 
August 8, 2022 2nd Quarter 2022 Earnings Presentation 
 
 
 
2 DISCLAIMER The information contained herein does not constitute or form part of, and should not be construed as, an offer or invitation to subscribe for, underwrite or otherwise acquire, any  securities of Bridge Investment Group Holdings Inc. (“Bridge” or the “Company”) or any affiliate of Bridge, or any fund or other investment vehicle managed by Bridge or an affiliate  of Bridge. This presentation should not form the basis of, or be relied on in connection with, any contract to purchase or subscribe for any securities of Bridge or any fund or other  investment vehicle managed by Bridge or an affiliate of Bridge, or in connection with any other contract or commitment whatsoever. This presentation does not constitute a  “prospectus” within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. Any decision to purchase securities of Bridge or any of its affiliates should be made solely on the basis  of the information contained in a prospectus to be issued by Bridge in relation to a specific offering. Forward-Looking Statements This presentation contains forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical facts contained in this presentation may be forward-looking statements.  Statements regarding our future results of operations and financial position, business strategy and plans and objectives of management for future operations, including, among  others, statements regarding expected growth, capital raising, expectations or targets related to financial and non-financial measures, future capital expenditures, fund  performance and debt service obligations, are forward-looking statements. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terms, such as “may,” “will,” “should,”  “expects,” “plans,” “seek,” “anticipates,” “plan,” “forecasts,” “outlook,” “could,” “intends,” “targets,” “projects,” “contemplates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “predicts,” “potential” or “continue”  or the negative of these terms or other similar expressions. Accordingly, we caution you that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and  are subject to risks, assumptions and uncertainties that are difficult to predict and beyond our ability to control.  Although we believe that the expectations reflected in these forward-looking statements are reasonable as of the date made, actual results may prove to be materially different  from the results expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. If one or more events related to these forward-looking statements or other risks or uncertainties  materialize, or if our underlying assumptions prove to be incorrect, actual results may differ materially from what we anticipate. Many of the important factors that will determine  these results are beyond our ability to control or predict. We believe these factors include but are not limited to those risk factors described under the section entitled “Risk  Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021, filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) on March 18,  2022, which will be updated upon filing our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three and six months ended June 30, 2022, accessible on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.  These factors should not be construed as exhaustive and should be read in conjunction with other cautionary statements included in this report and our other filings. You should  not place undue reliance on any such forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which it is made, and, except as otherwise required  by law, we do not undertake any obligation to publicly update or review any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise.  New factors emerge from time to time, and it is not possible for us to predict which will arise. We cannot assess the impact of each factor on our business or the extent to which  any factor, or combination of factors, may cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statements. Industry Information Unless otherwise indicated, information contained in this presentation concerning our industry, competitive position and the markets in which we operate is based on information  from independent industry and research organizations, other third-party sources and management estimates. Management estimates are derived from publicly available  information released by independent industry analysts and other third-party sources, as well as data from our internal research, and are based on assumptions made by us upon  reviewing such data, and our experience in, and knowledge of, such industry and markets, which we believe to be reasonable. In addition, projections, assumptions and estimates  of the future performance of the industry in which we operate and our future performance are necessarily subject to uncertainty and risk due to a variety of factors, which could  cause results to differ materially from those expressed in the estimates made by the independent parties and by us. Non-GAAP Financial Measures This presentation uses financial measures that are not presented in accordance with generally accepted accounted principles in the United States (“GAAP”), such as Distributable  Earnings, Fee Related Earnings, Fee Related Revenues and Performance Related Earnings, to supplement financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. There are  limitations to the use of the non-GAAP financial measures presented in this presentation. For example, the non-GAAP financial measures may not be comparable to similarly titled  measures of other companies. Other companies may calculate non-GAAP financial measures differently than the Company, limiting the usefulness of those measures for  comparative purposes.      
 
 
 
3 GAAP INCOME STATEMENT Unaudited GAAP Condensed Consolidated and Combined Statements of Operations Three Months Ended June 30, Six Months Ended June 30, ($ in thousands, except shares and per share amounts) 2022 2021 2022 2021 Revenues: Fund management fees $ 49,380 $ 34,536 $ 102,080 $ 65,387  Property management and leasing fees  19,616  14,335  37,895  31,081  Construction management fees  2,426  2,065  4,312  3,891  Development fees  793  1,163  2,052  1,549  Transaction fees, net  17,643  16,242  39,641  21,568  Fund administration fees  3,657  —  7,297  —  Insurance premiums  2,845  2,022  5,261  3,916  Other asset management and property income  2,659  1,611  4,614  3,131  Total revenues  99,019  71,974  203,152  130,523  Investment income: Incentive fees  —  —  —  910  Performance allocations: realized gains  33,581  35,629  42,518  41,185  Performance allocations: unrealized gains  70,116  43,248  135,978  57,967  Earnings (losses) from investments in real estate  1,251  980  1,291  976  Total investment income  104,948  79,857  179,787  101,038  Expenses: Employee compensation and benefits  46,693  42,306  94,172  69,457  Incentive fee compensation  —  —  —  82  Performance allocations compensation: realized gains  2,165  3,747  2,725  4,241  Performance allocations compensation: unrealized gains  7,987  6,048  17,225  7,477  Loss and loss adjustment expenses  1,439  2,132  3,191  2,917  Third-party operating expenses  6,749  6,117  13,517  14,743  General and administrative expenses  9,769  5,392  19,277  9,492  Depreciation and amortization  887  727  1,520  1,480  Total expenses  75,689  66,469  151,627  109,889  Other income (expense): Realized and unrealized gains (losses), net  3,489  300  3,916  6,097  Interest income  1,353  557  2,562  1,165  Interest expense  (2,901)  (2,554)  (4,522)  (4,140)  Total other income (expense)  1,941  (1,697)  1,956  3,122  Income before provision for income taxes  130,219  83,665  233,268  124,794  Income tax provision  (5,837)  (424)  (11,382)  (834)  Net income  124,382  83,241  221,886  123,960  Net income attributable to non-controlling interests in subsidiaries of Bridge Investment  Group Holdings LLC  49,748  5,815  86,461  9,764  Net income attributable to Bridge Investment Group Holdings LLC  74,634  77,426  135,425  114,196  Net income attributable to Common Control Group prior to Transactions and IPO  —  77,426  —  114,196  Net income attributable to non-controlling interests in Bridge Investment Group Holdings  Inc. subsequent to Transactions and IPO  61,694  —  112,714  —  Net Income attributable to Bridge Investment Group Holdings Inc. subsequent to  Transactions and IPO $ 12,940 $ — $ 22,711 $ —  Earnings per share of Class A common stock - Basic and Diluted $ 0.44 $ 0.79  Weighted-average shares of Class A common stock outstanding - Basic and Diluted 24,029,107 23,581,393 Financial Results • GAAP Net Income was  $124.4 million for the  quarter, a 50% year-over- year increase • GAAP Net Income  attributable to Bridge  Investment Group Holdings  Inc. was $12.9 million • Earnings per share of Class  A common stock - basic  and diluted was $0.44 and  $0.79 for the quarter and   year-to-date, respectively 
 
 
 
4 NON-GAAP INCOME STATEMENT SUMMARY Fee Related Earnings • Growth driven by  continued FEAUM growth Fund-Level Fees • Strong growth in recurring  fund management fees  driven by 44% year-over- year increase in FEAUM for  the 2nd quarter 2022 • Includes fund  administration fees from  internalization of fund  administration Realized Performance Fees • Performance fees were  mostly driven by  realizations in the  Multifamily vertical Three Months Ended June 30, Six Months Ended June 30, 2022 2021 YoY %  growth 2022 2021 YoY %  growth($ in thousands) Pro Forma Pro Forma NON-GAAP MEASURES INCOME STATEMENT Fund level fee revenues   Fund management fees $ 49,380 $ 34,545 $ 102,080 $ 65,404    Transaction fees, net  17,643  16,242  39,641  21,568  Total Fund-level fee revenues  67,023  50,787  32 %  141,721  86,972  63 % Net earnings from Bridge property operators  2,108  1,988  4,318  4,081  Development fees  793  1,163  2,052  1,549  Fund administration fees  3,657  —  7,297  —  Other asset management and property income  2,659  1,611  4,614  3,131  Fee Related Revenues  76,240  55,549  37 %  160,002  95,733  67 % Cash-based employee compensation and benefits  (30,120)  (21,403)  (61,946)  (41,712)  Net administrative expenses  (6,617)  (3,394)  (13,340)  (5,662)  Fee Related Expenses  (36,737)  (24,797)  (75,286)  (47,374)  Total Fee Related Earnings  39,503  30,752  28 %  84,716  48,359  75 % Fee Related Earnings Margin  52 %  55 %  53 %  51 % Total Fee Related Earnings attributable to non- controlling interests 977  (5,829)  1,127  (8,477)  Total Fee Related Earnings to the Operating  Company  40,480  24,923  62 %  85,843  39,882  115 % Fund level - performance fee revenues Realized performance allocations and incentive  fees  33,581  35,629  (6) %  42,518  42,095  1 % Realized performance allocations and incentive  fees compensation  (2,165)  (2,223)  (2,725)  (2,652)  Net realized performance allocations attributable  to non-controlling interests  (18,409)  (20,593)  (24,502)  (25,078)  Net insurance income  1,406  (110)  2,070  999  Earnings from investments in real estate  1,251  980  1,291  936  Net interest income/(expense) and realized gain/ (loss)  (1,529)  (1,995)  (1,979)  (2,624)  Distributable Earnings Attributable to the  Operating Company $ 54,615 $ 36,611  49 % $ 102,516 $ 53,558  91 % 1 Earnings from investments in real estate is offset by interest expense related to GP Lenders  1 
 
