--Carlyle's 2% decline among the heaviest among listed peers

--Executive: Return expectations have come down

--Executive: Not much competition for deal from corporates

(Updates with comments from executives and updates share price, in the third through sixth, eighth, 13th, 14th and 17th paragraphs.)

 
   By Amy Or and Saabira Chaudhuri 
 

NEW YORK--Carlyle Group LP (CG) reported a loss for the second quarter as revenue plummeted, dragged down by the performance of its funds.

The combined value of funds in which it shares profits declined 2% in the second quarter, with its publicly listed holdings down 10%.

While overall performance was better than the 3.3% drop by the Standard & Poor's 500 index, the depreciation Carlyle reported was among the heftiest recorded by listed alternative-asset managers.

Blackstone Group LP (BX) also reported a 2% dip in the value of its private-equity investments, but KKR & Co. (KKR) and Fortress Investment Group LLC (FIG) gained more than 5% with their portfolio companies, and Apollo Global Management LLC's (APO) investments were also up 1%.

Carlyle executives said during a conference call to discuss earnings that investors shouldn't focus on a quarter's performance and that its investments were still 8% higher in value this year through June. But they admitted private-equity returns, in general, have come down.

"In the hay day of private equity perhaps in the '80s and '90s, when there was less competition and growth was greater, people were expecting 20% net internal rate of return or higher. Now investors are quite happy with net internal rate of return in the high-to-mid teens because the alternatives were so much less attractive when interest rates were essentially zero," said Co-Chief Executive David Rubenstein.

Carlyle--whose investments span from private equity to real estate, hedge funds to private-equity fund of funds--recorded a second-quarter economic net loss of $57 million, down from a profit of $237 million a year ago. Revenue plunged 90% to $61 million, as the private-equity company reversed performance fees it had booked previously, on depreciation impacts.

The second-quarter loss of 19 cents a share was steeper than the loss of 11 cents that analysts had expected, FactSet said.

Private-equity firms and analysts who cover them generally view economic net income as a preferred measure of performance because it includes unrealized gains and employee compensation while excluding continuing costs related to the firms' initial public offerings.

But distributable earnings, a measure of cash flow to investors that Carlyle prefers, was up 29% at $115 million over a year ago, largely driven by stake sales in public companies such as Kinder Morgan Inc. (KMI) and Triumph Group (TGI).

Under generally accepted accounting principles, the company reported a loss of $10 million. It didn't provide a year-earlier figure. In the year-earlier period, Carlyle was still a private partnership and income attributable to Carlyle Holdings was $371.7 million.

Carlyle, which went public in May, managed $156.2 billion in assets at the end of the second quarter, down from the $159.2 billion at the end of the previous quarter but up substantially from the $108.0 billion a year ago. About 70% of its assets are generating fees.

Carlyle's other Co-Chief Executive William Conway described the investment environment as "pretty good" on the lack of intense competition over assets from corporate buyers.

"It's stunning to me these corporates are not far more competitive in buying assets given the low interest rate and the cash they have," he said

Carlyle deployed $1.4 billion during the second quarter and has made $1.6 billion worth of investments since the beginning of July. A notable recent deal for Carlyle was the $800 million investment it made in Genesee & Wyoming Inc. (GWR) to fund a $2 billion acquisition of RailAmerica Inc. (RA). The deal combines the two largest short-line and regional-rail operators in North America.

The company is also bidding for the performance-coatings unit of E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. (DD). The Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the matter, said Carlyle outbid rivals Apollo Global and KKR & Co. with a $4.8 billion offer, but a deal has yet to be finalized.

Carlyle, which sold shares at $22 apiece in an initial public offering in May, was recently down 2.6% to $23.74.

Write to Amy Or at amy.or@dowjones.com and Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@wsj.com.

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