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JPMorgan Hunts for Private Credit Firm to Grow in Hot Sector

JPMorgan's asset-management unit, which handles money for wealthy people and institutions including endowments and pension funds, is seeking to grow its private credit offerings.

 

(Bloomberg) -- JPMorgan Chase & Co. is on the hunt to buy a private credit firm to augment its $3.6 trillion asset management arm, as the biggest US bank makes more inroads into Wall Street’s buzziest sector.

The JPMorgan unit is seeking a private credit shop that could bolster its private capital business, according to people familiar with the matter. As part of the effort, the company held talks to buy Chicago-based Monroe Capital this year, but the two firms ultimately decided not to pursue a deal, the people said, asking not to be named describing private discussions.

Spokespeople for JPMorgan and Monroe declined to comment.

Interest in the $1.7 trillion private credit industry has exploded in recent years. Alternative-asset titans such as Ares Management Corp. and Apollo Global Management Inc. have poured money into ever-larger deals for their portfolios. Other investors, as well as banks themselves, are also keen to make more wagers.

JPMorgan’s investment bank has already earmarked more than $10 billion of the firm’s balance sheet for direct lending. The bank is also putting together a partnership with asset managers to join it in private credit deals, Bloomberg previously reported.

Read more: JPMorgan, Citi Are Copying From the Private Credit Playbook

The asset-management unit, which handles money for wealthy people and institutions including endowments and pension funds, is seeking to grow its private credit offerings. It managed $17 billion in private credit assets at the end of last year — less than the nearly $19 billion in committed and managed capital that Monroe had as of April 1.

For a direct lender, selling to a big bank could have implications for its franchise. The business would jump from a less regulated corner of the financial industry to one that is subject to stringent rules and a patchwork of overseers. With that in mind, some private credit lenders have erred toward partnering with banks instead of combining with them.

While banks’ forays into private credit have the potential to leave them competing with their own traditional lending desks, it’s also a way to boost asset management fees and offer borrowers a range of options as tighter capital rules limit their lending in other areas. Proponents of private credit say that some borrowers prefer dealing with a few direct lenders rather than arranging a loan with a bank that can then be sold off to dozens of other firms.

‘Working on That’

A takeover would help JPMorgan’s asset management arm beef up quickly, but the company may ultimately decide to grow private credit offerings organically, one of the people said.

At an investor day Monday, senior JPMorgan leaders discussed Wall Street’s focus on the sector and JPMorgan’s efforts to build up a franchise on multiple fronts. The firm must “find a way on the fiduciary space, as we are finding in the non-fiduciary space, to get into private credit,” President Daniel Pinto said. He added that Mary Erdoes, longtime asset- and wealth-management head, and her team are “working on that.”

Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon had a different take: “We are not going to buy a private capital company,” he said in response to a question on the topic — only to quickly take it back.

His top deputies “should be thinking all the time, regardless of what I say,” Dimon said. “I mean that. I have an opinion, but if they came in and said we have a great thing that makes sense for us, then yeah, fine, we should do it.”

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