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  • The Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) recently announced its acquisition of 10% interest in the O’Shaughnessy Asset Management (OSAM) firm.

    July 23
  • President and CEO of Federated Investors, Inc., J. Christopher Donahue, recently announced Federated’s acquisition of assets associated with the Prudent Bear and Prudent Global Income Funds. Federated is set to purchase these assets from David W. Tice & Associates at an initial price of $43 million with future contingent payments over the next four years of up to $100 million. These funds have an estimated net worth of $1.2 billion and $502 million, respectively.

    July 16
  • Ameriprise Financial finalized a $440 million deal to purchase J&W Seligman in the fourth quarter. The addition of Seligman will provide Ameriprise with addition outlets to sell its mutual funds and further improve its hedge fund business.

    July 11
  • Earlier this week, John Templeton sadly passed away at the age of 95. Templeton created the Templeton Growth Fund back in 1954, but many articles about his passing avoided this subject when they summarized his life.

    July 11
  • ING Group NV of the Netherlands has completed its $900 million purchase of CitiStreet LLC from Citigroup Inc. and State Street Corp.

    July 6
  • Back in 2005, the chances that Amvescap, now Invesco, would make a 360-degree turnaround seemed virtually impossible, but with a little bit of time and the addition of Martin Flanagan as chief executive officer, the unlikely actually occurred, Institutional Investor reports.

    July 2
  • Bowne & Co. recently acquired Capital Systems for $13 million.

    July 2
  • Cash-strapped banks are hoping the Federal Reserve will loosen restrictions keeping private-equity firms from giving them capital, according to The Wall Street Journal.

    June 27
  • Capital One Funds’ board has approved a transfer of assets from each of its six fund portfolios to comparable funds at Fidelity, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The agreement, pending shareholder approval, would go into effect in October.

    June 24
  • Goldman Sachs and Deloitte & Touche LLP announced they had finalized plans to unload a portion of a $7 billion structured investment vehicle, which was set up by U.K. hedge fund manager Cheyne Capital Management LLP, according to a recent report by Bloomberg.

    June 20
  • As JPMorgan Chase begins to remove the Bear Stearns name from its buildings, the firm is taking the opportunity to enhance its own brand identity, The New York Times writes.

    June 16
  • Julius Baer Americas, a subsidiary of the Swiss wealth manager Julius Baer Holding Ltd., has changed its name to Artio Global Investors Inc.

    June 16
  • In a conference call Thursday morning, Boston-based Putnam Investments announced that Robert L. "Bob" Reynolds will succeed Charles E. "Ed" Haldeman to become the firm's president and chief executive officer. Haldeman plans to stay on board and will take on a new role as the chairman of Putnam Investment Management, LLC.

    June 12
  • NEW YORK – Timothy Geithner, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, called for substantial reforms to the structure of the regulatory system of the U.S.

    June 9
  • Wachovia Corp. says its retail retirement group is drawing assets by having advisers work face to face with customers at every income level to create a retirement plan.

    June 6
  • On Thursday, San Francisco’s Forward Management LLC unveiled its latest plan to acquire Seattle’s Accessor Capital Management LLC.

    June 4
  • Despite strict guidelines and barriers within China, which tend to turn off global fund houses from conducting business, Fidelity International recently announced that it is ready and willing to pursue joint ventures there sometime in the near future.

    May 27
  • Wachovia Corp. plans to phase out the 121-year-old A.G. Edwards name, sacrificing a strong brand for a stronger one.

    May 26
  • Including lift-outs and partial deals, investment firms have shelled out more than $50 billion so far this year to acquire mutual fund companies and other asset management firms, in a record 241 deals this year, according to Jefferies Putnam Lovell, a division of Jefferies.

    May 15
  • WASHINGTON - The credit crisis is 75% to 85% unwound in terms of the financial markets, but the economy may still be on shaky ground, Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase told the 1,500 delegates assembled here for the Investment Company Institute’s 50th GMM.“I would say this thing has largely already worked its way through. It probably won’t get worse at this point. Increased capital requirements will take about six months longer” to bring markets and counter-party risk tolerance back to normalcy, Dimon said.However, he was quick to add: “The recession, I don’t know. To paraphrase Yogi Berra, it’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”Markets perform in cycles, Dimon reminded executives, listing the 2001 technology bubble, Long Term Capital Management’s overleveraged exposure to Russia in 1997, the real estate and savings and loan crisis of 1990, overvalued earnings in 1987 and the subsequent stock market crash, the recession of 1982 and the oil shortages in 1974.
“The difference in this one is it’s a housing crisis,” said Dimon, who included among those to blame for the subprime crisis those mortgage bankers who failed to properly verify borrowers’ income or appraisers’ real estate assessments.Dimon also praised the government for its swift action in bailing out Bear Stearns and a cadre of more than 1,000 investment bankers at his own firm who, after he got “the Thursday telephone call” about whether or not to purchase the ailing firm, spent the entire weekend performing due diligence on the deal.In answer to a question from an audience member, Dimon exhorted mutual fund executives to continue to bring innovative products to market but to be extremely cautious when doing so.As an example, Dimon said, collateralized debt obligations, CDO warehouses and structured investment vehicles that invested in subprime mortgages are so complex that to try to assess the price in one such instrument, JPMorgan ran a Monte Carlo simulation on one of its mainframe computers for seven hours.Questionable mark-to-market policies also factored into the subprime troubles, he added. But that said, Dimon said he is tired of being “vilified” by the media for bailing out Bear Stearns or operating a bank that itself sold subprime mortgages and products derived from them. And as to banks’ role in making credit and loans too available to the American public, Dimon stressed that the consumers of subprime CDOs and other structured products over the past two years, have largely been institutional and not retail investors.The ICI booked Dimon’s appearance many months ahead of JPMorgan’s recent preeminent role in partnering with the government on the Bear Stearns deal, noted Edward Bernard, chairman of the ICI’s General Membership Meeting Planning Committee, and vice chairman of T. Rowe Price Group.“We thank Mr. Dimon for honoring his commitment” at this exceptionally busy time, Bernard said.

    May 9