A $4.02-trillion-AUM (as of March 31) asset manager's 230-year-old, publicly traded parent is reportedly considering buying a 166-year-old, publicly traded multinational on the other side of the pond, one that also has a big asset management arm.
| Cyrus Taraporevala State Street Global Advisors Outgoing President, CEO | |
Boston-based
State Street is planning to bid for Zurich-based
Credit Suisse,
Inside Paradeplatz reports. According to the Swiss publication, State Street has 40,000 employees, while Credit Suisse has more than 51,000. Credit Suisse has a market cap of $17.129 billion, while State Street has a market cap of $25.382 billion.
Since that report,
Thomas Gottstein, Credit Suisse's CEO, has
reportedly called the deal talk "really stupid." Yet the State Street folks are
reportedly not responding to the deal talk.
State Street is an institutional bank and the parent of State Street Global Advisors (
SSGA), a giant institutional asset manager with a big ETF business, too. Credit Suisse, on the other hand, is an investment bank and private bank, with a $508-billion-AUM (as of September 30)
asset management arm (one eighth the size of SSGA).
The State Street-Credit Suisse deal talk now comes nine months after reports of SSGA
possibly combining with a $1.5627-trillion-AUM, publicly traded asset manager. A year ago there reports of several asset management
giants (including SSGA!) considering
bidding for Credit Suisse's asset management business, though Credit Suisse management previously
shared words of caution about asset management M&A. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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