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Assets of world’s largest fund managers passes US$80 trillion for the first time

But increasing US dollar strength dampens growth in Australia

October 30, 2017

While assets have returned to growth for the world’s largest fund managers, the increasing strength of the US dollar has had a dampening effect on the growth rate for Australian managers in Willis Towers Watson’s Global 500 survey.
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SYDNEY, Monday 30 October 2017 – Total assets under management (AuM) of the world’s largest 500 managers grew to US$ 81.2 trillion in 2016, representing a rise of 5.8% on the previous year, according to latest figures from Willis Towers Watson’s Global 500 research.

The research, which takes into account data up to the end of 2016, found that AuM for North American managers increased by 7.7% over the period and now stand at US$ 47.4 trillion, whilst assets managed by European managers, including the UK, increased by 2.8% to US$ 25.8 trillion. However, UK-based firms saw AuM decline for the second consecutive year, falling by 4.5% in 2016 to US$ 6.3 trillion.

In Australia, it’s particularly evident that the increasing strength of the US dollar has generally had a dampening effect on the gth rate in assets recorded by the asset managers in the survey.

Although the majority of total assets1 (78.4%) are still managed actively, its share has declined from 79.7% from end of last year as passive management continues to make inroads. 

Dania Zinurova, director of manager research at Willis Towers Watson Australia, said: “It is encouraging to see a return to gth in total global assets, suggesting that managers are finding success in attracting investors towards innovative solutions to achieve superior risk-adjusted returns. Whilst passive assets remain significantly smaller than actively managed assets, the proportion of passively managed assets has gn from 16.5% to 21.6% over the last five years alone. We expect that this trend will continue to put downward pressure on traditional fee structures, particularly amongst active managers seeking to remain competitive and to maximise value to investors.”

The 20 largest asset managers experienced a 6.7% increase in AuM, which now stands at US$ 34.3 trillion, compared to US$ 26.0 trillion ten years ago and US$ 20.5 trillion in 2008. The share of total assets managed by this group of 20 largest managers increased for the third year in a , rising from 41.9% in 2015 to 42.3% by the end of 2016. Despite this, the bottom 250 managers experienced a superior gth rate in assets managed, rising by 7.3% over the year. Of the Australian-based managers, Macquarie Group remains among the Top 100 asset managers globally while Colonial First State moved to a lower rank of 102 on the global list.

As with previous years, equity and fixed income assets have continued to dominate, with a 78.7% share of total assets1 (44.3% equity, 34.4% fixed income), experiencing an increase of 3% combined during 2016. Continuing from the strong gth they experienced in 2015, assets1 in alternatives saw a 5.1% increase by the end of 2016, closely followed by equities at 4.1%.

Dania Zinurova said: “Alternatives continue to g in popularity with investors remaining under pressure to find effective means of diversification in an environment of lower expected returns from traditional asset classes. These strategies often come with greater complexity and require superior risk management. We see this as linked to the gth in assets managed by managers in the bottom half of our list, suggesting that investors favour smaller investment houses with specialist investment skills. Australian-based asset managers specialising in alternatives remain in a strong position. As indicated by our table below, showing the 21 Australian asset managers in the Global 500, including property groups such as Goodman Group, Lendlease Investment Management, Dexus Property Group, GPT Group and Charter Hall, alternatives in Australia continue to attract more capital from both domestic and overseas investors.

“Our research has also highlighted awareness in sustainable investing, with 78% of the firms surveyed acknowledging a ging interest from their clients for these sorts of strategies as they continue to look for ways to add value for clients.”  

Whilst BlackRock retains its position at the top of the manager rankings for the eighth consecutive year, further insight shows the main gainers, by rank, in the top 50 during the past five years include, Dimensional Fund Advisors (+31 [76 to 45]), Affiliated Managers Group (+20 [52 to 32]), Nuveen (+16 [36 to 20]), New York Life Investments (+15 [55 to 40]) and Schroder Investment Management, (+15 [59 to 44]).

The world's largest money managers

Ranked by total assets under management, in U.S. millions, as of Dec. 31, 2016

Rank Manager Country Total assets
1 BlackRock U.S. $5,147,852
2 Vanguard Group U.S. $3,965,018
3 State Street Global U.S. $2,468,456
4 Fidelity Investments U.S. $2,130,798
5 Allianz Group Germany $1,971,211
6 J.P. Morgan Chase U.S. $1,770,867
7 Bank of New York Mellon U.S. $1,647,990
8 AXA Group France $1,505,537
9 Capital Group U.S. $1,478,523
10 Goldman Sachs Group U.S. $1,379,000
11 Prudential Financial U.S. $1,263,765
12 BNP Paribas France $1,215,482
13 UBS Switzerland $1,208,275
14 Deutsche Bank Germany $1,190,523
15 Amundi France $1,141,000
16 Legal & General Group U.K. $1,099,919
17 Wellington Mgmt. U.S. $979,210
18 Northern Trust Asset Mgmt. U.S. $942,452
19 Wells Fargo U.S. $936,900
20 Nuveen U.S. $881,748

Source: P&I/Willis Towers Watson Global 500

Australian money managers in Willis Towers Watson Global 500 survey

Ranked by total assets under management, in U.S. millions, as of Dec. 31, 2016

Rank Global ranking  Manager Total assets
1 52 Macquarie Group $362,511
2 102 Colonial First State  $147,154
3 120 AMP Capital $119,476
4 182 BT Investment Management $60,699
5 193 QIC $57,453
6 203 IFM Investors $54,486
7 227 Challenger $47,230
8 269 Westpac Banking $34,974
9 275 Magellan Asset Management $33,612
10 318 Goodman Group $25,147
11 332 Vinva $23,000
12 341 Perpetual $22,356
13 346 Tactical Global Management $21,736
14 372  Lendlease Investment Management  $17,848
15 373 QBE $17,613
16 374 Platinum Asset Management $17,500
17 379 DEXUS Property Group $16,403
18 400 GPT Group $13,890
19 403 Charter Hall $13,730
20 471 Maple-Bn Abbott $9,074
21 481 Cooper Investors $8,671

Source: P&I/Willis Towers Watson Global 500

Footnotes

1 Based on a subset of asset managers in the 2016 ranking who provided relevant data for all years since 2012.

About Willis Towers Watson Investments

Willis Towers Watson’s Investments business is focused on creating financial value for institutional investors through its expertise in risk assessment, strategic asset allocation, fiduciary management and investment manager selection. It has over 900 colleagues worldwide, assets under advisory of over US$2.3 trillion and over US$87 billion of assets under management.

About Willis Towers Watson

Willis Towers Watson (NASDAQ: WLTW) is a leading global advisory, broking and solutions company that helps clients around the world turn risk into a path for gth. With roots dating to 1828, Willis Towers Watson has 40,000 employees serving more than 140 countries. We design and deliver solutions that manage risk, optimize benefits, cultivate talent, and expand the power of capital to protect and strengthen institutions and individuals. Our unique perspective allows us to see the critical intersections between talent, assets and ideas – the dynamic formula that drives business performance. Together, we unlock potential.

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