Why your super-rich fund manager is facing oblivion

fund managers
fund managers

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“It’s been tough for the industry to remain relevant through all the change,” says Martin Gilbert, who founded Aberdeen Asset Management and guided it through several transformative mergers before stepping back in 2019 after nearly four decades. His firm has since had to struggle on without him – and its vowels after rebranding as Abrdn.

His view is hard to challenge. Today’s fund managers are no longer the masters of the universe they once were, driven by a range of factors combined to drain power away from an industry that was formerly the City of London’s crown jewel.

It is a story of new investment trends, ill-thought-through pension reforms, a struggling stock market, overzealous regulators and a growing culture of risk aversion in the UK. Add a dash of scandal, such as Neil Woodford’s dramatic fall from grace, and you have a toxic brew.

But it didn’t have to be this way.

The golden age

The ascendancy of fund managers can arguably be traced to December 1994, when most people were scratching their heads as to why Yasser Arafat was being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize and how East 17’s Stay Another Day could possibly be beating Mariah Carey in the Christmas charts.

There was similar incredulity in the City. But this was the result of SG Warburg’s revelation that it was about to be bought by the Wall Street bank Morgan Stanley.

Here, just eight years after Margaret Thatcher’s Big Bang of financial deregulation, was definitive proof that even the most celebrated corporate finance house in the UK, a constituent of the FTSE 100 no less, couldn’t hack it alone and was succumbing to foreign overtures.

But that wasn’t even the worst of it: within days the talks collapsed and the US business revealed it had only really wanted to get its hands on SG Warburg’s asset management business.

Sir Siegmund Warburg, who had founded the eponymous firm with Henry Grunfeld in 1946, was no doubt spinning in his grave. The German-born banker rarely bothered to hide his disdain for asset management, describing that side of the business as mere “share-pushing”.

His prejudice survived. A few years ago, one former employee told me: “Asset management was where you were sent if you failed in corporate finance.”

To distance itself, SG Warburg renamed its fund arm Mercury Asset Management and floated a quarter of the business in 1987. Just seven years later, the American barbarians at the gate were suggesting it was one of the choicest morsels in the City.

In 1995, SG Warburg was bought by Swiss Bank Corporation, starting the slow subsumption into what became UBS and allowing Mercury Asset Management to gain full independence. If you were trying to pinpoint the dawning of the UK fund management’s golden age, this would be a good candidate.