ING Group buys US retirement plan business

ING Group buys US retirement plan businessING Group has struck a deal to buy US retirement plan firm CitiStreet for $900 million (£454 million).

CitiStreet is jointly owned by Citigroup and State Street Corporation and ING said the acquisition would be financed by internal resources.

Amsterdam-based ING said CitiStreet has 3,700 employees with the majority located in the US. The company did not say at this stage whether there would be any staff lay-offs.

The deal will make ING the third-largest defined contribution business in the US based on assets under management (AUM) and assets under administration (AUA) with $351 billion (£177 billion) in AUM and AUA, and with over 14 million customers, the second-largest based on plan participants.

Michel Tilmant, ING Group chairman, said: “This acquisition is consistent with ING’s focused strategy to support the strong organic growth of the group with suitable add-on acquisitions aligned with its core banking, investments, life insurance and retirement services growth businesses.”

The company said CitiStreet’s “impressive scale and exceptional reputation” in the mid- and large-corporate markets, complements ING’s focus on the small- and mid-corporate, government, and education markets.

The acquisition will help ING expand in the US retirement services business, the company added.

According to ING, the acquisition is expected to be earnings-per-share accretive by 2010, excluding merger-related expenses and the amortization of customer-based intangible assets.

This transaction is subject to customary closing conditions and is expected be closed in the third quarter of 2008.

Have your say on  'ING Group buys US retirement plan business', comment below

Turn leads into sales (B)
Greenhous SAAB
Shropshire Star Podcasts (p)
Dating v2 - Prince

Post a Comment

*
*

* Required fields. Your email is never published or shared.

Disclaimer: We will put up as many of your responses as possible but cannot guarantee that all comments will be published. We prefer short comments that include no external website links. We reserve the right to edit comments and will not enter into correspondence over editing decisions. Comments featured on the site are not representative of the views of the Shropshire Star or Midland News Association.