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Japan's Dai-Ichi Life to take 15% stake in British insurer M&G

Japan's Dai-Ichi Life to take 15% stake in British insurer M&G

PARIS/LONDON: Japanese insurer Dai-ichi Life will take a 15% stake in British financial group M&G and has agreed a long-term partnership, sending shares in M&G sharply higher and marking the latest overseas foray by a Japanese firm.
The tie-up, in which Dai-ichi Life becomes M&G's biggest single shareholder, is expected to deliver at least $6 billion of new business for M&G and $2 billion of new business for Dai-ichi Life over the next five years, M&G said on Friday.
M&G shares rose more than 8% in early trading, hitting their highest since June 2021. The stock was last up nearly 6% at 1050 GMT.
M&G CEO Andrea Rossi told Reuters the agreement would help the firm accelerate growth in Asia via Dai-ichi Life's distribution network. He said the Japanese firm would also help fuel the growth of its European private markets business.
M&G has been seen as a takeover target in the past, but Rossi said the tie-up would strengthen M&G's competitive position as a standalone firm.
'I can see us having a great independent future in front of us,' he said.
The two companies will 'pursue opportunities to co-invest in new asset management capabilities' under the tie-up, and M&G will become Dai-ichi Life's preferred asset management partner in Europe.
Asset management has seen a spate of consolidation and collaboration deals in recent years as firms try to bulk up in order to compete with U.S. giants like BlackRock and Vanguard.
Japanese firms have also become more active in the insurance and asset management market outside of Japan, with British rival Legal & General announcing a tie-up with Meiji Yasuda in February, while DWS is in talks to form a joint venture with Nippon Life in India, Reuters reported this month.
Under the deal, Dai-ichi Life will have the right to appoint a director to the board of M&G for as long as it holds at least a 15% shareholding, the British company said.
In 2023 M&G was linked with a potential bid by Australia's Macquarie, which the British money manager at the time dismissed as speculative. Active asset managers have come under pressure from inflation and from investors turning to passive investment funds, which charge lower fees.
M&G reported an unexpected rise in annual profit in March, helped by cost-cutting and growth in its asset management business.
Dai-ichi Life earlier in May said it would raise its stake in UK-based Capula Investment Management to 15%, from just under 5%, and in April agreed to buy a 15.1% stake in Australian investment manager Challenger for around $550 million.

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