Fundsters interested in the fate of
AllianceBernstein [
see profile] may want to
take a look at
Bloomberg or
BusinessWeek. This week
Charles Stein penned a report (one version on
Bloomberg
and then another via its magazine
sibling) on the efforts of
Peter Kraus, chairman and
CEO, to reverse AllianceBernstein's fortunes after the financial
crisis. One version highlights the $52 million pay package
AllianceBernstein used to bring Kraus on-board in December 2008.
| Peter Kraus AllianceBernstein Chairman and CEO | |
"Asset management companies aren't built overnight and they don't
decline overnight," Kraus told Stein. "What we are doing is
executing. We are out there hitting singles."
It seems AllianceBernstein's woes are more institutional than retail
in nature -- according to the firm, on February 28 57 percent of its
assets were institutional, 27 percent retail and the remaining 16
percent high net worth. (Stein notes that investors (particularly
institutional equity investors) pulled $126 billion from
AllianceBernstein between December 31, 2008 and December 31, 2010.
Kraus expects future returns to "be consistent and better than the
competition," though Stein worries that AllianceBernstein's recent
performance has been rough. And
Cogent Research principal
Christy White claimed that AllianceBernstein came in last in a
brand loyalty survey of institutional investors.
Mutual fund industry consultant
Burt Greenwald,
AllianceBernstein spokesman John Meyers,
Morningstar analyst
Katie Rushkewicz,
Macquarie USA analyst
Roger
Smith,
Gabelli analyst
Macrae Sykes, and
Axa
Financial [Axa owns most of the publicly-traded
AllianceBernstein] spokesman Chris Winans all weighed in for the
article. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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