because the tires depreciated.


Joke #2

StepStone's venture platform is called SPRING.

Given the amount of money flowing into it, perhaps TRAMPOLINE would have been equally appropriate.


Joke #3

Alternative asset accounting occasionally resembles modern art.

Confusing at first.

Expensive.

And somehow worth billions.


📌 Signal Extract

The Optical Illusion Principle™

"Headline losses sometimes tell you less about economic reality than the footnotes do."

— FUNanc1al Alternative Asset Research Desk


🎯 High-Conviction Takeaway

The Private Wealth Migration Theory™

"Alternative assets are gradually migrating from institutions to individuals. The toll collectors may become more valuable than the roads themselves."

— FUNanc1al Wealth Democratization Institute


⚡ Quick Take / TL;DR

  • StepStone oversees $885 billion in capital.
  • Assets under management reached $233 billion.
  • Institutions own over 100% of shares.
  • Analysts see substantial upside.
  • Record quarterly FRE reached $105 million.
  • FRE margins hit 40%.
  • Dry powder climbed to $40 billion.
  • Private wealth continues accelerating.
  • GAAP losses obscure a much healthier underlying picture.
  • Complexity remains both a risk—and potentially an opportunity.

❓ FAQ

Why does StepStone show such large GAAP losses?

Much of the compression comes from non-cash compensation expenses and accounting adjustments rather than cash burn.


What is Fee-Related Earnings (FRE)?

FRE represents recurring, relatively predictable earnings generated from management fees and is one of the most important metrics in alternative asset management.


Why is the $40 billion dry powder figure important?

Because committed but undeployed capital represents future fee generation and gives StepStone considerable optionality.


Why are analysts bullish?

They see long-term secular growth driven by private markets and increasing participation from wealthy individuals.


What is the biggest risk?

Private market cycles.

If fundraising or exits slow dramatically, earnings growth can become uneven.


🌉 Food For Thought: The Cross-Hub Connection

Investing often rewards those willing to look beneath the surface.

Life works similarly.

Some people look prosperous while quietly struggling.

Others appear chaotic while building extraordinary things.

Headline impressions can be misleading.

Balance sheets can be misleading.

Even people can be misleading.

Perhaps wisdom consists of learning when to read the footnotes.

Because sometimes the truth isn't hiding.

It's simply buried beneath accounting.


👤 About Frédéric Marsanne

Frédéric Marsanne is the founder of FUNanc1al — part market analyst, part storyteller, part accidental comedian. A longtime investor, entrepreneur, and venture-builder across tech, biotech, and fintech, he now blends sharp insights with a twist of humor to help readers laugh, learn, live better lives, and invest a little wiser. When not decoding insider buys or poking fun at earnings calls, he's building Cl1Q, writing fiction, painting, or discovering new passions to FUNalize.


🧾⚠️📢 Fun(anc1al) but Serious Disclaimer: 🧾⚠️📢

This article is provided solely for informational and entertainment purposes and should not be construed as investment advice, financial advice, tax advice, legal advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. 

Investing involves risk, including loss of principal. Market conditions, company fundamentals, and management execution can change rapidly. Alternative asset managers are complex businesses whose reported results may differ materially between GAAP and adjusted frameworks. Always do your own research, mind dilution and debt, and know your risk tolerance.

Also, read the labels (and earnings reports), never invest based solely on one article or confuse “interesting” with “safe,” and consult qualified financial professionals where appropriate. 

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Resist FOMO and never invest money you can’t afford to lose or mistake a charismatic CEO for a guarantee. 

We analyze.
We laugh.
We invest (carefully).

👉 We’re FUNanc1al — not advisors. 😄📉📈

The author may hold positions in securities mentioned.

Invest wisely, and at your own risks.🎢📉
Love at any pace. Laugh at every turn. 😄

Carpe Diem—Be Happy.


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