It once seemed to make sense that owning an asset management business would provide a bank with diversification. The steady stream of revenue would mitigate or offset the choppiness of trading or investment banking revenues.
“These days, that model doesn’t look so smart,” says Richard Phillipson, director of institutional consulting at Investit, a consultancy to the investment management industry. “During this crisis, both investment banks and many fund managers will not have made a profit. With two downturns in a decade (that of 2000 to 2003 and from 2007), investing and savings projections and market levels that were used in fund management models just have not happened.”
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