 
 
5 $69 $77 $108 $181 $166 $254 $186 $319 Recurring Fund Management Fee Revenue Catchup Fund Management Fee Revenue Transaction and Other Fee Revenue 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 LTM  2Q21 LTM  2Q22 $6.4 $10.3 $14.5 $20.0 $25.2 $36.3 $28.7 $42.0 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 Q2  2021 Q2  2022 Gross Assets Under Management (AUM) ($ in Bn) Fee-Related Revenue ($ in MM) PROVEN RECORD OF STRONG AND STEADY GROWTH ~40% 5-Yr CAGR (2Q’17 – 2Q’22) ~46% YoY Growth (2Q'21 vs 2Q'22) Fund Mgmt. Fees (Recurring & Catchup):  ~34% 5-Yr CAGR Total Fee-Related Revenue: ~35% 5-Yr CAGR (2Q’17 – 2Q’22) 1 Netted out for placement agent fees (allocated pro rata between recurring and catch-up fund management fees) 1 1 
 
 
 
6 Financial  Highlights 2nd QUARTER 2022 OVERVIEW  Key  Operating  Metrics Business  Update • Declared quarterly dividend of $0.30 per share of Class A common stock, payable on Sep 16, 2022 to stockholders of  record on Sep 2, 2022. • Recently announced the launches of Bridge Solar and Bridge Ventures strategies  • On June 3, 2022, the Company entered into a $150 million note purchase agreement, pursuant to which Bridge  Investment Group Holdings LLC issued two tranches of notes in a private placement offering with a weighted-average  interest rate and duration of 5.05% and 11 years, respectively.  These transactions funded subsequent to quarter-end  on July 12, 2022. • In addition, the Company refinanced its existing Senior Secured Credit Facility (“Credit Facility”), increasing it from $75  million to $125 million. Bridge achieved record results across several key indicators All earnings prior to Q3 2021 are on a pro forma basis; assumes the Transactions and IPO occurred prior to reported period  ($ in MM, except per share data or  as noted) Q2 2022 Q2 2021 YoY  Change % YTD 2022 YTD 2021 YoY  Change % Total Revenue $99.0 $72.0 38% $203.2 $130.5 56% Fee Related Earnings (“FRE”) to the  Operating Company $40.5 $24.9 62% $85.8 $39.9 115% Distributable Earnings (“DE”) of the  Operating Company $54.6 $36.6 49% $102.5 $53.6 91% After-tax DE per share $0.32 $0.25 28% $0.60 $0.37 62% Q2 2022 Q2 2021 YoY  Change % YTD 2022 YTD 2021 YoY  Change % Gross AUM $42.0 Bn $28.7 Bn 46% $42.0 Bn $28.7 Bn 46% Fee-Earning AUM $15.5 Bn $10.8 Bn 44% $15.5 Bn $10.8 Bn 44% Capital Raised $1.5 Bn $1.1Bn 36% $2.6 Bn $1.2Bn 117% Capital Deployed $938.2 $998.0 (6)% $1.6 Bn $1.2Bn 33% Dry Powder $3.2 Bn $1.7 Bn 88% $3.2 Bn $1.7 Bn 88% Realized Performance Allocations $33.6 $35.6 (6%) $42.5 $42.1 1% Unrealized Accrued Performance  Allocations $575.5 $246.6 133% $575.5 $246.6 133% 
 
 
 
2nd QUARTER  FINANCIAL RESULTS 7 
 
 
 
8 • $1.5 billion of capital raised in Q2 2022 driven  by Multifamily, Workforce & Affordable  Housing, Single-Family Rental, Opportunity  Zone & Debt strategies • $938.2 of deployment driven mostly by  Multifamily, Workforce & Affordable Housing,  Single-Family Rental, Opportunity Zone & Debt  strategies Equity Raised ($ in MM) FEE EARNING AUM DRIVERS Deployment ($ in MM) Fee-Earning Assets Under Management ($ in Bn) Total AUM: $22 $23 $25 $26 $29 $32 $36 $39 $42 $129 $392 $1,657 $175 $1,056 $1,493 $2,307 $1,101 $1,498 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 $621 $696 $1,137 $212 $998 $1,303 $2,060 $639 $938 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 $9.0 $9.2 $10.2 $10.3 $10.8 $12.1 $13.4 $14.7 $15.5 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 
 
 
 
9 Management Fees ($ in MM) 2nd QUARTER – FEE RELATED REVENUE SUMMARY Transaction Fees ($ in MM) All Other Fees ($ in MM) • Fund management fees includes  $4.0 million of Catch-Up Fees in Q2 • All other fees includes Fund Administration  Fees of $3.7 million in the second quarter,  in which the Operating Company began  earning in Q1 2022 Fee Related Revenue ($ in MM) $8 $5 $19 $5 $16 $22 $32 $22 $18 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 $26 $27 $32 $31 $35 $41 $50 $53 $49 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 $6 $4 $3 $4 $5 $8 $6 $10 $9 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 $40 $36 $54 $40 $56 $70 $88 $84 $76 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 
 
 
 
10 1 Weighted-average fund life for closed-end funds as of June 30, 2022 2 Weighted-average fund life for closed-end funds as of June 30, 2021 3 As of June 30, 2022 LONG DURATION CAPITAL DRIVES FEE VISIBILITY FEAUM by Remaining Duration3 • $1.5 billion raised in 2nd quarter  continued to drive strong recurring  Fund Management Fee growth • Capital commitments raised in 2nd  quarter averaged 9.7 years in duration • In addition to fund lives increasing in  duration, we have two open-end  perpetual funds – Agency MBS and Net  Lease Income • Our weighted-average FEAUM by  remaining duration is 7.9 years1 versus  7.4 years at the end of the 2nd quarter  20212 10+ Years, 37% 7-10 Years, 26% 5-7 Years, 13% 3-5 Years, 18% 0-3 Years, 4% Perpetual, 2% 
 
 
 
11 Fee Related Earnings to the Operating Company  ($ in MM) 1All earnings prior to Q3 2021 are on a pro forma basis; assumes the Transactions and IPO occurred prior to reported period  2nd QUARTER – EARNINGS SUMMARY Distributable Earnings to the Operating Company  ($ in MM)1 • Bridge delivered its best second quarter for  Distributable Earnings in the Company’s  history • Fee Related Earnings driven by continued  FEAUM growth and healthy margins - Q2 2022  impacted by timing of catch-up and  transaction fees • Q2 2022 includes the impact of collapsing the  2019 profits interests which was accretive to  the Operating Company Fee Related Earnings & Margin ($ in MM) $23 $16 $31 $18 $31 $42 $50 $45 $40 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 $20 $14 $23 $15 $25 $30 $36 $45 $40 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 $22 $15 $34 $17 $37 $42 $39 $48 $55 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 58% 45% 57% 44% 55% 60% 57% 54% 52%Margin: 
 
 
 
