Strategy
JP Morgan's Chinese Fund Business Gets Brand Change
The US bank's asset management arm took full ownership of the China funds business in January this year.
JP Morgan
Asset Management yesterday said that its wholly-owned China
International Fund Management business will operate under the
brand name of JPMAM in China.
The US bank’s asset manager took full ownership of the Chinese
group in January.
To recognise this significant milestone for its business, George
Gatch, chief executive officer, JP Morgan Asset Management
and Paul Bateman, chairman, JP Morgan Asset Management, have
travelled to Shanghai to meet and greet the expanded team, and
visit the integrated team’s future workspace in Shanghai Tower,
the tallest building in China in the heart of Shanghai’s
financial district.
“Combining the full breadth of our global resources and
long-established domestic presence, we are well positioned to
deliver values for global investors as China’s economy continues
to grow and capital markets continue to internationalise,” Gatch
said.
Dan Watkins, Asia-Pacific CEO for, JP Morgan Asset Management,
said: “China is an important market for JPMAM in Asia-Pacific.
Unifying our local business with the global brand not only
signifies the first step of our integration journey but also
underscores our longstanding commitment to China. With JP
Morgan’s 102-year heritage and JPMAM’s almost two-decade track
record in China, we look forward to continuing to help global
investors navigate tremendous opportunities in China’s market and
domestic investors diversify their portfolios
internationally.”
In March 2021 JP Morgan agreed to pay $410 million for a
stake in the wealth arm of China Merchants Bank.
A number of Western firms have taken full ownership or controlling stakes in Chinese asset managers. Earlier this year, Morgan Stanley Investment Management won approval from the China Securities Regulatory Commission to take a full controlling stake in Morgan Stanley Huaxin Funds. In 2020 Goldman Sachs agreed to buy its China joint venture partner. A number of foreign firms have established JVs to tap into the world’s second-largest economy and the structure remains one of the main ways in which Western organisations are able to do business in China. This trend continues despite the sometimes fraught diplomatic relationship between the West and China.