New York, Feb 8, 2026, 04:51 ET — Market closed.
- KKR shares finished up Friday, capping a choppy week for alternative asset managers.
- KKR’s software bets are under the microscope, with investors also sizing up the firm’s latest bid to overhaul its governance rules.
- Next up: Monday’s session, with the sector searching for some stability.
Shares of KKR & Co. Inc. finished Friday up 4.06% at $103.20, snapping higher on volume that blew past recent levels. It comes after a tough stretch for the private-markets firm. 1
This rebound is significant: software shares took a steep, AI-fueled dive, and that’s rippling through private equity and private credit. Investors have started digging into the leverage built into those holdings—and the loans backing them. “The trigger … is driven by the software selloff and concern over loan exposure and leverage,” said Mark Hackett, chief market strategist at Nationwide. 2
KKR, facing concerns over its software exposure, has told investors the segment makes up just 7% of its assets and emphasized its readiness to invest if market conditions remain unstable. “We have $118 billion of dry powder,” co-CEO Scott Nuttall said, referring to capital it hasn’t put to work yet. 3
KKR shares dropped 5.35% to $99.17 just a day ago, caught in a sweeping selloff. Friday brought a snapback, but the stock’s still tracking the broader risk sentiment closely. 4
KKR said Thursday its management fees climbed, though transaction and asset-sale income slipped, Reuters reported. A charge linked to a lagging Asia fund dinged a closely watched profit figure. The firm pointed to investment openings as markets shift, and it’s picking up Arctos, which focuses on sports and secondaries. 5
Details on the Arctos transaction surfaced in a separate SEC filing. KKR plans to put down $1.4 billion upfront—$300 million in cash, $1.1 billion in equity. There’s another $550 million in play, contingent on KKR’s share price and various targets. The deal still needs regulatory and select sports-related sign-offs. 6
KKR, according to a preliminary proxy statement filed late Friday, has called a virtual special meeting for April 21 to let shareholders vote on changes to its charter as it eyes a move to a one-vote-per-share structure by Dec. 31, 2026. Among the proposals: scrapping certain supermajority requirements—rules requiring more than a simple majority—and shifting the power to fill board vacancies solely to directors, along with a handful of other updates. 7
It’s rare for governance to push KKR’s daily trading, though it does factor into how large investors value the shares. Complex voting setups tend to worry certain shareholders, who see them as a risk—so if the company shifts to a more straightforward structure, the stock’s discount could shrink gradually, even without immediate effects.
Right now, the dominant driver remains the software-driven hit that’s been dragging down alternative asset managers like Ares, Blackstone, Apollo, Carlyle, Blue Owl and TPG. Traders remain on edge over credit marks and exit values. As for KKR’s rally Friday, it came off more as a sigh of relief than a decisive turn.
The downside risk can’t be ignored. Should software names continue to drop and private credit investors tighten their marks, fundraising might slow, exits drag out—fee-driven shops would feel the pain. The Arctos deal still faces several approvals, and those governance votes are anything but locked in.
On Monday, eyes turn to Apollo, which is set to report Feb. 9. Investors want to see if the sector’s recovery sticks, and whether new numbers from Apollo or others in the group jolt sentiment in private markets.