12 +363% (98% CAGR) PERFORMANCE FEE SUMMARY Net Unrealized Performance Allocations by Vintage2Accrued Performance Allocations1 ($ in MM) 1 Based on fair value one quarter in arrears. All earnings prior to Q3  2021 are on a pro forma basis; assumes the Transactions and IPO  occurred prior to reported period  2 As of June 30, 2022 Performance Fees & Realizations ($ in MM) • Carry-eligible AUM of $15.5 billion, over 99% of  FEAUM  • Accrued performance allocations attributable to  the operating company is $219.2 million • Pipeline for future performance-driven  Distributable Earnings is significant • Quarterly realization pace and performance  fees will vary based upon market conditions 12 $124 $139 $199 $203 $247 $302 $440 $505 $576 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 $5.3 $4.4 $28.5 $6.5 $35.6 $31.0 $10.3 $8.9 $33.6 Net performance fees to the Operating Company - realized Gross performance fees to the Operating Company - realized Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 2015 16.4% 2016 3.1% 2017 18.2%2018 57.0% Post 2018 5.3% 
 
 
 
13 COMPELLING INVESTMENT-LEVEL TRACK RECORD This is a summary only. See the “Appendix: Fund Performance Summary” for full details and notes regarding investment performance metrics • Continued strong performance for  residential housing funds driven by  Bridge’s vertical integration approach • Performance is driving demand for new  commitments in our newly launched  vehicles • Multifamily Fund II, III, IV and Workforce  Housing Fund I were ranked in the first  quartile by Preqin1   • Excludes performance for strategies  currently raising capital including:  Multifamily, Workforce & Affordable  Housing, Logistics, Net Lease Income,  Single-Family Rental, Development,  Agency MBS 1Includes value-add strategies as of Q1 2022.  Preqin rankings based on  self-reported data and do not imply an endorsement from Preqin or  any other organization. As of June 30, 2022 Closed-End Funds Fund Gross Fund Net (Investment Period Beginning, Ending Date) IRR IRR Equity Strategies Funds Multifamily Bridge Multifamily I (Mar 2009, Mar 2012)  21.0 %  15.3 % Bridge Multifamily II (Apr 2012, Mar 2015)  30.2 %  23.4 % Bridge Multifamily III (Jan 2015, Jan 2018)  28.2 %  21.8 % Bridge Multifamily IV (Jun 2018, Jun 2021)  42.9 %  33.6 % Total Multifamily Funds  29.7 %  23.4 % Workforce & Affordable Housing Bridge Workforce Housing I (Aug 2017, Aug 2020)  37.1 %  29.9 % Total Workforce & Affordable Housing Funds  37.1 %  29.9 % Seniors Housing Bridge Seniors I (Jan 2014, Jan 2018)  4.9 %  2.5 % Bridge Seniors II (Mar 2017, Mar 2020)  10.0 %  6.9 % Total Seniors Housing Funds  7.0 %  4.3 % Office Bridge Office I (Jul 2017, Jul 2020)  5.0 %  2.2 % Bridge Office II (Dec 2019, to present)  28.9 %  19.5 % Total Office Funds  8.2 %  4.3 % Total Equity Strategies Funds  23.6 %  17.7 % Debt Strategies Bridge Debt I (Sep 2014, Sep 2017)  8.3 %  5.7 % Bridge Debt II (July 2016, July 2019)  11.5 %  8.9 % Bridge Debt III (May 2018, May 2021)  12.6 %  9.8 % Bridge Debt IV (Nov 2020, to present)  8.1 %  6.1 % Total Debt Strategies Funds  11.4 %  8.8 % 
 
 
 
14 DISTRIBUTABLE EARNINGS AND CAPITALIZATION Balance Sheet ($ in MM) As of June 30, 2022 After-Tax Distributable Earnings  Per Share1 Capitalization Highlights • Ample capital, a substantial amount of unrealized  performance fees and relatively low debt • Bolstered Balance Sheet with issuance of $150 million  senior notes which funded subsequent to quarter-end  on July 12, 2022 • In addition, refinanced existing Senior Secured Credit  Facility (“Credit Facility”), increasing it from $75 million  to $125 million • Declared $0.30 dividend for the 2nd quarter 2022 • Policy is to pay substantially all our after-tax  distributable earnings as dividends 1 All earnings prior to Q3 2021 are on a pro forma basis; assumes the Transactions and IPO occurred prior to reported period  Assets Cash and cash equivalents $ 102.8  Restricted cash  7.4  Marketable securities, at fair value  10.8  Receivables from affiliates  34.2  Notes receivable from affiliates  66.1  Other assets  44.8  Other investments  73.4  Accrued performance allocations  575.5  Intangible assets, net  5.9  Goodwill  56.0  Deferred tax assets, net  65.2  Total assets $ 1,042.1  Liabilities Accrued performance allocations compensation $ 58.7  Accrued compensation and benefits  28.7  Accounts payable and accrued expenses  25.2  Due to affiliates  51.3  General partner notes payable, at fair value  12.4  Insurance loss reserves  8.5  Self-insurance reserves and unearned premiums  3.5  Other liabilities  24.4  Notes payable  148.4  Total liabilities $ 361.1  $0.15 $0.10 $0.24 $0.12 $0.25 $0.26 $0.26 $0.28 $0.32 Q2  2020 Q3  2020 Q4  2020 Q1  2021 Q2  2021 Q3  2021 Q4  2021 Q1  2022 Q2  2022 
 
 
 
INTRODUCTION TO  BRIDGE 15 
 
 
 
16 Multifamily 23.1% Workforce &  Affordable  Housing 12.0% Seniors Housing 10.4% Single-Family  Rental 2.0% Development 10.5% Office 5.9% Logistics 1.1% Net Lease  Income 0.8% Debt 27.6% Agency MBS 6.8% INTRODUCING BRIDGE INVESTMENT GROUP A leading vertically integrated real estate investment  manager, diversified across specialized asset classes  Nationwide, “boots on the ground” team and  scalable infrastructure with active asset  management, property management, leasing, and  construction management Ranked #13 global private equity real estate firm  (June 2022) & #14 global real estate debt fund  manager (May 2022) for fundraising by PERE Loyal global investor base with ~$15.4Bn of capital  raised over the last five years2 Key Stats1 $42.0Bn Gross AUM ~$500MM+ Principal, Employee, and Affiliate  Capital Commitments LTM Pre-Tax  Distributable Earnings $184MM ~11,700 / ~210 Individual Clients / Institutional and  Family Offices AUM by Strategy1 Equity Strategies Debt  Strategies FY16-FY21 Fee-Related  Earnings CAGR ~30% Experienced and aligned management team leading  a deep and talented organization Track record of strong organic and inorganic growth  with proven ability to grow new business lines  1 As of June 30, 2022 2 From January 1, 2017 through December 31, 2021 
 
 
 
17 Strong Tailwinds from Favorable Market Trends Diversified and Synergistic Business Model Spanning Residential Rental,  Office, Development, Logistics and Real Estate-Backed Credit  Vertically Integrated Business Model and Scalable Infrastructure  Drive Competitive Advantages and Attractive Investment Returns National Footprint with High-Touch Operating Model and Local  Expertise High Proportion of Recurring Fees and “Sticky” Contractual  Revenue Streams from Long-duration Capital Proven Record of Fundraising Success with a Loyal Investor Base Significant Organic and Inorganic Opportunities to Accelerate  Growth Long-tenured Senior Management Team with High Alignment and  Support of Deep and Talented Employee Pool BRIDGE INVESTMENT GROUP KEY INVESTMENT HIGHLIGHTS 
 
 
 
18 Bridge has continued to expand into high-growth asset classes to complement existing investment verticals FIVE NEW INVESTMENT STRATEGIES LAUNCHED WITHIN THE LAST YEAR • Investment Strategy:  In partnership with Lumen Energy, seeks to create value through the production of clean energy by  building and operating renewable energy infrastructure on existing commercial properties, while at the same time  providing owners and tenants a discount to market energy prices • Market Opportunity:  Participation in a growing sector with anticipated strong demand for green energy fueled by price  sensitivity, environmental awareness and regulatory pressure • Team Experience:  The Bridge Solar principals have more than 60+ years of collective experience and relationships across  the real estate industry in multiple asset classes as well as decades of experience in commercializing & financing energy  technologies that have led to the development of over 600 MW of onsite power generation systems for major property  owners. Solar PropTech • Investment Strategy:  Seeks to identify and invest in transformative real estate technology companies (i.e., PropTech) that  are positioned to drive revenue and operating improvements in the built world • Market Opportunity: Real estate owners are adopting PropTech solutions in a significant way in the post-pandemic era,  catalyzed by the growth of e-commerce, remote workplaces, ESG adoption and the digitization of real estate • Team Experience: The Bridge Ventures team brings over 25 years of relevant experience in technology, real estate  investing and building and operating high growth technology companies with on-the-ground technology and real estate  experience providing differentiated capabilities to source, evaluate, identify, and scale future high growth companies   Single- Family  Rental • Investment Strategy:  Bridge acquired the majority ownership of the management platform of Gorelick Brothers Capital  (“GBC”) and launched a single-family rental (“SFR”) strategy within Bridge (“Bridge Homes”).  Bridge Homes has been  seeded with a portfolio of approximately 2,700 homes in 14 markets, concentrated in the Sunbelt and certain Midwest  markets of the United States and seeks to construct a recession resilient portfolio across build-to-rent, bulk purchases,  and 1x1 acquisitions • Market Opportunity:  Continued lack of affordable housing backed by demographic tailwinds and a fragmented single- family rental market with low institutional ownership approximating only 2% • Team Experience:  The Single-Family Rental team is made up of industry pioneers with a demonstrated ability to source,  manage, and scale SFR assets 
 
