Family Office
Merrill ups stake in Indian securities house

Wirehouse to take control of DSP Merrill Lynch; delisting
planned. Merrill Lynch plans to take control of India’s DSP
Merrill Lynch. The New York-based wirehouse will pay around $500
million to increase its 40% ownership of the Mumbai-based
brokerage house to as much as 90%. Merrill says the bigger stake
will help it stay the course as a leading securities firm in
India – a country whose growing affluence is attracting interest
from other global players as well.
Merrill will make an offer for the publicly traded shares of DSP
Merrill Lynch and then apply to have the company delisted from
the Bombay Stock Exchange. DSPML Fund Managers, a wholly-owned
asset management subsidiary of DSP Merrill Lynch, will continue
to be operated as a joint venture with DSPML owning 40% of it,
and DSP Merrill Lynch chairman Hemendra Kothari and “related
entities” controlling the remainder.
Kothari will stay on as chairman of DSP Merrill Lynch after the
transaction, become a vice chairman of London-based Merrill Lynch
International and take a seat on Merrill’s Asia-Pacific executive
management committee.
Tremendous confidence
“We have tremendous confidence in Hemendra Kothari and the
talented team at DSP Merrill Lynch,” Merrill CEO Stan O'Neal says
in a press release. “As a result of this change we will be able
to accelerate our plans for growth in this robust market.”
Citing Merril’s “global distribution network, product
capabilities, client franchise, infrastructure, and highly
regarded brand,” Kothari describes Merrill as “an excellent
partner for DSP over the last 20 years.”
DSP Merrill Lynch was known as DSP Financial Consultants Limited
before it linked up with Merrill in the mid 1980s. It was founded
in 1975.
Merrill’s move on DSP reflects a growing interest in India. A few
months ago France’s BNP Paribas Asset Management (BNP PAM) said
it planned to buy 49.9% of Indian fund manager Sundaram Asset
Management, a subsidiary of Mumbai-based Sundaram Finance. Late
in 2004 Societe Generale, another French firm, paid $36 million
for 37% of SBI Funds Management.
Private wealth in India increased 123% to $177 billion in the
five years through 2003, according to Datamonitor, a London-based
research firm. Two thirds of that – about $116 billion – was in
the hands of 620,000 “mass affluent” and high-net-worth
individuals. (In India mass-affluent individuals have investable
assets of between $50,000 and $299,000; high-net-worth
individuals have at least $300,000 to invest.) Datamonitor sees
that population growing to just short of 1 million by 2008, by
which time their collective assets will have increased nearly
twofold to something in the neighborhood of $200 billion.
–FWR
.