Morgan Stanley said on Thursday it has agreed to acquire investment managerEaton Vance in a cash-and-stockdeal worth $7 billion.- "Eaton Vance is a perfect fit for Morgan Stanley," CEO James Gorman said, adding that the asset manager will add more fee-based revenues to its investment banking and institutional securities franchise.
- The deal is part of the Wall Street firm's push to acquire companies across a number of platforms, including equity and fixed income.
- Morgan Stanley closed a $13 billion acquisition with online brokerage eTrade last week.
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Morgan Stanley said on Thursday it had agreed to buy US asset manager Eaton Vance, in a deal worth $7 billion, advancing CEO James Gorman's push to strengthen the bank's businesses.
Boston-based Eaton Vance holds about $500 billion in assets under management. Under the deal, Morgan Stanley's investment-banking division will hold about $1.2 trillion of managed assets and over $5 billion in combined revenue.
"Eaton Vance is a perfect fit for Morgan Stanley," CEO Gorman said in a statement, and added that the deal advances its "strategic transformation by continuing to add more fee-based revenues."
The cash-and-stock deal is expected to close in the second quarter of 2021.
Under the agreement, Eaton Vance shareholders will receive a combination of cash and stock, or a total of $56.50 a share, and a one-time cash dividend of $4.25 a share before market closing.
Eaton Vance shares were up 44% in pre-market trading on Thursday, while Morgan Stanley was down 3%.
Morgan Stanley expects to cut about 4% of the group's combined expenses through the deal, thereby delivering $150 million in annual savings.
Business Insider's Meghan Morris reported last year that the bank was exploring acquisitions for both its wealth and investment management businesses. In an earnings call, CEO Gorman said Morgan Stanley could execute a "string of pearls-type acquisitions" and scale up its fixed-income platform over a couple of years by betting on not one, but a "series of answers."
The bank closed a $13 billion acquisition with online brokerage eTrade earlier this month. Last year, Morgan Stanley acquired stock-plan operator Solium Capital to add potential customers to its wealth management business.