Franklin Resources Inc. agreed to acquire asset manager Legg Mason Inc. for almost $4.5 billion in a deal that would create an active management investing giant.
Franklin will pay all cash for Legg Mason, the companies said in a statement Tuesday. The transaction values Legg Mason at $50 per share, a 23% premium to the Baltimore-based company’s share price Friday.
The transaction is another case of consolidation in the industry, as firms grapple with falling fees and the rising challenge from managers of index-tracking funds. In November, Charles Schwab Corp. agreed to buy TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. for about $26 billion; Janus Henderson Group and Standard Life Aberdeen were both formed in mergers in 2017.
Tuesday’s announcement comes less than a year after activist investor Trian Fund Management took a 4.5% stake in Legg Mason, enough to secure its founder Nelson Peltz a position on the board.
Just days later, the fund manager said it would cut about 12% of its staff and reduce its executive committee to four from eight members. Mr. Peltz said at the time his three top priorities were “significantly reducing costs, driving revenue growth organically and through acquisition, and increasing profitability.”
The combined companies will have $1.5 trillion in assets under management. Franklin will also assume about $2 billion in Legg Mason debt.
“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,” Greg Johnson, executive chairman of the board of Franklin Resources, said in a statement.
Legg Mason closed down less than 1% to $40.72 on Friday, giving the company a market value of about $3.5 billion.
Asset and wealth managers are facing unprecedented pressures on their bottom lines as investors increasingly pull money from actively managed funds and move them to cheaper passive ones that track benchmarks. The flood of money out of active and into passive funds has sent fees grinding lower, led to thousands of job cuts and forced large-scale consolidation.
Among other changes, Banco de Sabadell agreed in January to sell its asset-management business to Amundi for 430 million euros ($466 million), while GAM Holding considered a sale of the company last year. On Monday, Jupiter Fund Management agreed to acquire rival U.K. asset manager Merian Global Investors.
Tuesday’s announced deal is complementary because Legg Mason primarily focuses on retail investors, while Franklin Resources caters to institutional investors.
Advisors can set their practice apart and win more business with a powerful graphic describing their unique business and value proposition.
The Labor Department's reversal from its 2022 guidance has drawn approval from crypto advocates – but fiduciaries must still mind their obligations.
With $750 million in assets and plans to hire a RIA Growth Lead, Autopilot is moving beyond retail to court advisors with separately managed accounts and integrations with RIA custodians such as Schwab and Fidelity.
Elsewhere on the East Coast, a Boca Raton-headquartered shop has acquired a fellow Florida-based RIA in "a natural evolution for both organizations."
After advising on nearly $700 million in retirement assets, 27-year veteran Greg Mykytyn is bringing his expertise in ESOP and 401(k) plans to the national RIA in Texas.
How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave
From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.