Home / Korea’s Mirae Asset to launch Australian presence

Korea’s Mirae Asset to launch Australian presence

Chris Wildman
Mirae Asset Global Investments, the big Korean-owned global funds management and property group, has opened an Australian office for its investment firm, recruiting a former institutional business development manager at AMP Capital, Chris Wildman, to head business development for the operation.
Mirae Asset is a diversified manager across the major asset classes but is particularly well known in Asian and emerging market equities. It also has an ETF and hedge fund range and a private equity offering alongside global equity and fixed interest. It has about US$75 billion under management.
Headquartered in Seoul, it has offices in the US, Canada, UK, Hong Kong, South America, India and Taiwan as well as Sydney. In its property business, it owns Sydney’s five-star Four Season’s Hotel among other trophy assets.
Wildman, who left AMP Capital in September to start work on the Mirae Asset Australia launch, most recently spent about eight years with that firm, starting as an account manager for its affiliate alliances and then becoming a senior business development executive.
He also worked for AMP prior to that as a private client manager, for three years, but left for a short stint in London as a marketing consultant at Legal & General.
Mirae will launch its capabilities for the Australian market next month, focusing initially on emerging market and Asian equities.
A recent client note from the firm emphasised the long-term prospects in Asia, including China, with a focus on “resilient quality businesses”. It believes India is the region’s most attractive market in the shorter term, and has a low exposure to the slowing Chinese economy.
Rahul Chadha, Mirae’s co-chief investment officer, based in Hong Kong, said: “You need a strong on-the-ground presence if you want to be a strong bottom-up stock picker in Asia. We have teams in Hong Kong, India, China, Korea and Taiwan who identify trends early.”
In terms of the firm’s style, he said: “We seek established or emerging sector leaders at the right price. All our potential investments are rated by a ‘competitive scorecard’, which is Mirae Asset’s proprietary measure of shifting market dynamics, a company’s track record and sustainability of returns. Stocks must be top quartile performers to make it through to selection. Analysis is deliberately tight and stock-specific. Macro is just noise 80 per cent of the time. Only when there is a step-change do we take top-down economic factors into approach.
“In recent years, currency movements, the downgrades of Indonesia’s prospects and India’s changing monetary policy were all chances to buy good companies cheaply. But the majority of the time, we are company-specific.”

Investor Strategy News




  • Print Article

    Related
    AustralianSuper builds out London-based international equities team

    The $350 billion profit-to-member fund will be trying to rustle up some desk space in its London office as it makes a slew of new appointments and prepares to deploy 70 per cent of new inflows into global markets.

    Lachlan Maddock | 29th Nov 2024 | More
    Why super ‘isn’t fit for purpose’ for First Nations Australians

    Nearly every Australian has super, but its settings don’t work for every Australian, according to the First Nations Foundation, which is advocating for changes around estate planning and the preservation age to make the system fairer.

    Lachlan Maddock | 27th Nov 2024 | More
    Riders on the storm: MLC looks to hurricanes, earthquakes for returns  

    Betting against acts of God is a great way to make money, but institutional allocations to natural catastrophe reinsurance have stayed relatively static even as some managers are generating double-digit uncorrelated returns.

    Lachlan Maddock | 27th Nov 2024 | More
    Popular