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Japan's Nomura buys 35 pct of Indian fund firm

MUMBAI
Sat Jul 11, 2009 8:57am EDT

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MUMBAI (Reuters) - Japan's Nomura (8604.T) has bought a 35 percent stake in LIC Mutual Fund in a deal which values the Indian fund firm at 8 billion rupees ($163 million).

The deal gives Nomura an entry into one of the fastest growing mutual fund markets and offers LIC Mutual Fund, which is largely a debt manager, international exposure and equity fund management expertise.

"It is very important to have a local partner with a strong reputation here. Life Insurance Corp is the best brand in India with respect to customer confidence," said Takumi Shibata, deputy president and chief operating officer of Nomura Holdings.

The deal values the Indian fund firm, a unit of state-owned Life Insurance Corp, at about 2.5 percent of average assets of 324.1 billion rupees as at June.

The company, India's largest life insurer, is a household name in the country, managing $167 billion, and has sold more than 200 million individual life policies.

The valuation is lower than the 4-5 percent that most Indian fund managers have fetched because more than 90 percent of LIC Mutual's assets are in low margin fixed-income funds, analysts said.

Nomura, which managed $192 billion in March under its fund management arm, already runs a brokerage, investment bank and a large back office in India.

Assets of Indian funds industry have risen by more than half over the past two years to 5.8 trillion, luring the likes of JPMorgan (JPM.N), South Korea's Mirae Asset and France's Axa (AXAF.PA).

More than 20 firms, including Credit Agricole (CAGR.PA) and UBS (UBSN.VX) are considering entering India's fiercely competitive fund market, forecast by Boston Consulting Group to manage $520 billion by 2015.

(Reporting by Narayanan Somasundaram; Editing by Anthony Barker)



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