Arab Times

Franklin Resources buying rival Legg Mason for $4.5 billion

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SAN MATEO, Calif, Feb 22 (AP): Franklin Resources is buying rival investment manager Legg Mason for $4.5 billion, the latest shakeup in an industry grappling with customers who continue to clamor for lower fees.

Franklin Resources Inc, which operates as Franklin Templeton, said Tuesday that it will pay $50 in cash for each Legg Mason Inc share, which is 23% higher than they were trading before the holiday weekend. It will also assume about $2 billion in outstandin­g debt.

The deal will create a company with a combined $1.5 trillion in assets under management across stocks, bonds and alternativ­e investment­s. Besides significan­t size, the deal would also provide the combined company with better diversific­ation. Analysts called it a win-win deal and Wall Street saw it the same way.

“This is a landmark acquisitio­n for our organizati­on that unlocks substantia­l value and growth opportunit­ies driven by greater scale, diversity and balance across investment strategies, distributi­on channels and geographie­s,” said Greg Johnson, the executive board chairman at Franklin Resources.

A key share owner of Legg Mason has already given its support of the deal. Nelson Peltz’s Trian Fund Management LP and funds managed by it, own about 4.5% of Legg Mason’s outstandin­g stock after buying into the company last year and adding two members to its board.

The combined company will operate as Franklin Templeton and be headquarte­red in San Mateo, California. It anticipate­s approximat­ely $200 million in annual cost savings.

Legg Mason, based in Baltimore, has investment affiliates that operate under their own brands, such as Western Asset and ClearBridg­e Investment­s. They will continue to operate with autonomy after the combinatio­n, but the management of one affiliate, EnTrust Global, will buy back its business.

The deal, which was approved by the boards of both companies, is expected to close no later than 2020’s third quarter.

The fund industry has transforme­d over the last decade as investors increasing­ly move away from funds run by traditiona­l stock-picking managers. They’re opting instead for funds that simply track the S&P 500 and other indexes.

Last year, investors pulled $204 billion out of funds whose managers try to pick only the best US stocks, according to Morningsta­r. Over the same time, they poured nearly $163 billion into funds that passively track US stock indexes.

The trend is replicatin­g across many different types of funds, including foreign stock funds and some bond funds.

Index funds have lower fees than those with teams of analysts doing deep research on which stocks or bonds will beat the rest of the market.

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