Home / Contenders line up for crack at Russell in round two

Contenders line up for crack at Russell in round two

At least six final bidders remain in the running to buy Russell Investments, according to offshore media reports. Towers Watson and Threadneedle are considered among the frontrunners.
The Financial Times (FT) last week named global asset consulting firm Towers Watson and Ameriprise, owner of funds management firm Threadneedle, as second-round bidders for the Russell Investments business, along with an anonymous Chinese firm and a couple of private equity firms.
According to the report, one of the initial bidders, the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, may have dropped out of the process, which is being managed by Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase.
“[Sources] said that the interest from Towers Watson, which is focused on consulting rather than asset management, may mean that other risk managers such as insurance brokers Aon and Marsh and McLennan [owners of Mercer] are also following the process closely,” the FT story says.
The London Stock Exchange (LSE), which bought the Frank Russell Company in 2014 for about US$2.7 billion, confirmed this February it would spin off the group’s investments and asset consulting arm.
In a recent statement, LSE said it had fielded “a good number of indications of interest” in the Russell Investments business, which is tipped to sell for up to $1.5 billion.
The LSE will keep the Russell index business, combining it with its existing FTSE indices arm. Collectively, over US$9 trillion in assets globally are benchmarked to the combined indices, including US$5 trillion against Russell’s.
According to just-published LSE results, US$400 billion in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are linked to the group’s combined indices, with US$242 billion against FTSE benchmarks.
Globally, Russell Investments has about US$272 billion in its multi-management funds business, according to the LSE results.
– Investment News NZ

Investor Strategy News


  • Related
    Big super’s hard bargains pay off: CEM Benchmarking

    Australian super funds roundly beat their global peers on investment costs due to a combination of hardball negotiations around fees and savvy implementation in pricier asset classes.

    Lachlan Maddock | 19th Apr 2024 | More
    What to do about the ‘concentration conundrum’: Pzena

    Owning the largest stocks has historically been a recipe for underperformance over every period, according to value house Pzena, but the madness of benchmark construction means some investors have few choices but to.

    Staff Writer | 19th Apr 2024 | More
    2024 Capital Market assumptions: scenarios and asset return forecasts for the next decade by Amundi

    The next decade could see higher growth and lower inflation, partly due to AI adoption’s productivity gains, according to Amundi’s latest investment forecast.

    Investor Strategy News | 19th Apr 2024 | More
    Popular