Home / News / Franklin Templeton rounds out Aussie offering

Franklin Templeton rounds out Aussie offering

News

(Pictured: James Savage )

Franklin Templeton has expanded its Australian team with the recruitment of James Savage as head of institutional sales. Savage, an experienced quant-orientated manager, should add some grunt to the firm’s traditional asset management capabilities.

His new role is as ‘senior manager, institutional sales’, reporting to Keri Pratt. She said the role reflected the company’s “growing presence with global and local investment teams in fixed interest, equities, real estate and multi-asset solutions”.

  • Prior to joining Franklin Templeton, Savage worked for boutique manager Tribeca Investment Partners as head of institutional sales for eight years. Before that he set up the performance measurement department at State Street Australia, followed by business development roles at MLC and Credit Suisse.

    Savage said: “I am looking forward to working with Franklin Templeton investment professionals across all asset classes and multi-style strategies on behalf of our institutional client relationships.”

    Maria Wilton, the managing director of Franklin Templeton in Australia, said: “Diversification across investment capabilities and market segments is an important part of our long-term business strategy… Following the acquisition of Australian equity manager Balanced Equity Management in 2011, K2 Advisors in 2012 and adding Australian fixed income specialists this year, it is important to have the right team in place to meet the demands of our clients and address the growth opportunities we are seeing.”

    Investor Strategy News


    Related
    What poor investment governance really costs members

    A new report “from the coalface” of super fund investing has gone some way to quantifying the cost of shonky investment management, with members potentially losing out on hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    Lachlan Maddock | 2nd May 2024 | More
    ‘It comes at a cost’: Small funds fret APRA levy increase

    A number of super funds managing less than $10 billion have been slugged with an increase in their restricted APRA levy of more than 80 per cent even as the regulator pushes them to keep costs down.

    Lachlan Maddock | 30th Apr 2024 | More
    Megafunds split on future of YFYS

    Australia’s biggest super funds disagree on what the new Your Future, Your Super performance test should look like, but they both think the consequences for failure should be just as weighty – and apply to everybody equally.

    Lachlan Maddock | 26th Apr 2024 | More
    Popular