mbi-logombi-logombi-logo-mobilembi-logo-mobile
  • Home
  • Agriculture
  • Business
  • Energy & Mining
  • Food
  • Healthcare
  • MPR News
  • National News
  • Retail
  • Tourism
✕
The Latest: Biden administration to send millions of masks
February 23, 2021
The Latest: Tennessee probe finds wasted vaccines
February 23, 2021

Wells Fargo sells asset management business for $2.1 billion

Wells Fargo will sell its asset management business to two private equity firms for $2.1 billion. The deal announced Tuesday is the first major sale of CEO Charlie Scharf’s drive to simplify the sprawling bank.

Chicago-based GTCR and New York-based Reverence Capital Partners will buy Wells Fargo Asset Management from the bank. Wells Fargo will hold on to 9.9% and remain involved as “client and distribution partner” of the asset manager, according to a bank press release.

“This transaction reflects Wells Fargo’s strategy to focus on businesses that serve our core consumer and corporate clients, and will allow us to focus even more on growing our wealth and brokerage businesses,” said Barry Sommers, the head of Wells Fargo’s wealth and investment management division, in a statement.

The transaction is expected to close in the second half of 2021.

Established in 1995, Wells Fargo Asset Management is chiefly the bank’s mutual fund business and manages $603 billion on behalf of institutions, financial advisors and individuals. It is separate from Wells Fargo’s private bank, Abbot Downing and Wells Fargo Advisors.

More than 1,500 people work for Wells Fargo Asset Management in 24 cities.

Milton Berlinski, the managing partner of Reverence Capital, said in a statement that he wants to expand the asset manager’s offerings as an independent company.

“As an independent organization, WFAM will pivot to the next phase of its growth,” Berlinski said.

The sale is the biggest exit of a business by Wells Fargo under Scharf.

Since he took over in 2019, Scharf has pledged to cut the size of the bloated and underperforming bank, including exiting businesses that Scharf thought weren’t core to Wells Fargo. Mutual funds, it is apparent, were not core.

Tuesday’s announcement follows the smaller sales of the bank’s private student loan portfolio in 2020 and Canadian direct equipment finance business this year.

Share

Related posts

March 24, 2023

Minnesota lawmakers likely to spend $100 million on broadband. How far will that go?


Read more
March 24, 2023

Settlement will wipe $6 billion in student loan debt — but not for these borrowers


Read more
March 21, 2023

Lawmakers consider influx of cash for Minnesota cities, counties facing inflation


Read more
✕

CATEGORIES

  • Agriculture
  • Announcements
  • Business
  • Business Focus
  • Energy & Mining
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Healthcare
  • MPR News
  • National News
  • Retail
  • Technology
  • Tourism

OUR MAGAZINE

Minnesota Business Insights is the premiere business web, digital and print media publication, built for entrepreneurs, visionaries, builders, and doers who are committed to growing the economy of the great state of Minnesota.

LATEST POSTS

  • Elon Musk sounds the alarm on real estate, warning a spike in defaults on mortgages and commercial loans could hammer banks
    March 27, 2023
  • Twitter and Apple are cracking down on return-to-office mandates. Other tech companies will likely start too.
    March 27, 2023

ADVERT

© 2020 Minnesota Business Insights. All Rights Reserved.