 
 
19 Bridge has continued to expand into high-growth asset classes to complement existing investment verticals FIVE NEW INVESTMENT STRATEGIES LAUNCHED WITHIN THE LAST YEAR  (CON'T) Logistics  • Investment Strategy:  Targets a balanced portfolio of logistics assets with allocation across income, value-add, and  development opportunities seeing price dislocation, operational upside, and innovative redevelopment in markets where  there is a confluence of existing and increasing population density, rapid e-commerce adoption, and constrained supply • Market Opportunity:  Demographic growth coupled with significant shifts in consumer behaviors, including rapid                e-commerce adaptation, are driving a transformative evolution within supply chains and last mile logistics demand • Team Experience:  The Bridge Logistics Properties Principals have 40+ years of collective experience across acquisition,  repositioning, and development of global logistics assets, totaling over $20 billion of transaction volume Net Lease  Income • Investment Strategy:  Invests in mission critical industrial, manufacturing, logistics and other critical business  infrastructure real estate located in prime growth and logistically connected markets leased to high-quality credit tenants • Market Opportunity:  Selectively acquire attractively priced mission critical industrial assets anchored by high quality  credit tenants in an overlooked subset of industrial real estate • Team Experience:  The Bridge Net Lease Income investment team has decades of sector expertise and deep  marketplace relationships to identify attractive opportunities designed to generate stable high yielding income and long- term real estate appreciation 
 
 
 
20 VERTICALLY INTEGRATED BUSINESS MODEL DRIVES COMPETITIVE  ADVANTAGES AND ATTRACTIVE INVESTMENT RETURNS Operational impact and alpha generation enhanced by collaborative teams Bridge’s operational  expertise extends beyond  asset management and  includes a full spectrum of  alpha-generating services Bridge’s ability to offer  specialized operational  capabilities translates directly  to investor returns 
 
 
 
21 DIFFERENTIATED DATA-DRIVEN INVESTMENT STRATEGY ENABLED BY  SPECIALIZED UNDERWRITING CAPABILITIES Data-Driven   Top-Down   Investment   Strategy Bottom-up   Underwriting   Capabilities 1 Such as higher household formation growth or higher office-using employment growth Analytics & Geospatial Models Yardi Customizations to Drive Multifamily  Alpha Bridge’s deep expertise and vertically integrated platform facilitate a comprehensive top-down  investment strategy supported by specialized asset level underwriting u Nationwide on-the-ground footprint allows Bridge to uncover  the most attractive opportunities in its target markets u Proprietary Bridge business intelligence tool supports both  underwriting of new investments & value maximization of  investments u Benefits across investment strategies: for example, Bridge  Multifamily property management team conducts physical due  diligence of multifamily assets for potential loan investments by  Debt Strategies u Utilizes a comprehensive, data-driven approach to analyze  macroeconomic trends & identify compelling investment  opportunities u Analytical metrics include detailed demand forecasts, supply  forecasts and marking pricing, all at the local level u Extensive underwriting and transactional experience helps  secure off-market deals u Bridge's identified "target markets" are projected to outperform  substantially on key metrics1 
 
 
 
22 12 AUM MIX IS WELL DIVERSIFIED ACROSS OUR STRATEGIES Gross AUM1 Fee-Earning AUM1 Multifamily 23% Workforce &  Affordable  Housing 12% Seniors Housing 10% Single-Family Rental 2% Development 10% Office 6% Logistics 1% Net Lease Income 1% Debt 28% Agency MBS 7% Multifamily 20% Workforce &  Affordable  Housing 11% Seniors Housing 10% Single-Family Rental 1% Development 23% Office 5% Logistics 2% Net Lease Income 1% Debt 26% Agency MBS 1% 1 As of June 30, 2022 
 
 
 
23 21 BALANCED INVESTOR BASE Fund Investor by Geography1 Fund Investor by Type1 Bridge’s Client Solutions Group maintains deep institutional and retail investor relationships and has  built an impressive track record of raising capital and driving growth u During Q2 2022, 55% of capital was raised  internationally and 63% came from institutional  investors u Global fund investor base across ~11,920 total  investors, including ~210 institutional investors /  family offices and ~11,700 individual investors u Deep and broad individual investors relationships  driven in part by relationships with some of the  largest wirehouses and RIAs in the world u 15 new prominent global institutional investors  finalized fund commitments during the quarter u AIFM license in Luxembourg approved July 2022,  which will open up marketing efforts in Europe in a  more direct and efficient manner US 66% Rest of World 34% Individual 65% Institutional 35% 1 Based on committed capital as of June 30, 2022 
 
 
 
24 High Proportion of  Repeat Investors1, 2 High Proportion of Investors  Invested Across Multiple Funds1 LP Composition1 1 Based on committed capital as of June 30, 2022 2 Repeat investors groups investors coming through wirehouse platforms as one repeat investor as of June 30, 2022  TRACK RECORD OF FUNDRAISING SUCCESS WITH A LOYAL  INVESTOR BASE Bridge enjoys a diverse investor base with many repeat investors u Bridge has succeeded in penetrating key institutional segments (e.g., sovereign wealth funds, pension funds,  insurance) as a complement to its extensive high-net-worth relationships u Continued success gathering assets across wirehouses driven by strong investment results, excellent client service  and positioning as a sector specialist Non-Repeat 26.7% Repeat Investors 73.3% Invested  Across  Multiple Funds 58.7% Invested  in Single Fund 41.3% Wealth  Management 38.3% SWF, Pension 19.0% Family Office,  HNW, RIA 18.7% Insurance,  Bank,  Foundation 14.2% Fund of Funds 7.4% Employees 2.4% 
 
 
 
25 ESG INITIATIVES ARE CORE TO OUR CULTURE Our commitment to ESG spans our organization as we seek to analyze, integrate and report ESG  metrics across our assets, investments, and practices. Select Associations Select ESG Awards3 2021 Pension Bridge  ESG Strategy of the  Year Award 2021 ESG Investing  Awards: Private Equity 2021 & 2022  Environmental Finance  Social Fund of the Year 1 For our Workforce and Affordable Housing Funds 2 Bridge completed its first GRESB reporting submission in 2021 for Bridge Workforce and Affordable Housing Fund I and Bridge Office Fund II and submitted its 2022 GRESB reports recently for the aforementioned funds, as well as for Bridge Multifamily Fund IV and Bridge Seniors  Housing Fund II. 3 For Workforce and Affordable Housing strategy. Awards are based on self-reported data and are not intended to imply any endorsement or testimonial from any of these organizations.  Social / Community & Citizenship Cross-Divisional Integration l Passionate community revitalization mindset, with  dedicated social & community programming  funded by the Bridge Community Enhancement  Initiative (“BCEI”)1, integrated into WFAH assets. l Firmwide citizenship initiatives such as Charitable  Giving, Employee Engagement, and Employee  Resource Groups l Engage with CERES, NCREIF, Sorenson Impact, and  PropTech firms for continuous dialogue on ESG  best practices and new technologies.  l Employee, resident, and tenant engagement to  promote sustainable and healthy practices. l Cross-functional ESG Steering Committee and  integration of business lines and leadership for  decision making, opportunity assessment, and risk  mitigation. l Dedicated Climate Change Task Force to increase  awareness of climate risks and opportunities. l Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (“DE&I”) Committee  to drive progress at all levels of the organization. Measuring Reporting l Seeking to integrate ESG parameters into  investment due diligence process in certain equity  strategies as a defining criteria for asset, market  and vendor selection. l Seeking measurement and reporting of energy,  emissions, water, and waste to steadily improve  environmental performance across Value-Add  Multifamily, Workforce & Affordable Housing  (“WFAH”), Office, and Seniors Housing strategies  and communities. l Seeking alignment with industry-leading benchmarks  and global frameworks such as Global Impact Investing  Network’s 1 (“GIIN”) & UN Principles for Responsible  Investment (“UNPRI”), which provides unbiased  assessment of progress and best practices. l Completed GRESB reporting submissions in 2021 and  2022.2 l Support the achievement of the United Nations  Sustainable Development Goals (“SDGs”) in its annual  ESG report and GIIN IRIS metrics for WFAH.1 
 
