Last fall,
Tom Horton, chief financial officer of
AMR Corp. (commonly known as
American Airlines) -- the owner of
American Beacon Advisors -- openly discussed the option of spinning off the business during the airline's third quarter earnings conference call with Wall Street analysts. Now, it looks like Horton has heard the decision and the DC-focused asset manager is on the block again. The airline last shopped its fund arm in 2002 and 2003.
Multiple industry sources have told
The MFWire that a pitch book is already making the rounds to potential bidders.
Sought for comment, American Beacon Advisors chairman
Bill Quinn responded in an e-mail: "We never comment on speculative information."
Quinn relinquished the CEO post at American Beacon in January of 2008, when
Douglas Herring took over.
In October, Horton explained the rationale for spinning off or selling its stake in American Beacon Advisors.
"For each of these businesses, there are arguments for some type of value-enhancing activity, but there are also strategic and practical challenges," Horton told analysts at the time.
The sale, however, is not a foregone conclusion. American Airlines shopped American Beacon back in 2002, only to pull it off the block in 2003 after the appointment of then new CEO,
Gerald Arpy, who found the business line to be an essential part of a turnaround strategy at the airline.
For the 2002 sale effort, American Airlines hired
Salomon Smith Barney. Salomon is now, of course, part of Citigroup's Global Wealth Management unit. Whether Citi won the banking mandate this time around could not be learned. Also in 2002, news reports pegged
Yucaipa Companies, a Los Angeles-based private equity firm, as the top bidder. This time around another private equity firm might make the final list of potential purchasers.
American Beacon employs a sub-advised model for it's funds, utilizing the pension fund strategy of multiple sub-advisors for each fund. This means that if there is a change of control at the company some or all mandates may be up for grabs.
The current sub-advisors include:
Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss
BlackRock Advisors
Boston Company Asset Mgmt
Brandywine Global Investment Mgmt
Calamos Advisors
Causeway Capital Markets
Dreman Value Management
Franklin Advisers
Goldman Sachs Asset Mgmt
Hotchkis and Wiley Capital Mgt
Lazard Asset Management
Metropolitan West Capital Mgmt
Morgan Stanley Invst Mgmt
Nisa Investment Advisors
Opus Capital Management
Panagora Asset Management
Post Advisory Group
Pzena Investment Management
Renaissance Investment Management
SSgA Funds Management
Templeton Investment Counsel
The American Beacon funds were established in 1987 with AMR Investment Services (which became known as American Beacon Advisors in 2005) as the investment adviser. Its initial business consisted of the pension and defined contribution plans sponsored by the airline. As with other plan sponsor captive fund managers, the airlines strategy was to turn a cost center -- the oversight of its retirement plans -- into a profit center by marketing its expertise to other plan sponsors and related entities. American Beacon claimed $31.8 billion in AUM at the end of last year. 
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