Office address: 53rd Floor, 333 South Hope Street, Los Angeles, CA 90071
Website: www.capitalgroup.com
Year established: 1931
Company type: financial sevices
Employees: 9,000+
Expertise: sub-advisory services to mutual funds, equity, fixed income, multi-asset solutions, ESG, retirement planning, global markets, investment research, wealth management, active management, financial planning, investment management
Parent company: N/A
Key people: Mike Gitlin (CEO), Noriko Chen (portfolio manager), Canise Arredondo (CFO), Rob Klausner (COO), Matt O'Connor (head of NACG), Martin Romo (CIO), Jody Jonsson (vice chair)
Financing status: N/A
Capital Group, based in Los Angeles, is a global investment firm managing over $2.7 trillion in assets as of June 2024. With more than 9,000 employees in 32 offices worldwide, they focus on delivering strong, long-term results for investors through research-driven strategies. For over 93 years, they have helped individuals and institutions grow their financial futures.
Capital Group was founded in 1931 by Jonathan Bell Lovelace in Los Angeles during the Great Depression to help investors navigate challenging economic times. In 1943, the firm opened a New York office but moved their headquarters back to Los Angeles a year later. The firm introduced The Capital System in 1958, a unique approach to portfolio management.
By 1962, Capital Group expanded internationally, opening its first office outside the US in Geneva, followed by offices in London, Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Singapore. In 1983, they launched a dedicated service center for American Funds shareholders in California.
The company celebrated its 90th anniversary in 2021 and entered the ETF market in 2022 with its first actively managed funds.
Capital Group offers a broad range of investment solutions tailored to various client needs:
Capital Group's services are structured around three independent investment groups, each making its own equity and proxy voting decisions. Their fixed income professionals manage research and investments across the organization, ensuring comprehensive coverage in both equity and fixed income sectors.
Capital Group promotes a collaborative work environment where diverse perspectives are valued and supported. They are committed to equal opportunity employment and offer competitive compensation and benefits that prioritize employee well-being. Their focus on a positive work-life balance is reflected in a variety of programs, including:
The organization values diversity as a cornerstone of its business, actively seeking different perspectives and experiences to build inclusive teams. The company is committed to fostering a workplace where every voice is heard, believing that inclusion leads to better outcomes. This focus on belonging drives their diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, which include:
Capital Group integrates environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues into its investment process through a three-part approach: research frameworks, monitoring, and engagement. They have developed over 25 sector-specific frameworks and use over 50 data sources to identify ESG risks.
Long-standing relationships with company management allow for ongoing dialogue about managing ESG risks and opportunities, supporting efforts to address key issues, including:
In terms of sustainability, Capital Group invests in people, communities, and the environment through its business practices. Their efforts include expanding renewable energy, improving supplier relationships, and adhering to climate-related financial disclosures. They aim to empower employees to support meaningful causes and work toward greater access to financial services for all.
Mike Gitlin serves as the company CEO and president, overseeing investment strategies for clients worldwide. He previously held leadership roles at T. Rowe Price, Citi, and Credit Suisse Asset Management. Gitlin earned his bachelor’s degree from Colgate University and started his career as a trader at George Weiss & Associates.
The following are key leaders at Capital Group, each playing vital role in the company’s operations:
Capital Group recently introduced the Target Date Retirement Blend Series, combining their active management with passive strategies from BlackRock and State Street. This new series offers a diversified solution for retirement planning, appealing to a broader range of plan sponsors. By blending active and passive strategies, it aims to meet various preferences, from cost-conscious options to those seeking higher returns.
Capital Group recently partnered with Orion, offering new opportunities for financial advisors through this collaboration. These portfolios, available through Orion’s platforms, are designed to help advisors meet client goals with dynamic asset allocation. This collaboration reflects Capital Group’s commitment to offering innovative, actively managed investment solutions while expanding its presence in the growing ETF market.
PHILADELPHIA — Even though he was aware that it would violate their contracts, Gary Black, chief executive of Janus Capital Group Inc., told the company’s portfolio managers last October that they would receive pay cuts, according to a lawsuit filed last month.
The $14 billion hedge fund manager run by billionaire Steven Cohen is considering selling up to 20% of itself in a private offering.
The ever-increasing focus on social and environmental causes is attracting a segment of the hedge fund industry to a movement that is considered by some to be the ultimate test of socially conscious investing.
Hedge fund Ritchie Capital has filed for bankruptcy for two of its life insurance units that lost $700 million in policies.
The latest challenge to the $1.3 trillion hedge fund industry could be strategies that produce hedge-fund-like performance without the hassles of investing in hedge funds.
BOSTON — Thanks to a banner year on Wall Street, the 2006 bonus increase for employees at The Vanguard Group Inc. could be the biggest in more than a decade.
BOSTON — Sen. Barack Obama took in at least $49,185 from employees of the 20-largest U.S. mutual fund groups and related companies in the first quarter, more than any other 2008 presidential candidate.
Janus Capital Group Inc. today announced its profits rose 1% and its revenues increased 7% in the first quarter.
Knight Capital Group Inc. posted a 35% drop in first-quarter profits on lower revenues and a loss from discontinued operations, falling short of analysts estimates.
Buoyed by the firm’s popularity with financial advisers, net inflows at American Funds have dwarfed its competitors’ over the past five years.
Fidelity Investments’ plan to subject more of its adviser-sold mutual funds to performance-fee adjustments got a chilly response last week from some financial advisers who said such incentives could encourage funds to take on too much risk.
BOSTON — Although it is too early to tell whether their winning streaks will continue, Fidelity Magellan Fund and Janus Worldwide Fund — two large mutual funds that have struggled to beat their benchmarks of late — are off to decent starts in 2007.
SAN FRANCISCO — The biggest software company in the world may be forcing financial advisers to purchase expensive hardware in the wake of its recent upgrade.