 
 
APPENDIX 26 
 
 
 
27 Appendix Unaudited GAAP Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets As of ($ in thousands) June 30, 2022 December 31, 2021 Assets (Unaudited) (Audited)  Cash and cash equivalents $ 102,777 $ 78,417  Restricted cash  7,401  5,455  Marketable securities, at fair value  10,777  8,035  Receivables from affiliates  34,186  35,379  Notes receivable from affiliates  66,104  118,508  Other assets  44,836  44,463  Other investments  73,395  44,006  Accrued performance allocations  575,527  439,548  Intangible assets, net  5,862  3,441  Goodwill  55,982  9,830  Deferred tax assets, net  65,221  59,210  Total assets $ 1,042,068 $ 846,292  Liabilities and shareholdersʼ equity Accrued performance allocations compensation $ 58,688 $ 41,020  Accrued compensation and benefits  28,655  15,107  Accounts payable and accrued expenses  25,221  13,586  Due to affiliates  51,302  46,134  General Partner notes payable, at fair value  12,364  12,003  Insurance loss reserves  8,540  8,086  Self-insurance reserves and unearned premiums  3,515  3,504  Other liabilities  24,430  8,973  Notes payable  148,356  148,142  Total liabilities $ 361,071 $ 296,555  Total shareholdersʼ equity $ 680,997 $ 549,737  Total liabilities and shareholdersʼ equity $ 1,042,068 $ 846,292  
 
 
 
28 Appendix Unaudited Historical Pro Forma & Actual Non-GAAP Measures ¹ Pro forma assumes the Transactions and IPO occurred prior to reported period  Pro Forma1 Actual Three Months Ended ($ in thousands) 6/30/2020 9/30/2020 12/31/2020 3/31/2021 6/30/2021 9/30/2021 12/31/2021 3/31/2022 6/30/2022 Net income $ 3,624 $ 29,133 $ 93,171 $ 38,378 $ 84,031 $ 118,882 $ 165,786 $ 97,505 $ 124,382  Income tax provision  984  1,235  2,829  1,703  2,340  2,607  4,821  5,545  5,837  Income before provision for income taxes  4,608  30,368  96,000  40,081  86,371  121,489  170,607  103,050  130,219  Depreciation and amortization  672  672  1,198  753  727  699  651  633  887  Less: Unrealized performance allocations  21,251  (14,626)  (49,639)  (14,729)  (43,204)  (53,042)  (137,638)  (65,862)  (70,116)  Plus: Unrealized performance allocations compensation  (922)  599  3,348  623  2,540  2,682  20,910  9,238  7,987  Less: Unrealized (gains)/losses  72  176  225  (5,780)  (317)  (2,565)  (705)  (479)  (3,483)  Plus: Other Expenses  —  —  —  —  —  —  1,723  —  —  Plus: Share-based compensation  2,678  2,679  7,287  3,133  16,916  2,452  3,592  7,264  6,553  Less: Net realized performance allocations attributable to  non-controlling interests  (3,193)  (2,599)  (15,827)  (4,486)  (20,593)  (17,142)  (5,913)  (6,094)  (18,409)  Less: Net income attributable to non-controlling interests in  subsidiaries  (3,544)  (2,368)  (8,133)  (2,648)  (5,829)  (12,154)  (14,568)  150  977  Distributable Earnings attributable to the Operating  Company $ 21,622 $ 14,901 $ 34,459 $ 16,947 $ 36,611 $ 42,419 $ 38,659 $ 47,900 $ 54,615  Realized performance allocations and incentive fees  (5,336)  (4,437)  (28,493)  (6,467)  (35,629)  (30,999)  (10,345)  (8,937)  (33,581)  Realized performance allocations and incentive fees  compensation  293  278  1,704  429  2,223  1,855  648  560  2,165  Net realized performance allocations attributable to non- controlling interests  3,193  2,599  15,827  4,486  20,593  17,142  5,913  6,094  18,409  Net insurance income  (253)  (685)  (1,660)  (1,108)  110  (1,101)  124  (665)  (1,406)  (Earnings) losses from investments in real estate  102  (163)  (909)  43  (980)  (823)  (333)  (40)  (1,251)  Net interest (income)/expense and realized (gain)/loss  8  1,310  1,751  630  1,995  1,381  848  450  1,529  Net income attributable to non-controlling interests  3,544  2,368  8,133  2,648  5,829  12,154  14,568  (150)  (977)  Total Fee Related Earnings $ 23,173 $ 16,171 $ 30,812 $ 17,608 $ 30,752 $ 42,028 $ 50,082 $ 45,212 $ 39,503  Less: Total Fee Related Earnings attributable to non- controlling interests  (3,544)  (2,368)  (8,133)  (2,648)  (5,829)  (12,154)  (14,568)  150  977  Total Fee Related Earnings to the Operating Company $ 19,629 $ 13,803 $ 22,679 $ 14,960 $ 24,923 $ 29,874 $ 35,514 $ 45,362 $ 40,480  
 
 
 
29 Appendix Unaudited Historical Pro Forma & Actual Non-GAAP Measures ¹ Pro forma assumes the Transactions and IPO occurred prior to reported period  Pro Forma1 Actual Three Months Ended ($ in thousands) 6/30/2020 9/30/2020 12/31/2020 3/31/2021 6/30/2021 9/30/2021 12/31/2021 3/31/2022 6/30/2022 Fund-level fee revenues Fund management fees $ 25,723 $ 26,635 $ 32,180 $ 30,860 $ 34,545 $ 40,576 $ 49,965 $ 52,700 $ 49,380  Transaction fees  8,294  5,085  18,574  5,326  16,242  21,907  31,598  21,998  17,643  Total net fund level fee revenues  34,017  31,720  50,754  36,186  50,787  62,483  81,563  74,698  67,023  Net earnings from Bridge property operators  3,308  2,388  1,171  2,094  1,988  4,969  2,469  2,939  2,108  Development fees  373  738  651  386  1,163  1,018  1,136  1,259  793  Fund administration fees  —  —  —  —  —  —  320  3,640  3,657  Other asset management and property income  2,343  1,147  1,327  1,520  1,611  1,533  2,329  1,955  2,659  Fee Related Revenues  40,041  35,993  53,903  40,186  55,549  70,003  87,817  84,491  76,240  Cash-based employee compensation and benefits  (14,280)  (16,754)  (21,653)  (20,308)  (21,403)  (23,173)  (31,228)  (32,539)  (30,120)  Net administrative expenses  (2,588)  (3,068)  (1,438)  (2,270)  (3,394)  (4,802)  (6,507)  (6,740)  (6,617)  Fee Related Expenses  (16,868)  (19,822)  (23,091)  (22,578)  (24,797)  (27,975)  (37,735)  (39,279)  (36,737)  Total Fee Related Earnings  23,173  16,171  30,812  17,608  30,752  42,028  50,082  45,212  39,503  Net income attributable to non-controlling interests  (3,544)  (2,368)  (8,133)  (2,648)  (5,829)  (12,154)  (14,568)  150  977  Total Fee Related Earnings to the Opearting Company  19,629  13,803  22,679  14,960  24,923  29,874  35,514  45,362  40,480  Realized performance allocations and incentive fees  5,336  4,437  28,493  6,467  35,629  30,999  10,345  8,937  33,581  Realized performance allocations and incentive fees compensation  (293)  (278)  (1,704)  (429)  (2,223)  (1,855)  (648)  (560)  (2,165)  Net realized performance allocations attributable to non-controlling  interests  (3,193)  (2,599)  (15,827)  (4,486)  (20,593)  (17,142)  (5,913)  (6,094)  (18,409)  Net insurance income  253  685  1,660  1,108  (110)  1,101  (124)  665  1,406  Earnings (losses) from investments in real estate  (102)  163  909  (43)  980  823  333  40  1,251  Net interest income/(expense) and realized gain/(loss)  (8)  (1,310)  (1,751)  (630)  (1,995)  (1,381)  (848)  (450)  (1,529)  Distributable Earnings attributable to the Operating Company $ 21,622 $ 14,901 $ 34,459 $ 16,947 $ 36,611 $ 42,419 $ 38,659 $ 47,900 $ 54,615  
 
