GAM assets slump 17.7 billion francs after director
suspension
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[October 23, 2018]
By John Miller and Oliver Hirt
ZURICH (Reuters) - Money manager GAM
Holding AG <GAMH.S> suffered a 17.7 billion Swiss francs ($18 billion)
slump in the value of its assets after the suspension of a top asset
manager prompted investors to withdraw billions of francs from its
funds, the company said on Tuesday.
Shares in the Swiss-based group slid more than 14 percent to 6.2 francs
in early trade, hitting their lowest level in nine years. They had
traded as high as 18.18 francs in January.
Investors withdrew a net 8.1 billion francs in the third quarter after
the group suspended absolute return bond fund (ARBF) director Tim
Haywood while it investigated possible misconduct.
It also liquidated 7.7 billion francs in funds he managed, and together
with usual market effects, group assets under management fell overall by
17.7 billion francs to 146.1 billion as at Sept. 30.
GAM suspended Haywood in July after questions arose about whether he
failed to conduct sufficient due diligence and make accessible some
internal records, sparking an investor exodus and hammering its shares.
"The consequences of the suspension of an ARBF investment director
marked a clear setback for GAM," Chief Executive Alexander Friedman said
in a statement on Tuesday.
"We are taking immediate and near-term measures to support GAM's
profitability," Friedman added. "We have a stable and diversified
business that we continue to build upon and we remain fully focused on
delivering the investment returns expected by our clients."
In a telephone interview, finance chief Richard McNamara told Reuters:
"We still saw net outflows in the first three weeks of October but ...
we saw a significant change in the trend compared to what we reported
for Q3".
Vontobel analyst Andreas Venditti said assets under management were
clearly below his bank's estimate.
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"Profit estimates are likely to decline but we need more information on the
actual amount of planned near-term cost actions to assess the impact," Venditti
said.
FIERCE CRITICISM
Asked about reports that GAM was speaking to potential buyers, Friedman told
Reuters the company remained open to all avenues that maximize value, but
declined to elaborate.
Friedman, who has faced fierce criticism from some investors about his handling
of the matter, insisted GAM had acted properly to address potential misconduct
even at the cost of short-term disruption.
He said he remained "100 percent committed" to his job but ultimately his
position was up to the board.
Friedman added the group's long-term financial targets remained valid. He and
McNamara declined to forecast the company's 2018 results or discuss its
potential dividend.
GAM targets an operating margin of between 35 and 40 percent and annualized EPS
growth or more than 10 percent over the business cycle.
GAM has begun liquidating nine funds with assets of 10.8 billion francs whose
trading it halted after suspending Haywood. Investors so far have been getting
all their money back, company officials said.
The group has said its decision to suspend Haywood was prompted by a tip from an
internal whistleblower. Haywood has not responded to requests for comment.
GAM has said Haywood may have breached the company's policy on the number of
signatures required on documents, used his personal email for work purposes, and
violated the company's gifts and entertainment policy.
(Additional reporting by Michael Shields; Editing by David Holmes)
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