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➤ Key Highlights

  • New Mountain Capital (~$60B AUM) agreed to acquire Asset Living, a residential property management firm, in a deal valued at more than $2B.

  • Seller is Roark Capital; William Blair ran the process.

  • CEO Ryan McGrath invests alongside New Mountain and stays on.

  • The deal includes Asset Living's owned real estate and its proprietary technology platform.

  • Asset Living manages multifamily, student, and affordable housing across 40+ states.

➤ SIGNAL

  • A $2B+ check just cleared for a company that mostly owns contracts, not concrete.

  • Recurring management fees are being priced like infrastructure.

  • This is the second major CRE services platform to trade in 2026, after Savills–Eastdil.

Private equity has spent two years circling rental housing. The notable shift is what it is buying. Asset Living gives New Mountain exposure to apartment demand through contractual fee income — without taking direct asset-level basis risk, debt-maturity risk, or cap-rate risk.

The seller matters too: Roark is exiting after a hold that saw Asset Living roll up managers nationally. The buyer pool for scaled fee businesses is now deeper than the buyer pool for the buildings they manage.

For owners, consolidation of management into fewer, larger, tech-enabled platforms changes negotiating leverage on fees, data ownership, and service quality.

Implications

Fee streams are trading at premium multiples while the underlying real estate still trades at discounts. That spread tells you where institutional conviction actually sits.

TAKEAWAY

The smartest money in rental housing just bought the manager, not the building.

Source: Reuters / The Real Deal / Bisnow

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