 
 
30 Appendix Unaudited Historical Pro Forma & Actual Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Distributable Earnings per Share ¹ Pro forma assumes the Transactions and IPO occurred prior to reported period  Pro Forma1 Actual Three Months Ended ($ in thousands, except per share and per share amounts) 6/30/2020 9/30/2020 12/31/2020 3/31/2021 6/30/2021 9/30/2021 12/31/2021 3/31/2022 6/30/2022 Numerator Distributable Earnings ("DE") attributable to the Operating Company $ 21,622 $ 14,901 $ 34,459 $ 16,947 $ 36,611 $ 42,419 $ 38,659 $ 47,900 $ 54,615  Less: DE attributable to non-controlling interest in the Operating Company  (16,748)  (11,542)  (26,692)  (13,127)  (28,359)  (33,792)  (29,957)  (37,380)  (42,256)  Proforma DE attributable to Bridge Investment Group Holdings, Inc.  4,874  3,359  7,767  3,820  8,252  8,627  8,702  10,520  12,359  Less: Income allocated to participating Restricted Shares  (424)  (292)  (676)  (332)  (718)  (823)  (743)  (1,897)  (2,126)  Proforma DE available to common shareholders--Basic and Diluted  4,450  3,067  7,091  3,488  7,534  7,804  7,959  8,623  10,233  Less: Tax expense  (1,112)  (767)  (1,773)  (872)  (1,884)  (1,951)  (1,990)  (2,156)  (2,558)  Proforma after-tax DE available to common shareholders--Basic and Diluted  3,337  2,300  5,319  2,616  5,651  5,853  5,969  6,467  7,675  Denominator Weighted-average shares of Class A Common stock outstanding--Basic and Diluted  22,284,351  22,284,351  22,284,351  22,284,351  22,284,351  22,284,351  22,742,137  23,138,030  24,029,107  After-Tax Non-GAAP Distributable Earnings Per Share Basic and Diluted $ 0.15 $ 0.10 $ 0.24 $ 0.12 $ 0.25 $ 0.26 $ 0.26 $ 0.28 $ 0.32  
 
 
 
31 Appendix Non-GAAP to GAAP Reconciliation - Historical Pro Forma & Actual ¹ Pro forma assumes the Transactions and IPO occurred prior to reported period  Pro Forma1 Actual Three Months Ended ($ in thousands) 6/30/2020 9/30/2020 12/31/2020 3/31/2021 6/30/2021 9/30/2021 12/31/2021 3/31/2022 6/30/2022 Cash-based employee compensation and benefits $ 14,280 $ 16,754 $ 21,653 $ 20,308 $ 21,403 $ 23,173 $ 31,228 $ 32,539 $ 30,120  Compensation expense of Bridge property operators  5,172  5,685  6,925  6,002  6,279  6,138  6,667  7,677  10,020  Share based compensation  2,678  2,679  7,287  3,133  16,916  2,452  3,592  7,264  6,553  Employee compensation and benefits $ 22,130 $ 25,118 $ 35,865 $ 29,443 $ 44,598 $ 31,763 $ 41,487 $ 47,480 $ 46,693  Administrative expenses, net of Bridge property operators $ 2,588 $ 3,068 $ 1,438 $ 2,270 $ 3,394 $ 4,802 $ 6,507 $ 6,740 $ 6,617  Administrative expenses of Bridge property operators  1,476  1,380  2,601  1,830  1,997  1,901  2,112  2,768  3,152  General and administrative expenses $ 4,064 $ 4,448 $ 4,039 $ 4,100 $ 5,391 $ 6,703 $ 8,619 $ 9,508 $ 9,769  Unrealized gains/(losses) $ (72) $ (176) $ (225) $ 5,780 $ 317 $ 2,565 $ 705 $ 479 $ 3,483  Other expenses from Bridge property operators  (21)  (53)  (22)  (21)  (19)  (18)  (16)  (14)  (13)  Net interest income/(expense) and realized gain/(loss)  (8)  (1,310)  (1,751)  (630)  (1,995)  (1,381)  (848)  (450)  (1,529)  Other expenses  —  —  —  —  —  —  (1,723)  —  —  Total other income (expense) $ (101) $ (1,539) $ (1,998) $ 5,129 $ (1,697) $ 1,166 $ (1,882) $ 15 $ 1,941  Net income attributable to non-controlling interests in subsidiaries $ 3,544 $ 2,368 $ 8,133 $ 2,648 $ 5,829 $ 12,154 $ 14,568 $ (150) $ (977)  Realized performance allocations attributable to non-controlling interests  3,193  2,599  15,827  4,486  20,593  17,142  5,913  6,094  18,409  Unrealized performance allocations attributable to non-controlling interests  (16,724)  10,118  28,994  9,586  25,517  31,605  64,778  30,769  32,316  Total net income attributable to non-controlling interests $ (9,987) $ 15,085 $ 52,954 $ 16,720 $ 51,939 $ 60,901 $ 85,259 $ 36,713 $ 49,748  
 
 
 
32 Appendix AUM Roll Forward (Unaudited) FEAUM Roll Forward (Unaudited) ($ in millions) Three Months Ended  June 30, 2022 Six Months Ended June 30, 2022 Balance as of beginning of period $14,657 $13,363 Increases (capital raised/deployment)4 985 2,550 Changes in fair market value 2 12 Decreases (liquidations/other)5 (102) (383) FEAUM as of end of period $15,542 $15,542 % Change  6 %  16 % 1 New capital / commitments raised generally represents limited partner capital raised by our funds and other vehicles, including any reinvestments in our open-ended vehicles. 2 Distributions / return of capital generally represents the realization proceeds from the disposition of assets, current income, or capital returned to investors.  3 Change in fair value and acquisitions generally represents realized and unrealized activity on investments held by our funds and other vehicles (including changes in fair value and changes in leverage) as well  as the net impact of fees, expenses, and non-investment income. 4 Increases generally represents limited partner capital raised or deployed by our funds and other vehicles that is fee-earning when raised or deployed, respectively, including any reinvestments in our open- ended vehicles. 5 Decreases generally represents liquidations of investments held by our funds or other vehicles or other changes in fee basis, including the change from committed capital to invested capital after the  expiration or termination of the investment period. ($ in millions) Three Months Ended  June 30, 2022 Six Months Ended June 30, 2022 Balance as of beginning of period $38,847 $36,315 New capital / commitments raised1 1,389 2,490 Distributions / return of capital2 (461) (1,044) Change in fair value and acquisitions3 2,194 4,208 AUM as of end of period $41,969 $41,969 % Change  8 %  16 % 
 
 
 
33 Appendix FEAUM by Fund (Unaudited) December 31, June 30, ($ in millions) 2020 2021 2022 Bridge Debt Strategies Fund IV $ 305 $ 1,133 $ 2,038  Bridge Opportunity Zone Fund IV  —  1,490  1,476  Bridge Multifamily Fund V  —  976  1,471  Bridge Multifamily Fund IV  1,574  1,284  1,342  Bridge Workforce Fund II  166  915  1,212  Bridge Debt Strategies Fund III  1,549  1,286  1,137  Bridge Opportunity Zone Fund III  1,028  1,019  1,019  Bridge Seniors Housing Fund II  769  805  797  Bridge Seniors Housing Fund I  626  626  626  Bridge Workforce Fund I  499  556  556  Bridge Office Fund I  500  499  499  Bridge Opportunity Zone Fund I  482  482  482  Bridge Opportunity Zone Fund II  408  408  408  Bridge Debt Strategies Fund II  678  354  280  Bridge Debt Strategies III JV Partners  416  308  264  Bridge Logistics U.S. Venture I  —  110  250  Bridge Opportunity Zone Fund V  —  —  240  Bridge Multifamily Fund III  401  269  228  Bridge Single-Family Rental Fund IV  —  —  227  Bridge Agency MBS Fund  104  123  194  Bridge Office Fund II  89  176  176  Bridge Debt Strategies IV JV Partners  —  129  158  Bridge Debt Strategies II JV Partners  343  195  152  Bridge Office I JV Partners  154  130  130  Bridge Net Lease Income Fund  —  29  95  Bridge Seniors Housing Fund III  33  33  57  Bridge Debt Strategies I JV Partners  18  18  18  Bridge Office II JV Partners  21  6  6  Bridge Multifamily III JV Partners  10  4  4  Bridge Debt Strategies Fund I  41  —  —  Total FEAUM by Fund $ 10,214 $ 13,363 $ 15,542  
 
