Home / News / Yarra Capital adds to board’s fire power

Yarra Capital adds to board’s fire power

News

Yarra Capital, the diversified Melbourne-based equities boutique, is building an impressive and experienced board, with the latest appointment announced last week (July 20). It is Mark Lazberger, who was most recently the chief executive of the former Colonial First State Global Asset Management (now First Sentier Investors, owned by Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group).

Lazberger, who spent much of his career at State Street Global Advisors, joins: Yarra Capital’s non-executive chair Mark Burgess, a former funds manager, also at Colonial, and chief executive of the Future Fund; Michael Gordon, a former chief executive of Schroders in Australia, Fidelity’s head of investments in Sydney and CIO in Hong Kong and London, CIO of equities for BNP Paribas in London, and then head of investments at Perpetual back in Australia before his semi-retirement; two representatives of private equity backer TA Associates, Edward Sippel in Hong Kong and Michael Berk in the US; Masato Degawa in Japan, where he was previously a president of BlackRock; and executive directors Dion Hershan, the firm’s managing director; and Katie Hudson, the head of Australian equities research.

Lazberger built SSGA into Australia’s largest institutional manager, between 1991 and 2002, before moving to Tokyo with the firm, as president of the Japan business as well APAC regional boss and then onto London as president of the international (non-US) business until 2008, when he returned home to take up the top job at CFS GAM until that business was sold the Japanese in December 2018. He is one of the founders of the CFA Institute in Australia, and an immediate past director of the global CFA organisation. He also has some other non-executive directorships, including family office Omnia Capital, the Sydney Theatre Company and the Zero Childhood Cancer Board.

  • He said that he had known several of the Yarra Capital directors, including the TA Associates people, and liked the way they were looking to expand the business. “I also liked the fact that they were independent,” he said.

    Yarra Capital, formed in 2017 after a management buyout of Goldman Sachs Asset Management in Australia, has a range of Australian equities funds, a global small-cap fund, a credit fund and two income funds and multi-asset and hybrid strategies.

    – G.B.

    Greg Bright

    Greg has worked in financial services-related media for more than 30 years. He has launched dozens of financial titles, including Super Review, Top1000Funds.com and Investor Strategy News, of which he is the former editor.




    Print Article

    Related
    ‘A force to be reckoned with’: Funds heading for retirement tipping point

    Some members are excited for retirement, while others approach it with a “real sense of shame and fear”. Funds are going to have to figure out how to cater to both groups or risk failing them all.

    Lachlan Maddock | 20th Nov 2024 | More
    Super early access for housing would hurt every member’s balance: Aware

    Opening up early access to super for housing would have a negative effect on the balances of even those members that don’t dig into their savings, with funds forced to adopt more conservative investment strategies and hold more liquid assets.

    Lachlan Maddock | 15th Nov 2024 | More
    HESTA brings total portfolio thinking to ‘nuanced’ housing crisis

    The circa $88 billion industry fund for workers in health and community services reckons that alleviating the affordable housing crisis will boost its other investments by easing the cost of living and inflation.

    Lachlan Maddock | 15th Nov 2024 | More
    Popular