Weather Tonight: 11°c Clear Night Morning: 20°c Mostly cloudy

Business

HEADLINES:
Michael Dobson
Crunched: Michael Dobson

Schroders' funds suffer a £9bn blow

Robert Lea
08.08.08

The credit crunch has taken a bite out of Schroders, as private investors keep their hands in their pockets or quit the market completely.

The fund manager, private banking and private-equity firm, one of the biggest names in the City, said today that its funds under management are £9 billion lighter than they were at the start of the year and its profits have dived 27% for the first half of the year.

Chief executive Michael Dobson warned: "We expect retail investor demand for mutual funds to be increasingly affected by the volatility of financial markets.

"This will have a negative impact on revenues in our retail business."

Schroders said it was seeing rising redemptions of investments and " significant outflows" in Europe, as investors take their money out of shares on bourses around the Continent.

In a statement Schroders said: "As expected, falling equity markets and high levels of volatility have had a significant impact on retail investor demand, and industry flows out of equity mutual funds continued in the second quarter."

At 30 June, funds under management had fallen to £130 million from £139 billion at the end of 2007.

While new business wins from institutional clients was up 28% in its asset management business, net outflows from those clients totalled £1.1 billion in the six months. In the profit and loss account a 10% rise in profits to £136 million from Schroders' asset management business, and a near-50% leap in profits to £22 million in its revitalised private banking business, were wiped out by the performance of its venture capital investments.

Its private-equity business raised profits of just £7 million in the half year, down from £36 million in the same period last year. This reflected "fewer opportunities to exit from long-standinginvestments," said a spokesman . Schroders also booked a £30 million writedown on seed capital investments in start-ups and on certain bond investments.

First-half pre-tax profits were £50 million lower, at £135 million.

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 

Business blog

Mickey Clark
Mickey Clark - Business
Thorny issue for Sir Stuart Rose
Market Roundup
THURSDAY UPDATE

Bullish Next boss forecasts happier days on High Street

Has the wind of change start to blow through the High Street? Next chief executive David Keens popped into Goldman Sachs for a chat and was in bullish mood

More



City Spy, cityspy@standard.co.uk

City Spy: Is Barclays on the right track here?

Barclays Capital boss Bob Diamond's mission to take over America continues, following the purchase of the US arm of Lehman Brothers and his move from London back to his native land

More

Reader Rewards

Check out today's special offers and discounts for regular readers.

Read More...