Apollo Global Management, Inc. (APO) Enterprise Value (EV): $71.31B
The enterprise value (EV) for Apollo Global Management, Inc. (APO) is $71.31B as of Sunday, June 14, 2026.
APO Enterprise Value (EV) Metrics
ENTERPRISE VALUE (EV)
$71.31B
APO Competitors' Enterprise Value (EV)
| NAME | MARKET CAP | ENTERPRISE VALUE (EV) |
|---|---|---|
| Apollo Global Management, Inc. (APO) | $77.18B | $71.31B |
| Moody's Corporation (MCO) | $78.24B | $96.46B |
| Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. (ICE) | $79.47B | $111.94B |
| iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) | $80.40B | N/A |
| Aon plc (AON) | $71.61B | $91.24B |
| Robinhood Markets, Inc. (HOOD) | $83.92B | $111.64B |
| KKR & Co. Inc. (KKR) | $86.41B | $168.26B |
| The Travelers Companies, Inc. (TRV) | $64.74B | $73.59B |
| Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. (MMC) | $89.82B | $109.85B |
| Truist Financial Corporation (TFC) | $64.36B | $95.79B |
Enterprise Value Calculation
Market Cap
$77.18B
Total Debt
$13.36B
Cash
$19.24B
Enterprise Value
$71.31B
EV-Based Valuation Multiples
Why use EV instead of Market Cap?
- EV accounts for debt - an acquirer must pay or assume it
- EV deducts cash - the acquirer effectively receives it
- EV enables fair comparison of companies with different capital structures
- EV-based ratios (EV/EBITDA, EV/Sales) are capital structure neutral
Apollo Global Management, Inc. Enterprise Value (EV) Formula & Definition
Enterprise Value represents the total value of a company as if you were to acquire it completely - paying for equity while assuming debt and receiving cash.
Expanded definitions: Investopedia, Wikipedia, Corporate Finance Institute
Apollo Global Management, Inc. Enterprise Value (EV) FAQ
- What is the enterprise value (EV) for Apollo Global Management, Inc. (APO)?
- The enterprise value (EV) for APO stock is $71.31B.
Related Metrics
About Apollo Global Management, Inc.
Apollo Global Management, Inc. operates as a prominent investment management firm, primarily concentrating its efforts across credit, private equity, and real estate asset classes. Within its private equity division, Apollo engages in a broad spectrum of transactions, ranging from traditional management buyouts, recapitalizations, and distressed acquisitions to corporate carve-outs, growth capital infusions, turnaround financing, bridge loans, strategic acquisitions, and industry consolidation initiatives. This also includes debt investments in real estate and corporate partnerships, along with investments in distressed assets and special situations within the middle market. Its client base is diverse, encompassing sovereign wealth and endowment funds, as well as various other institutional and private investors. The firm constructs and oversees bespoke portfolios for clients and actively manages a suite of investment vehicles, including hedge funds, real estate funds, and private equity funds. Globally, Apollo also deploys capital in fixed income and alternative investment markets. Its fixed income strategies span a wide array, featuring income-oriented senior secured loans, corporate bonds, collateralized loan obligations (CLOs), structured credit products, opportunistic and non-performing loans, distressed debt, mezzanine financing, and other value-oriented fixed income instruments. Apollo seeks investment opportunities across numerous sectors, such as chemicals, energy (including oil, gas, natural resources), metals and mining, agriculture, consumer and retail, distribution and transportation, financial and business services, manufacturing and industrial, media (distribution, cable, entertainment), telecommunications, technology, packaging and materials, and satellite and wireless communications. Geographically, the firm targets investments in Africa, North America (with a strong emphasis on the United States), and Europe, while also making significant inroads into Western Europe and Asia. Its investment methodology combines contrarian insights with a rigorous focus on intrinsic value and distressed situations. Apollo typically commits equity capital ranging from $10 million to $1.5 billion per transaction, generally pursuing companies with an enterprise value between $750 million and $2.5 billion. Proprietary in-house research underpins its investment selection process. The firm is open to acquiring both minority and controlling stakes in its portfolio companies. Established in 1990 and headquartered in New York, New York, Apollo maintains additional offices across North America, Asia, and Europe to support its global operations.
- Sector
- Financial Services
- Industry
- Asset Management
- CEO
- Marc Jeffrey Rowan