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Nikko and Macquarie Eye ING Asia Asset Management
Tara Loader Wilkinson
20 April 2012
Japan’s Nikko Asset Management and Australia’s
Macquarie Group are among those looking at buying ING’s Asian asset management
division, which is believed to be worth up to $600 million, according to
reports. Other companies likely to express interest in
the investment management sale include South Korea's Mirae Asset and Fidelity
Worldwide Investment, according to a report on Reuters. ING's Asia-Pacific investment management
business had about $55 billion of assets under management across Japan, South
Korea, Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Thailand at the end of the fourth
quarter 2011, according to its website. It selling the business as part of its bailout deal with the Dutch government in 2008. Headquartered in Hong Kong, ING Investment
Management has about 230 investment professionals and manages assets for ING's
life insurance and third-party institutional and retail clients. ING’s global investment management business had
an operating income of €872 million euros ($1.14 billion) for 2011 and
underlying profit before tax of €204 million. It does not break out Asia
figures.
Nikko Asset Management, which is currently planning
to list, has been on the acquisition trail for asset management businesses in
recent years. It purchased Australian fund manager Tyndall Investments in 2010
and last year it acquired DBS's asset management business.
Macquarie has also been on the lookout for asset
management businesses. It was among the suitors for Deutsche Bank's asset
management business when it was sold, said the report.