Amundi’s alternative assets have taken a hit, falling 15.5 per cent year on year, despite the French manager reaching a new “record high” of €2.3tn (£2tn) in assets under management (AUM).
In its third-quarter 2025 results, Amundi reported that alternative assets declined from €4bn in September 2024 to €3bn in September 2025. Net inflows for alternative assets were –€0.6bn in the first nine months of 2025, compared with –€0.2bn during the same period in 2024.
Overall, real estate, alternative and structured assets’ AUM fell 6.6 per cent year on year, and now total €106bn of Amundi’s overall holdings. Alternative Credit Investor has inquired into why the firm saw its alternatives AUM fall during 2025.
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However, in private assets, the firm said its private equity teams have completed the first round of fundraising for the Megatrends III strategy, securing €0.3bn in commitments.
The drop in alternatives AUM contrasts with Amundi’s broader business strength, with the group reporting AUM growth of 5.7 per cent year on year, despite a negative foreign exchange impact of €13bn in the third quarter. Total inflows reached €15bn in the third quarter and €67bn over the first nine months of 2025.
Alongside this, net income for the third quarter stood at €340m, while revenues rose 4.9 per cent over the first nine months of the year.
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“In the third quarter, we were able to extend the positive momentum from early 2025. We recorded inflows of €15bn, an increase in revenues of five per cent and an increase in pre-tax income of four per cent,” said Valérie Baudson, Amundi’s chief executive officer. “The main growth drivers of our Ambitions 2025 plan – Asia, third-party distribution and ETFs – each generated between €20bn and €30bn in inflows in the first nine months.”
Amundi added that Asia, third-party distributors and ETFs together accounted for more than 80 per cent of total inflows across all client segments, asset classes and regions during the first nine months of 2025.
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