 
 
34 Fund Performance Summary - As of June 30, 2022 ($ in MM) Appendix Notes: 1. Does not include performance for(i) Opportunity Zone funds as such funds are invested in active development projects and have minimal stabilized assets, or (ii) funds that are currently raising capital, including our open-ended funds. Each fund identified contemplates all associated  parallel and feeder limited partnerships in which investors subscribe and accordingly share common management. All intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated in the combined presentation. Values and performance presented herein are the combined investor  returns gross of any applicable legal entity taxes. The returns presented above are those of the primary funds in each platform and not those of the Company. An investment in our Class A common stock is not an investment in any of our funds. The historical returns attributable to our  platforms are presented for illustrative purposes only and should not be considered as indicative of the future returns of our Class A common stock or any of our current or future funds. 2. Fund Committed Capital represents total capital commitments to the fund (excluding joint ventures or separately managed accounts). 3. Unreturned Drawn Capital plus Accrued Pref represents the amount the fund needs to distribute to its investors as a return of capital and a preferred return before the General Partner is entitled to receive performance fees or allocations from the fund. 4. Cumulative Invested Capital represents the total cost of investments since inception (including any recycling or refinancing of investments). 5. Realized Proceeds represents net cash proceeds received in connection with all investments, including distributions from investments and disposition proceeds. 6. Remaining Fair Value (RFV) represents the estimated liquidation values that are generally based upon appraisals, contracts and internal estimates. There can be no assurance that Remaining Fair Value will be realized at valuations shown, and realized values will depend on numerous  factors including, among others, future asset-level operating results, asset values and market conditions at the time of disposition, transaction costs, and the timing and manner of disposition, all of which may differ from the assumptions on which the Remaining Fair Value are based.  Direct fund investments in real property are held at cost minus transaction expenses for the first six months. 7. Unrealized MOIC represents the Multiple of Invested Capital (“MOIC”) for Total Fair Value associated with unrealized investments before management fees, fund level expenses and carried interest, divided by Cumulative Invested Capital attributable to those unrealized investments.   8. Total Fair Value (TFV) represents the sum of Realized Proceeds and Remaining Fair Value, before management fees, expenses and carried interest. 9. TFV MOIC represents MOIC for Total Fair Value, divided by Cumulative Invested Capital.  10. Fund Gross IRR is an annualized realized and unrealized return to fund investors gross of management fees and carried interest. 11. Fund Net IRR is an annualized realized and unrealized return to fee-paying investors, net of management fees, fund-level expenses and carried interest. Net return information reflects average fund investor level returns, which may differ from actual investor level returns due to timing,  variance in fees paid by investors, and other investor-specific investment costs such as taxes. Bridge Multifamily I and II funds reported their final IRRs in 2018 and 2019 respectively in a manner that includes a small share of affiliate capital who paid zero fees. Total Investments Closed-End Funds(1) (Investment Period Beginning, Ending Date) Fund Committed  Capital (2) Unreturned Drawn Capital +  Accrued  Pref(3) Cumulative Invested  Capital(4) Realized  Proceeds(5) Remaining Fair Value (RFV)(6) Unrealized MOIC(7) Total  Fair Value (TFV)(8) TFV MOIC(9) Fund Gross IRR(10) Fund Net  IRR(11) Equity Strategies Funds Multifamily Bridge Multifamily I (Mar 2009, Mar 2012) $ 124 $ — $ 150 $ 280 $ — N/A $ 280 1.87x  21.0 %  15.3 % Bridge Multifamily II (Apr 2012, Mar 2015)  596  —  605  1,264  — N/A  1,264 2.09x  30.2 %  23.4 % Bridge Multifamily III (Jan 2015, Jan 2018)  912  —  877  1,614  594 3.43x  2,208 2.52x  28.2 %  21.8 % Bridge Multifamily IV (Jun 2018, Jun 2021)  1,590  1,525  1,373  240  2,805 2.22x  3,045 2.22x  42.9 %  33.6 % Total Multifamily Funds  3,222  1,525  3,005  3,398  3,399 2.41x $ 6,797 2.26x  29.7 %  23.4 % Workforce & Affordable Housing Bridge Workforce Housing I (Aug 2017, Aug 2020)  619  651  568  105  1,224 2.34x  1,329 2.34x  37.1 %  29.9 % Total Workforce & Affordable Housing Funds  619  651  568  105  1,224 2.34x  1,329 2.34x  37.1 %  29.9 % Seniors Housing Bridge Seniors I (Jan 2014, Jan 2018)  578  793  644  387  434 1.14x  821 1.27x  4.9 %  2.5 % Bridge Seniors II (Mar 2017, Mar 2020)  820  809  720  207  771 1.34x  978 1.36x  10.0 %  6.9 % Total Seniors Housing Funds  1,398  1,602  1,364  594  1,205 1.26x $ 1,799 1.32x  7.0 %  4.3 % Office Bridge Office I (Jul 2017, Jul 2020)  573  634  596  182  513 1.15x  695 1.17x  5.0 %  2.2 % Bridge Office II (Dec 2019, to present)  208  202  205  24  272 1.44x  296 1.44x  28.9 %  19.5 % Total Office Funds  781  836  801  206  785 1.23x $ 991 1.24x  8.2 %  4.3 % Total Equity Strategies Funds $ 6,020 $ 4,614 $ 5,738 $ 4,303 $ 6,613 1.85x $ 10,916 1.90x  23.6 %  17.7 % Debt Strategies Funds Bridge Debt I (Sep 2014, Sep 2017) $ 132 $ — $ 219 $ 262 $ 2 1.24x $ 264 1.21x  8.3 %  5.7 % Bridge Debt II (July 2016, July 2019)  1,002  242  2,500  2,673  296 1.32x  2,969 1.19x  11.5 %  8.9 % Bridge Debt III (May 2018, May 2021)  1,624  1,062  5,359  4,838  1,100 1.29x  5,938 1.11x  12.6 %  9.8 % Bridge Debt IV (Nov 2020, to present)  2,888  1,886  5,435  3,880  1,671 1.04x  5,551 1.02x  8.1 %  6.1 % Total Debt Strategies Funds $ 5,646 $ 3,190 $ 13,513 $ 11,653 $ 3,069 1.17x $ 14,722 1.09x  11.4 %  8.8 % 
 
 
 
35 Appendix Reconciliation of GAAP Shares of Common Stock Outstanding to Total Shares Outstanding Q2 2022 GAAP Shares of Common Stock Outstanding  24,078,107  Unvested Participating Shares of Common Stock  4,999,699  Total Participating Shares of Common Stock  29,077,806  Participating Partnership Units  96,491,589  Unvested Participating Partnership Units  3,150,332  Total Shares Outstanding  128,719,727  Shareholder Dividends ($ in thousands, except per share data) Q2 2022 Distributable Earnings Attributable to the Operating Company $54,615 Less: 5% Holdback of Profits in the Operating Company to reinvest  (2,731)  Less: DE attributable to non-controlling interests in Operating Company  (40,135)  DE before Certain Payables Attributable to Common Stockholders $11,749 Less: Other Payables Attributable to Common Stockholders  (2,937)  DE Attributable to Participating Common Stockholders $8,812 Total Participating Shares of Common Stock  29,077,806  DE per Share $0.30 Less: Retained Capital per Share 0.00 Dividend per Share $0.30 Record Date Sep 2, 2022 Payment Date Sep 16, 2022 
 
 
 
36 Appendix Reconciliation of GAAP Earnings per Share to Distributable Earnings per Share Q2 2022 ($ in thousands, except per share data) Amount Weighted- Average Shares  Outstanding Amount per  Share Net Income Available to Common Shareholders  10,589  24,029,107 $ 0.44  Add: Income Allocated to unvested Participating Shares of Restricted Stock  2,351  Net Income Attributable to Bridge Investment Group Holdings Inc.  12,940  29,039,604 $ 0.44  Net income attributable to non-controlling interests in Operating Company  61,694  Net income attributable to non-controlling interests in subsidiaries of Operating Company  49,748  Net income  124,382  128,712,145 $ 0.97  Income tax provision  5,837  Income before provision for income taxes  130,219  128,712,145 $ 1.01  Depreciation and amortization  887  Less: Unrealized performance allocations  (70,116)  Plus: Unrealized performance allocations compensation  7,987  Less: Unrealized (gains)/losses  (3,483)  Plus: Share-based compensation  6,553  Less: Net realized performance allocations attributable to non-controlling interests  (18,409)  Less: Net income attributable to non-controlling interests in subsidiaries of Operating Company  977  Distributable Earnings attributable to the Operating Company  54,615  128,712,145 $ 0.42  Less: DE attributable to non-controlling interests in the Operating Company  42,256  99,672,541  0.42  Distributable Pre-Tax Earnings attributable to Bridge Investment Group Holdings Inc.  12,359  29,039,604 $ 0.42  
 
