By Mike Spector 

KKR & Co. signaled continued momentum in profiting from previous takeovers, with companies increasingly open to buying firms the buyout shop owns.

The New York company, alongside other private-equity owners, reached an agreement on Thursday to sell orthopedic-device maker Biomet Inc. to rival Zimmer Holdings Inc. for $13.35 billion. The deal builds on a series of so-called " exits" for KKR and other private-equity firms as they seek to sell companies owned for several years outright or cash out by taking them public on stock exchanges.

Private-equity firms are rushing to take companies public as the stock market trades near record highs. But they prefer to sell companies and take profits immediately, whereas initial public offerings require them to sell shares over time and hope that markets--and prices--remain robust.

"There is more strategic dialogue going on. There does seem to be strategic interest in our companies," said Scott Nuttall, who heads KKR's global capital and asset-management group, during a conference call with analysts to discuss the KKR's first-quarter financial results. Still, Mr. Nuttall said KKR would continue to pursue IPOs for companies and sell shares of those already publicly trading. "You'll continue to see a mix" of IPOs and M&A deals, he said.

His comments echoed those from Blackstone Group LP President Hamilton "Tony" James, who earlier this month shrugged off recent hiccups in the IPO market, in which several companies priced below expectations. Mr. James said he believed the market volatility would be "relatively temporary" and wouldn't interfere with the buyout firm's ability to cash out of deals.

KKR, meanwhile, reported first-quarter earnings that soundly beat Wall Street expectations, largely on the back of taking public companies it previously bought and selling shares of other companies it owns that already were trading on stock exchanges. The buyout firm also reported record fee-related earnings from raising money and doing deals during the year's first three months.

KKR took Santander Consumer USA Holdings Inc., the U.S. auto-lending arm of the Spanish bank, public in January. KKR also sold shares of NXP Semiconductors NV and Nielsen Holdings NV in the quarter.

In addition to Biomet, KKR on Thursday pointed to M&A deals expected to close in the months ahead that would add to the firm's so-called realized carried interest, the share of deal profits KKR reaps after fund investors receive returns. They include an agreement to sell US Foods to rival Sysco Corp. for $3.5 billion and a deal to sell Ipreo Holdings LLC to other buyout firms.

KKR reported a first-quarter profit of $210 million, or 65 cents a share, up from $193.4 million during the same period a year ago.

The buyout firm reported economic net income of $630.3 million compared with $647.7 million during the year-earlier period. That amounted to 82 cents for each after-tax-adjusted share. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected 52 cents. Economic net income is a measure preferred by private-equity firms because it gauges realized and unrealized gains and losses and quirks related to private partnerships becoming public companies.

KKR's financial performance resulted in a first-quarter distribution to shareholders of 43 cents, a roughly 59% increase from the company's dividend during the same time period a year ago.

KKR's overall distributable earnings--the portion of profits from which shareholders get a cut--in the first quarter increased about 54% from the comparable time period a year earlier to $446.8 million.

The financial firm's assets under management at the end of the first quarter totaled $102.3 billion, up from $94.3 billion at the end of 2013. KKR closed on its acquisition of European credit firm Avoca Capital during the first quarter, adding $8.4 billion to the private-equity firm's assets under management. The value of KKR's private-equity portfolio rose 4.5% in the first quarter.

In addition to selling off investments, buyout firms also have taken advantage of robust debt markets to help finance takeovers after raising billions of dollars in new funds from investors they now need to put to work. KKR in the first quarter bought eyewear retailer National Vision Inc. and insurance-claims provider Sedgwick Claims Management Services Inc.

KKR also plans to soon close a deal to acquire KKR Financial Holdings LLC in a $2.6 billion all-stock deal. A shareholder vote on the deal is set for next week.

The private-equity firm in the first quarter racked up fees of $327.6 million for doing deals and raising money. That helped it post record fee-related earnings of $151.7 million.

Write to Mike Spector at mike.spector@wsj.com

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