A trio of mutual fund firm mergers are nearing their respective finish lines, and a fourth isn't too far behind.
 |  |  |  | Richard M. Weil Janus Capital Group
 CEO
 |  | 
 
Last week shareholders of Denver-based 
Janus [
profile] and London-based 
Henderson [
profile] 
both approved the 
pending cross-Atlantic "merger of equals" of the two publicly-traded asset managers. Janus CEO 
Dick Weil and Henderson CEO 
Andrew Formica confirm that the deal, first 
unveiled in October is expected to go through on May 30. Formica and Weil will serve as co-CEOs of the combined company, which will be called Janus Henderson Global Investors. As of March 31, 2017, Janus Capital Group reports $204.7 billion AUM and Henderson manages $128.9 billion in assets. 
Meanwhile, word on the mutual fund industry street is that the close of Hartford-based, publicly-traded 
Virtus' [
profile] planned acquisition of Atlanta-based, private-equity-backed 
RidgeWorth [
profile] is just around the corner. Last week in its Q1 2017 earnings report Virtus 
revealed Q1 "acquisition and integration costs of $1.6 million" related to the RidgeWorth deal and confirmed that, as 
planned back when the deal was unveiled in December, the close is expected by the end of Q2. Virtus has an AUM of $48 billion as of March 31, 2017 while RidgeWorth manages approximately $40 billion in assets as of December 31, 2017. 
Watch for Paris-based, publicly-traded 
Amundi's purchase of Boston- and London-based, UniCredit-backed 
Pioneer [
profile] to also close by the end of this quarter. Last week in its Q1 2017 
earnings report Amundi 
revealed 3.5 million euros (about $3.82 million), net of tax, of "expenses related to the forthcoming integration of Pioneer Investments," which Amundi CEO 
Yves Perrier still expects to close by the end of Q2  as planned when Amundi 
unveiled the deal back in December.The Paris-based asset manager has €1,100 billion ($1198.59 billion) AUM while Pioneer manages €228.4 billion ($240.8 billion) as of December 31, 2016.
Meanwhile, Aberdeen, Scotland-based, publicly-traded 
Aberdeen [
profile] also 
released earnings 
last week, which 
Bloomberg describes as showing "slowing outflows and improving profitability as investors return to its emerging-market strategies." Aberdeen's 
impending merger with another publicly-traded Scottish giant, 
Standard Life, is expected to close next quarter. Standard Life manages £277.9 billion ($359 billion) as of December 31, 2016 and Aberdeen has $385.2 billion under management and advice as of March 31, 2017.  
 Edited by: 
         Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
       
       
       
    
		
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       Edited by: 
         Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
       
       
       
    
		
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