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Morgan Stanley Wins Full Control Of China JV

A number of foreign firms have established JVs to tap into the world’s second-largest economy. It is one of the main ways for them to do business in mainland China.
  
  Morgan Stanley Investment Management has won approval from
  the China Securities Regulatory Commission to take a full
  controlling stake in Morgan Stanley Huaxin Funds.
  
  The move is subject to business registration and other procedures
  required by Chinese regulatory entities, the US firm said in a
  statement last Friday. When complete, Morgan Stanley will have
  100 per cent ownership of the business, from 49 per cent.
  
  Based in Shenzhen, Morgan Stanley Huaxin Funds became a joint
  venture in June 2008.
  
  Several other firms, such as Manulife Asset Management, the asset
  management arm of Canada’s Manulife Financial, have taken full
  control of Chinese JVs. 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
  organizations are able to do business in China.
  
  “Wholly-owning our China mutual funds business will allow us to
  more fully serve this dynamic asset and wealth management market
  and adds a significant pillar of growth to our global investment
  management franchise,” Dan Simkowitz, head of investment
  management at Morgan Stanley, said. 
  
  Gokul Laroia, CEO of Asia at Morgan Stanley, said: “The firm has
  been active in China for almost three decades and we are
  committed to our goal of building a fully-integrated financial
  services firm to meet the evolving needs of domestic and global
  clients. With high levels of wealth creation, growing demand for
  financial advice, and with the launch of a private pension
  scheme, we see long-term opportunities in China’s asset
  management industry.”
  
  Morgan Stanley’s business provides diversified investment
  management services to retail and institutional clients through
  mutual funds and segregated management accounts, including fixed
  income, active equity, quantitative equity, and multi-asset
  investment.
  
  In November 2020 Union Bancaire Privée, the Geneva-based private
  bank, announced that its wholly foreign-owned enterprise in
  China, UBP Overseas Investment Management (Shanghai), had
  partnered with Idinvest Partners, a European private equity firm
  and a subsidiary of global investment company Eurazeo. Amundi,
  the European asset management giant, and China’s BOC Wealth
  Management, won a license to operate a joint venture in China in
  2020. In February 2021 UK-listed Schroder Investment
  Management 
  won regulatory clearance to set up a joint venture in
  Shanghai.
  
  A Cerulli Associates report has 
  pointed out the growth potential of such ventures.