Family Office
Neuberger gets set to buy Lehman's trust companies

Manager to re-acquires estate-planning capabilities it had under
old regime. Neuberger Berman, formerly the asset-management
division of failed investment bank Lehman Brothers, has agreed to
buy Lehman's trust companies. The move gives Neuberger Berman the
wherewithal to provide trust, estate-planning and related
services to its wealth-management and smaller institutional
clients -- and do it using entities and personnel it's familiar
with.
Ideal home
Neuberger Berman will follow Lehman's practice of referring to
its trust companies in the singular for branding purposes. Lehman
Brothers Trust Company's president Robert Laughlin will lead
Neuberger Berman Trust Company once the deal is completed --
probably before this year is out.
"We are looking forward to continuing our partnership with the
talented professionals of the Trust Company, working together to
meet the needs of our clients," says Neuberger Berman's CEO
George Walker. "We and our clients have seen firsthand the value
the Trust Company provides, making this acquisition a logical and
important step for our firm."
New York-based Lehman Brothers Trust Company gives Neuberger
Berman a national licensed to provide trust services throughout
the U.S.; Wilmington, Del.-based Lehman Brothers Trust Company of
Delaware gives it access to coveted "Delaware trust"
asset-protection capabilities.
Linking up with Neuberger Berman "creates an ideal home for the
Trust Company," says Laughlin. "We look forward to continuing to
draw upon Neuberger Berman's considerable investment strengths
and a shared dedication to providing the highest level of client
service."
Past masters
About 200 of Neuberger Berman's executives and portfolio managers
-- led by Walker, who is a first cousin of forty-third U.S.
president George Bush -- recently acquired 51% of the firm from
the holding company established to disperse Lehman's assets for
the benefit of its creditors.
Private-equity firms Bain Capital Partners and Hellman & Friedman
came out with an offer of $2.15 billion for the asset manager
just weeks after Lehman's collapse in September 2008. But with
markets in freefall, they were in U.S. Bankruptcy Court within a
few months looking for a judge's OK to pay less. In a subsequent
court-run auction, the Neuberger Berman management group edged
out the venture firms' revised-down bid with an offer that came
to about $922 million after adjustments.
Politically connected private-equity giant Carlyle was sniffing
around Neuberger Berman at around the same time, but it dropped
out of contention just before the early-December deadline for
bids rolled around.
Neuberger Berman, at root a value investor, isn't saying what it
plans to pay Lehman's debt holders for the trust businesses.
New York-based Neuberger Berman is 70 years old. Lehman Brothers
acquired it in 2003 for $2.6 billion -- just four years after its
managers and employees hauled in approximately $334 million from
an IPO of 15% of its common stock. It managed $158 billion at the
end of June 2009 -- roughly 20% of that for high-net-worth
clients, 60% for institutions; the rest is handled by
unaffiliated intermediaries.
Neuberger Berman's co-founder Roy Neuberger, who is retired,
celebrated his 106th birthday a few days ago. -FWR
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