Concentration continues among the top 20 managers
ASIA, 19 October, 2020 – Assets under management (AuM) at the world’s 500 largest asset managers exceeded US$100 trillion for the first time in 2019 - totalling US$104.4 trillion - according to new research from the Thinking Ahead Institute. This represents an increase of 14.8% on the previous year when total AuM was US$91.5 trillion and an almost three-fold increase from US$35.2 trillion in 2000.
The research, conducted in conjunction with Pensions & Investments, a leading U.S. investment newspaper, confirms growing concentration among the top 20 managers whose market share increased during the period to 43% of total assets, up from 38% in 2000 and 29% in 1995. It also shows that, in the last decade, 232 asset manager names have dropped out of the ranking.
Reflecting the global position, the top 20 asset managers in Asia experienced a 57% increase in total AuM in 2019. The region’s continued importance to global asset management growth is underlined by the fact that Japan, at 24.9%, registered a larger increase in AuM than anywhere else in the world. This continues a longstanding trend in regional growth. Over the last five years, China experienced the biggest rise in AuM at 22.5%, closely followed by India at 11.9%, South Korea at 9.3%, Australia at 8.5% and Hong Kong at 9%.
Roger Urwin, co-founder of the Thinking Ahead Institute, said: “The investment industry has always been dynamic, but the pace of change is speeding up, manifested notably through consolidation. In addition, rapidly advancing technology is changing the shape of mandates and producing products that require less governance and are more streamlined. This has led to the growth of passive and index tracking, factor-based strategies and solutions. Private markets have also continued a significant growth trend in the last decade, during which investors have sought higher returns involving higher risk.”
According to the research, passively managed assets in the survey grew to US$7.9 trillion in 2019, up from US$4.9 trillion in 2015.
Roger Urwin said: Most asset management processes, including investment, operating and decision-making, are also having to evolve. This is being driven by, in particular, asset owners seeking the benefits of outsourcing; the increased use of the Total Portfolio Approach, especially when targeting absolute return; and the use of index tracking in ETFs, where there is an active choice of the index.”
Jayne Bok, Head of Investments, Asia, at Willis Towers Watson, said: “Asia’s asset managers continue to experience rapid growth compared to their peers in other markets across the globe, with Japan and China leading the charge. However, there are choppy waters ahead with markets increasingly volatile due to COVID-19, ongoing geopolitical tensions and the intensification of the climate emergency. There will be greater demand for Chinese equities and bonds in global portfolios.
But as asset managers in Asia continue their meteoric rise, they will need to create greater diversity and resilience in their business models as well as within their portfolios. The Asian asset managers who succeed at making the transition to regional or even global players, will be those who can tap global demand for Asian assets, invest in ongoing innovation and technology, and adapt to changing client expectations around ESG, societal impact, purpose, diversity and inclusion.”
Ranked by total assets under management, in U.S. millions, as of Dec. 31, 2019
Rank | Fund | Market | Total Assets |
---|---|---|---|
1 | BlackRock | U.S. | $7,429,632 |
2 | Vanguard Group | U.S. | $6,151,920 |
3 | State Street Global | U.S. | $3,116,424 |
4 | Fidelity Investments | U.S. | $3,043,134 |
5 | Allianz Group | Germany | $2,539,842 |
6 | J.P. Morgan Chase | U.S. | $2,364,000 |
7 | Capital Group | U.S. | $2,056,991 |
8 | BNY Mellon | U.S. | $1,910,000 |
9 | Goldman Sachs Group | U.S. | $1,859,000 |
10 | Amundi | France | $1,617,280 |
11 | Legal & General Group | U.K. | $1,568,891 |
12 | Prudential Financial | U.S. | $1,550,982 |
13 | UBS | Switzerland | $1,413,000 |
14 | BNP Paribas | France | $1,257,603 |
15 | Northern Trust | U.S. | $1,231,300 |
16 | Invesco | U.S. | $1,226,173 |
17 | T. Rowe Price | U.S. | $1,206,800 |
18 | Wellington Mgmt. | Canada | $1,154,735 |
19 | Morgan Stanley | U.S. | $1,131,824 |
20 | Wells Fargo | U.S. | $1,091,100 |
Ranked by total assets under management, in U.S. millions, as of as of 31 Dec 2019
2019 Asia Rank | 2019 Global Rank | Fund | Market | Total Assets |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 25 | Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Holdings | Japan | $928,145 |
2 | 31 | Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group | Japan | $780,655 |
3 | 37 | Nippon Life Insurance1 | Japan | $688,267 |
4 | 53 | Dai-ichi Life Holdings | Japan | $508,603 |
5 | 55 | Asset Management One | Japan | $490,837 |
6 | 56 | Nomura Asset Mgmt. | Japan | $488,788 |
7 | 60 | Macquarie Group | Australia | $412,127 |
8 | 67 | Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance2 | Japan | $352,593 |
9 | 68 | Shinkin Central Bank1 | Japan | $351,954 |
10 | 78 | Sumitomo Life Insurance | Japan | $302,726 |
11 | 89 | CCB Principal Asset Mgmt. | China | $231,822 |
12 | 95 | Samsung Group | South Korea | $218,002 |
13 | 100 | E Fund Mgmt. | China | $205,077 |
14 | 102 | Agricultural Bank of China | China | $200,912 |
15 | 103 | CITIC Securities | China | $199,590 |
16 | 108 | ICBC Credit Suisse Asset Mgmt. | China | $184,599 |
17 | 111 | Resona Holdings | Japan | $174,110 |
18 | 112 | China Asset Mgmt. | China | $171,600 |
19 | 115 | Harvest Fund Mgmt. | China | $169,518 |
20 | 119 | IFM Investors | Australia | $163,248 |
The Thinking Ahead Institute was established in January 2015 and is a global not-for-profit investment research and innovation member group made up of engaged institutional asset owners and service providers committed to changing and improving the investment industry for the benefit of the end saver. It has 45 members around the world and is an outgrowth of Willis Towers Watson Investments’ Thinking Ahead Group, which was set up in 2002.
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 growth. With roots dating to 1828, Willis Towers Watson has 45,000 employees serving more than 140 countries and markets. We design and deliver solutions that manage risk, optimise 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.
1 As of March 31, 2019
2 As of March 31, 2020