Home / JP Morgan closes Aussie TM business

JP Morgan closes Aussie TM business

(Pictured: Patrick Fanning)

JP Morgan has closed down its transition management (TM) business in Australia, following the lead of its US and European colleagues who shuttered their operations last May.

The Australian business, run by experienced TM manager Patrick Fanning, was given the extra time to support its local clients and discuss with them their likely future demands.

  • “We gave it a good shot but, in the end, there was just not enough revenue in it to justify the effort,” one JP Morgan executive said. Clients were advised of the closure last week.

    For JP Morgan, TM, which has had its ups and downs as a business line for all the major banks around the world in recent years, the business was a non-core offering.

    In Australia, Fanning moved across from Citi’s TM business in October 2011. He had spent more than 10 years in that department at Citi. The team reported through to JP Morgan’s Markets business, run by Jeff Herbert-Smith.

    JP Morgan is working with the team to look at alternative roles within the bank.

    TM has been very competitive in Australia in recent years and Australian investors will still have a range of service providers, using both broker and agency models, from which to choose.

    Investor Strategy News


    Related
    How investors can weather a  ‘crisis of global integration’

    Investors should keep a close eye on the new Cold War brewing between China and the US, but its outcome could still support “robust” trade and investment as strategic competition drives capital investment.

    Lachlan Maddock | 17th Jan 2025 | More
    AustralianSuper makes European industrial property play

    The $300 billion profit-to-member fund has linked up with Oxford Properties for a portfolio of high-quality European industrial and logistics assets that it wants to expand significantly over the next three to five years.

    Staff Writer | 15th Jan 2025 | More
    Why big super funds might become more like banks

    Australia’s megafunds are looking to international asset owners for ideas on how to invest what will soon be trillions in retirement savings. But banks – with their sharp focus on efficient implementation and balance sheet management – could also be a source of inspiration.

    Lachlan Maddock | 15th Jan 2025 | More
    Popular