Office address: 1331 Spring St NW, Atlanta, GA 30309
Website: invesco.com
Year established: 1935
Company type: financial services
Employees: 8,500+
Expertise: asset management, exchange-traded funds, mutual funds, private credit, real estate, fixed income, money market funds, retirement solutions, college savings, custom portfolios
Parent company: N/A
Key people: Andrew Schlossberg (CEO), Stephanie Butcher and Tony Wong (co-head of investments), Allison Dukes (CFO), Terri Houghton (global CoS), Shannon Johnston (chief information and operations officer), Jeffrey Kupor (general counsel)
Financing status: corporation
Invesco is an Atlanta-based independent investment firm with over $2.1 trillion in AUM. The firm provides investment options such as ETFs, mutual funds, private credit, and education savings to retail and institutional clients. It has a presence in more than 20 countries and clients in more than 120 countries.
Invesco began in 1935 in Atlanta, Georgia, and has developed into a worldwide investment company. The firm is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol IVZ.
The company has been active in Asia-Pacific since 1962. It has built a strong regional presence with 13 offices in eight key markets. In China, the firm works through a joint venture called Invesco Great Wall, which helps reach even more investors.
The company has always looked for ways to improve its services for clients. In 2024, the firm partnered with Vestmark to offer greater portfolio personalization and tax management for financial advisors.
This partnership brought new technology to help advisors create tax-efficient, customized portfolios for their clients. This makes it easier to transition legacy investments and diversify holdings.
In 2025, Invesco joined forces with Barings, the asset management arm of MassMutual, to expand private credit offerings for retail investors. This partnership combined Barings’ fixed income expertise with Invesco’s US wealth distribution network.
MassMutual, the company’s largest shareholder, committed $650 million to support this effort and aimed to deliver new income solutions for US investors. The firm continues to grow by building strong partnerships and delivering a wide range of investment solutions.
The company provides a broad selection of investment products and is known for its worldwide presence and diverse offerings:
The firm aims to help investors reach their goals with research-driven strategies and a broad product lineup.
According to Invesco, everyone is encouraged to lead and work as one team. The firm also highlights a culture where employees can do their best work and support each other, which connects to a range of benefits:
It also reports that it aims to create a workplace where all employees feel included and valued. The company backs employee-led groups such as:
These resource groups welcome all staff and reflect a range of backgrounds, experiences, and perspectives.
Andrew R. Schlossberg is the president and CEO of Invesco and serves on the board. Before this, Schlossberg led the Americas market and also managed Europe, Middle East, and Africa. He joined the firm in 2001 and holds degrees from the University of Delaware and Northwestern University.
The executive leadership team oversees the firm's strategy, operations, and client solutions across global markets:
This leadership group guides Invesco’s focus on delivering new opportunities for clients. Their combined experience helps the firm adapt and grow in global markets.
Invesco, through senior portfolio manager Kristina Campmany, increased short positions against the dollar as new US tariffs were set to launch in 2025. The firm’s fund manager aimed to shield client portfolios from possible losses tied to changing trade policies. This action highlighted the company’s focus on risk management and adapting strategies for clients as global markets shifted.
The company also agreed to sell intelliflo and spin off RedBlack, focusing both companies on their core markets. By making this move, the firm is sharpening its focus on wealth advisor relationships and supporting clients through ongoing partnerships. This decision allows it to concentrate on its main business while still connecting with technology providers that serve financial advisors.
A new iShares that is more heavily involved in actively managed exchange traded funds will likely emerge as the company changes hands, though some say it might be late to the party.
The stellar returns that junk bond funds are generating are unsustainable and will come to an end, fund managers and financial advisers agree, but they disagree on when that will be.
Actively managed exchange traded funds are finally starting to trickle into the market.
As might have been expected, the extreme nature of the economic downturn continues to spawn ways for investors to navigate the financial markets.
Stable-value funds are the safest investment option available to 401(k) plan participants, but recent problems at two funds illustrate why sponsors should exercise caution in selecting them, according to observers.
The government’s stress tests of banks have been shrugged off by the market, Bill Miller, chairman of Legg Mason Capital Management Inc., told the Investment Company Institute today.
Tom Turpin, chief executive of Old Mutual Asset Management, has left the firm just months after the firm's parent, Old Mutual PLC, said that it planned a partial initial public offering of the business.
Invesco PowerShares Capital Management LLC said today that it plans to close 19 of its current 135 exchange traded funds.
The possibility that Barclays' iShares exchange traded fund business could be sold to another big ETF provider, reducing competition by creating an industry behemoth, is worrying advisers.
Publicly traded asset management companies tend to lead market recoveries, but the fast and brutal decline in mutual fund assets makes the firms' ability to front a recovery doubtful.
Big-name mutual fund companies leery of jumping into exchange traded funds have finally received the signal that they need to make a major push into that arena.
Although financial advisers generally welcome new exchange traded funds that invest in municipal bonds, some industry experts question whether they are the best way to access such an opaque market.
States that have Section 529 college savings plans and the financial services companies that manage them are working overtime to make sure that advisers — who account for about 80% of their sales — remain interested in the product during the recession.