Discontinued — last reported Q4 '25

Business Segments · Net income (loss)

Global Private Equity — Net income (loss)

The Carlyle Group Global Private Equity — Net income (loss) remained flat by 0.0% to $1.80B in Q4 2025 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric declined by 0.9%, from $1.81B to $1.80B. Over 3 years (FY 2022 to FY 2025), Global Private Equity — Net income (loss) shows a downward trend with a -14.8% CAGR. This decline may warrant attention — for this metric, higher values are generally preferred.

Analysis

StatementSegment
CategoryProfitability
SignalHigher is better
VolatilityVolatile
First reportedQ1 2022
Last reportedQ4 2025Feb 27, 2026
Rolls up toNet Income

How to read this metric

Higher net income indicates strong overall segment performance and operational efficiency.

Detailed definition

The bottom-line profitability of the private equity segment after all revenues, expenses, and investment gains or losses...

Peer comparison

Standard segment-level net income metric used for performance evaluation.

Metric ID: cg_segment_global_private_equity_net_income_loss

Historical Data

4 years
 FY'22FY'23FY'24FY'25
Value$11.62B$3.31B$7.25B$7.19B
YoY Change-71.5%+119.0%-0.9%
Range$3.31B$11.62B
CAGR-14.8%
Avg YoY Growth+15.5%
Median YoY Growth-0.9%

Frequently Asked Questions

What is The Carlyle Group's global private equity — net income (loss)?
The Carlyle Group (CG) reported global private equity — net income (loss) of $1.80B in Q4 2025.
How has The Carlyle Group's global private equity — net income (loss) changed year-over-year?
The Carlyle Group's global private equity — net income (loss) decreased by 0.9% year-over-year, from $1.81B to $1.80B.
What is the long-term trend for The Carlyle Group's global private equity — net income (loss)?
Over 3 years (2022 to 2025), The Carlyle Group's global private equity — net income (loss) has grown at a -14.8% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $11.62B to $7.19B.
What does global private equity — net income (loss) mean?
The total profit or loss of the private equity segment.