Asset manager Victory Capital is adding to its bevy of investment strategies by acquiring a derivatives investment firm with $12 billion under management.
The Cleveland-based firm will acquire Harvest Volatility Management to build out its multi-boutique offerings, which include nine other investment franchises, according to Victory’s announcement Monday. The asset manager is paying $300 million for Harvest and plans to finance the deal with debt, equity, and cash on the balance sheet, its investor presentation shows.
“We’ve been following Harvest for quite a while, and have been talking with them about a deal through this calendar year,” Victory’s chief executive officer David Brown said by phone Monday. “They’re a super high-quality firm and they’re really experienced.”
Victory’s clients had been asking for a derivatives strategy, which is why the firm started looking at Harvest as a potential option for an acquisition, according to Brown. Harvest specializes in yield enhancement overlay, risk reduction, alternative beta, and absolute return investment strategies, according to the announcement.
Harvest was looking to do a deal as well.
“We knew that at some point, to achieve the growth on some of our newer products, we would have to find a buyer,” Harvest chief executive officer and co-founder Richard Selvala Jr. said by phone. “We’ve developed some great liquid alternatives for the institutional space and a suite of mutual funds. We’re too small and don’t have enough salespeople to give the products attention.”
Selvala said that Victory will be able to assist Harvest in selling its products so that he and his team of 17 can focus on investing.
“As successful as they’ve been, there’s a real opportunity for their product set to grow by bringing on more clients,” Brown said. “By them partnering with us, the investment professionals will spend all of their time on investing.”
[II Deep Dive: Asset Managers Cashing in on Merger Madness]
Victory has obtained $265 million of committed bank financing for the acquisition, which is expected to close by the end of March, according to the presentation. The purchase will be accretive to earnings by 15 percent or more in 2019, the document shows.
Under terms of the deal, Harvest’s investment team and investment process will remain in place. The firm will maintain its proprietary technology platform but use Victory’s centralized operations and distribution platform, according to the investor presentation.
“We think it’s the right fit,” Selvala said. “We’re going to be impactful for Victory, and Victory will be impactful for us.”
Once the deal closes, Victory will manage roughly $75 billion, based on assets under management at the end of July, according to the announcement. Other investment strategies offered by the multi-boutique firm include quantitative, fixed income, emerging markets, and actively managed equities, its website shows.
Brown said that Victory is open to doing more acquisitions to add to expand its investment offerings.