Home / News / Murphy to depart BNY Mellon for Pareto

Murphy to depart BNY Mellon for Pareto

News

 (Pictured: Bruce Murphy)

Bruce Murphy, managing director responsible for the Australian funds management business of BNY Mellon, is to leave that position to take up a senior role at one of the firm’s affiliate managers, Insight Pareto. A search is underway to fill the job.

Murphy has been in the current role for nearly five years. Prior to that he was an executive director at Macquarie Group, responsible for domestic and international distribution, and before that was head of retail distribution for Deutsche Asset Management. He is expected to start the transition to Insight Pareto from next month.

  • Mark Speciale, Singapore-based managing director and head of distribution for BNY Mellon Investment Management, who is overseeing finding Murphy’s replacement, said it was company policy not to comment on personnel changes.

    BNY Mellon’s multi-affiliate structure has 14 separate funds management firms, mostly wholly-owned, which are allowed to operate with independence in terms of their investments and marketing strategies. Not all are marketed in Australia.

    They are: Alcentra; ARX Investimentos; BNY Mellon CIS; BNY Mellon Asset Management Japan; The Boston Company; CenterSquare; EACM; Insight Pareto; Mellon Capital; Meriten; Newton; Siguler Guff; Standish; and Walter Scott.

    Insight Pareto is best known in Australia as an active currency manager, however, it offers a range of strategies including liability-driven investments, multi-asset, fixed interest and cash.

    Murphy will be working with Margaret Waller, who has headed up the Australian office of Pareto – formerly a privately-owned firm, Pareto Partners – for many years. Prior to that, in the early 1990s, she headed up the global quant group for the old County NatWest, based in London.

    Investor Strategy News




    Print Article

    Related
    APRA’s governance move could trigger wholesale change

    If the regulator’s proposal to limit board tenure to 10 years takes effect, then many non-executive board members will be in the firing line, with industry funds likely to have the most casualties.

    Nicholas Way | 7th Mar 2025 | More
    ATO has family offices in its sights over succession strategies

    The wealth transfer from Baby Boomers to their offspring, which is in full swing, has got the taxman’s full attention, especially as it pertains to capital gains payments, trust structures and potential breaches of the Tax Act’s Division 7A.

    Duncan Hughes | 27th Feb 2025 | More
    Don’t fear the ‘Trump effect’ in emerging markets: Ninety One

    The set-up for emerging markets is better than ever, and harks back to the beginning of their decade-long run following the end of the Asian financial crisis. And while Trump has investors running scared, fears about another brushfire trade war are overblown.

    Lachlan Maddock | 21st Feb 2025 | More
    Popular