Another Japanese giant may soon buy into the U.S. mutual fund business, this time on the West Coast.
Nippon Life Insurance is in talks to buy a 20 to 30 percent stake in Los Angeles-based
TCW from
Carlye Group,
Nikkei Asian Review,
Pensions & Investments, and
Reuters all report. And the
Wall Street Journal reports that the bidders also include
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group.
Earlier this year
Japan Times reported that Nippon Life president
Yoshinobu Tsutsui is specifically interested in acquiring U.S. asset managers and life insurers.
The TCW deal price tag could rang from 50 billion to 100 billion yen, according to
Nikkei, which translates to between $444 million and $888 million. For a 20 to 30 percent stake, that implies an overall valuation of TCW of between $1.48 billion ($444 million for a 30 percent stake) and $4.44 billion ($888 million for a 20 percent stake). TCW, which is known for fixed income investing, had $196.7 billion in AUM as of June 30, so the rumored price range values the company at between 0.75 and 2.26 percent of AUM.
Private equity giant Carlyle, through a pair of its funds,
bought about 60 percent of TCW four years ago, leaving about 40 percent in the hands of TCW management. The terms of that deal were not disclosed, though reports since then have pegged the price tag at about $700 million. Thus, the rumored Japanese deal now would entail Carlyle selling between one-third and one-half of its stake and would turn TCW's management into the company's biggest shareholder block. The
WSJ notes that, thanks to their big stake, management would have a say in any deal and that, despite
longrunning IPO rumors, management has "resisted a potential initial public offering." TCW is currently led by president and CEO
David Lippman and chairman
Marc Stern.
Sale rumors, partial or complete, should not be a surprise. Carlyle is a financial backer, and private equity firms typically don't hold their investments for too long if they have a choice, with seven years often being the theoretical maximum. Conventional wisdom is that private equity-backed companies are, to some extent, usually always for sale, passively if not actively.
Regarding TCW in particular,
MFWire heard rumors as recently as this summer that Carlyle has had TCW on the block for some time. A source familiar with the situation claimed that management wants TCW to remain independent and that they have "nixed the idea of being consolidated into another company," which lent more credence to the IPO option. Yet there's no real pressure to sell, that source said, except from Carlyle.
"[TCW management is] not hurting for money," that source told
MFWire. "What they care about is autonomy."
If a deal goes down, TCW would not be the only big U.S. fund firm with a sizable minority stake held by a Japanese giant. Last year Nomura
bought 41 percent of American Century. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
Stay ahead of the news ... Sign up for our email alerts now
CLICK HERE