JPMorgan Chase & Co expects to liquidate or spin off much of the asset management arm of Bear Stearns after it takes over Bear next month, people familiar with the situation said last night.
Bear Stearns Asset Management (BSAM), which during the past year generated more bad news than revenues, has about 400 employees and managed $39 billion in investments at the end of February.
On Monday, JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon told a UBS investor conference he expected the bank would close down "big parts of Bear's asset management business."
Ultimately, the sources said, roughly one-third of Bear's asset management employees are expected to get job offers from JPMorgan. Some funds with strong track records will be spun off to their management teams.
JPMorgan and Bear Stearns declined to comment.
Meanwhile, JPMorgan, which is eager to add on Bear's brokerage business, will shut private client brokerage operations in London and Hong Kong over the next two months.
About 10 brokers plus support staff in London and about eight employees in Hong Kong will lose jobs as a result, the sources said.
The moves mark a change in strategy since March 16th, when JPMorgan cited Bear's "broad asset management capabilities" as a selling point for its hastily arranged fire-sale takeover.
BSAM was at the epicenter of last year's subprime mortgage meltdown.