Schroders to exit wholly-owned China fund management unit, sources say

Industry:    1 day ago

Schroders is exiting its wholly owned China ‌fund unit and has reached a deal to sell its products to Neuberger Berman, three people with knowledge of the matter said, as the British fund manager looks to move out of its smaller operations.

The move, which was first ​reported by Reuters, comes a month after Schroders’ shareholders approved the 9.9 billion pound ($13.2 billion) sale ​of the historic London fund house to U.S. rival Nuveen to create one ⁠of the world’s largest active fund managers.

U.S. asset manager Neuberger’s wholly owned China unit has reached a ​deal with Schroders to take over fund products from Shanghai-headquartered Schroders Fund Management (China), which was launched in ​2023, said the sources.

Financial details of the deal were not immediately known. Schroders is separately seeking interest in the fund management unit’s licence, two of the people said, which would allow a buyer to instantly operate a fully owned ​unit in China’s $5.6 trillion fund market. One of the potential buyers in talks is South Korean firm ​Mirae Asset Financial Group, they added.

All the sources declined to be named as they were not authorised to speak ‌to ⁠the media. Schroders and Neuberger declined to comment. Mirae did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

FIRST TO EXIT

Schroders obtained Chinese regulatory approval to set up the wholly owned mutual fund unit in January 2023, as Beijing accelerated the opening up of its financial sector, worth trillions of dollars, to foreigners.

The ​unit managed 1.7 billion ​yuan ($249.89 million) in mutual ⁠fund assets as of end-March, its latest reports showed, a tiny fraction of the parent company’s $1.1 trillion global assets.

The sources said the exit will not affect ​the operation of Schroders’ two other joint ventures in China – a Schroders-controlled ​wealth management unit ⁠with China’s state-owned Bank of Communications and a minority-owned Bank of Communications Schroders Fund Management unit.

China in 2020 allowed foreign firms to run fully owned fund management businesses in the local market, allowing the entry ⁠of global ​asset managers including BlackRock and Fidelity International. Schroders is the ​first to exit after setting up a wholly owned unit.

London-listed shares of Schroders were 0.3% lower at 1020 GMT.

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