The offers value the unit, which includes PE firms and a brokerage business, at around $5 bn.
Lehman Brothers Holdings has received bids for its asset management unit from private equity firms, including Bain Capital LLC and Clayton Dubilier & Rice Inc, according to people familiar with the situation.
The bids value the unit - which includes the Neuberger Berman fund business, private-equity funds and a brokerage firm serving wealthy individuals - at approximately $5 billion, the people, who asked not to be named due to the private nature of the auction. KKR & Co, which was weighing an offer, hadn’t made a bid by the 5 pm deadline, the buyout firm told people involved in the process.
On September 10, Lehman said it would sell 55 per cent of the investment unit, part of Chief Executive Officer Richard Fuld’s plan to keep the 158-year-old firm independent.
After its shares dropped by 53 per cent in the next two days, Fuld, 62, began talks with companies, including Bank of America Corp, to sell all of Lehman, potentially derailing the investment-management auction.
Also Read
“It’s still going to be a premier property,” said Eric Weber, a managing director of Freeman & Co, a New York-based financial-services consulting firm. “Three years from now, you can take it public, if you can get your hands on it.”
Hellman & Friedman LLC, the San Francisco-based buyout firm started by Warren Hellman, may also have submitted a bid, according to the people. Representatives for Lehman and the private-equity firms declined to comment.
Revenue of $2.3 billion
The buyout companies are angling to own a business with assets of $273 billion headed by former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. banker George Walker, 39. The New York-based firm proceeded with the auction because the private-equity firms continued to express interest in a deal, according to the people. While Lehman aimed to complete the sale by late next month, the process may be disrupted by a takeover of the company, perhaps as soon as this weekend.
The private-equity firms may get the investment business at a discount. Lehman’s asset-management unit earned $361 million on $2.3 billion of revenue this year through August, according to a Sanford Bernstein research note at that time. The report valued the unit at $7 billion, including stakes in hedge-funds not included in the sale.
Lehman announced on Sept. 10 a $3.9 billion loss, the biggest in its history, after $5.6 billion of writedowns on real-estate loans and mortgages. The stock has fallen more than 94 per cent this year and is valued below $3 billion, less than St. Petersburg, Florida-based Raymond James Financial Inc., the largest regional brokerage firm.
Private-equity firms like Blackstone Group LP and Carlyle Group had weighed bids for the investment unit and opted to stay out of the auction, according to people familiar with the process.