 
 
37 Appendix Performance Income • The Operating Company  receives 24% to 40% of the  gross performance  allocations Profits Interest • Current plans expected to  be collapsed over the next  two years • 2019 profit interests  converted on January  1, 2022 • Will result in a reduction in  NCI and increase in Net  Income to the Operating  Company • Will result in an increase in  share count; however,  expected to be antidilutive  to public shareholders Non-Controlling Interests ($ in thousands) For Three Months Ended June 30, 2022 NON-GAAP MEASURES INCOME STATEMENT Total Fund  Management Performance  income Fund-level fee revenues Fund management fees $ 49,380 $ 49,380 $ —  Transaction fees net  17,643  17,643  —  Total Fund-level fee revenues  67,023  67,023  —  Net earnings from Bridge property operators  2,108  2,108  —  Development fees  793  793  —  Fund administration fees  3,657  3,657  —  Other asset management and property income  2,659  2,659  —  Fee Related Revenues  76,240  76,240  —  Cash-based employee compensation and benefits  (30,120)  (30,120)  —  Net administrative expenses  (6,617)  (6,617)  —  Fee Related Expenses  (36,737)  (36,737)  —  Total Fee Related Earnings  39,503  39,503  —  Fee Related Earnings Margin  52 %  52 % Total Fee Related Earnings attributable to non-controlling interests from 2020  Profits Interests  689  689  —  Total Fee Related Earnings attributable to non-controlling interests from 2021  Profits Interests  518  518  —  Total Fee Related Earnings attributable to non-controlling interests from  subsidiaries of the Operating Company  (230)  (230)  —  Total Fee Related Earnings to the Operating Company  40,480  40,480  —  Realized performance allocations and incentive fees  33,581 -  33,581  Realized performance allocations and incentive fees compensation  (2,165) -  (2,165)  Net realized performance allocations attributable to non-controlling interests  (18,409) -  (18,409)  Net insurance income  1,406  1,406 - Earnings from investments in real estate  1,251  1,251 - Net interest income/(expense) and realized gain/(loss)  (1,529)  (1,529) - Distributable Earnings Attributable to the Operating Company $ 54,615 $ 41,608 $ 13,007  
 
 
 
38 Appendix Composition of Fund Management Fees ($ in MM) 
 
 
 
39 Glossary Assets Under Management Assets under management, or AUM, represents the sum of (a) the fair value of the assets of the funds and vehicles we  manage, plus (b) the contractual amount of any uncalled capital commitments to those funds and vehicles (including our  commitments to the funds and vehicles and those of Bridge affiliates). Our AUM is not reduced by any outstanding  indebtedness or other accrued but unpaid liabilities of the assets we manage. Our calculations of AUM and fee-earning AUM  may differ from the calculations of other investment managers. As a result, these measures may not be comparable to similar  measures presented by other investment managers. In addition, our calculation of AUM includes uncalled commitments to  (and the fair value of the assets in) the funds and vehicles we manage from Bridge and Bridge affiliates, regardless of whether  such commitments or investments are subject to fees. Our definition of AUM is not based on any definition contained in the  agreements governing the funds and vehicles we manage or advise. Distributable Earnings Distributable Earnings, or DE, is a key performance measure used in our industry and is evaluated regularly by management  in making resource deployment and compensation decisions, and in assessing our performance. DE differs from net income  before provision for income taxes, computed in accordance with U.S. GAAP in that it does not include depreciation and  amortization, unrealized performance allocations and related compensation expense, unrealized gains (losses), share-based  compensation, net income attributable to non-controlling interests, charges (credits) related to corporate actions and non- recurring items. Although we believe the inclusion or exclusion of these items provides investors with a meaningful indication  of our core operating performance, the use of DE without consideration of the related U.S. GAAP measures is not adequate  due to the adjustments described herein. This measure supplements and should be considered in addition to and not in lieu  of the results of operations discussed further in our most recent annual report on Form 10-K under “Management’s  Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations—Key Components of our Results of Operations— Combined Results of Operations” prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP. Our calculations of DE may differ from the  calculations of other investment managers. As a result, these measures may not be comparable to similar measures  presented by other investment managers. Fee-Earning AUM Fee-Earning AUM, or FEAUM, reflects the assets from which we earn management fee revenue. The assets we manage that  are included in our FEAUM typically pay management fees based on capital commitments, invested capital or, in certain cases,  NAV, depending on the fee terms.  Fee Related Earnings Fee Related Earnings, or FRE, is a supplemental performance measure used to assess our ability of to generate profits from  fee-based revenues that are measured and received on a recurring basis. FRE differs from income before provision for  income taxes computed in accordance with U.S. GAAP in that it adjusts for the items included in the calculation of  Distributable Earnings, and also adjusts Distributable Earnings to exclude realized performance allocations income, net  insurance income, earnings from investments in real estate, net interest (interest income less interest expense), net realized  gain/(loss), and, if applicable, certain general and administrative expenses when the timing of any future payment is uncertain.  FRE is not a measure of performance calculated in accordance with U.S. GAAP. The use of FRE without consideration of the  related U.S. GAAP measures is not adequate due to the adjustments described herein. Our calculations of FRE may differ  from the calculations of other investment managers. As a result, these measures may not be comparable to similar measures  presented by other investment managers. 
 
 
 
40 Glossary (cont'd) Fee Related Expenses Fee Related Expenses is a component of Fee Related Earnings. Fee Related Expenses differs from expenses computed in  accordance with U.S. GAAP in that it does not include incentive fee compensation, performance allocations compensation,  share-based compensation, loss and loss adjustment expenses associated with our insurance business, depreciation and  amortization, or charges (credits) related to corporate actions and non-recurring items, and expenses attributable to non- controlling interest in consolidated entities. Additionally, Fee Related Expenses is reduced by the costs associated with our  property operations, which are managed internally in order to enhance returns to the Limited Partners in our funds. Fee  Related Expenses are used in management’s review of the business. Please refer to the reconciliation to the comparable line  items on the combined statements of operations. Fee Related Revenues Fee Related Revenues is a component of Fee Related Earnings. Fee Related Revenues is comprised of fund management fees,  transaction fees net of any third-party operating expenses, net earnings from Bridge property operators, development fees,  and other asset management and property income. Net earnings from Bridge property operators is calculated as a  summation of property management, leasing fees and construction management fees less third-party operating expenses  and property operating expenses. Property operating expenses is calculated as a summation of employee compensation and  benefits, general and administrative expenses and interest expense at our property operators. We believe our vertical  integration enhances returns to our shareholders and fund investors, and we view the net earnings from Bridge property  operators as part of our fee related revenue as these services are provided to essentially all of the real estate properties in  our equity funds. Net earnings from Bridge property operators is a metric that is included in management’s review of our  business. Please refer to the reconciliation to the comparable line items on the combined statements of operations. Fee  Related Revenues differs from revenue computed in accordance with U.S. GAAP in that it excludes insurance premiums.  Additionally, Fee Related Revenues is reduced by the costs associated with our property operations, which are managed  internally in order to enhance returns to the Limited Partners in our funds. Fund Management Fees Fund management fees refers to fees we earn for advisory services provided to our funds, which are generally based on total  commitments, invested capital or net asset value managed by us. Fund management fees are generally based on a quarterly  measurement period and amounts are paid in advance of recognizing revenue. Operating Company Bridge Investment Group Holdings LLC, or the Operating Company, acts as a holding company of certain affiliates that provide  an array of real estate-related services. The Operating Company is the ultimate controlling entity, through its wholly owned  subsidiary Bridge Fund Management Holdings LLC, of the investment manager entities, which we refer to collectively as the  Fund Managers.  Sponsored Funds Sponsored Funds refers to the funds, co-investment vehicles and other entities and accounts that are managed by Bridge,  and which are structured to pay fees.