Amid improving fundamentals, the bank is keen to double the corpus over the next year and a half, said a senior official.
It is also looking at strategic buyouts in the space for which it is well capitalised.
“We manage Rs 3,500 crore of local mutual-fund assets and sub-advise approximately $500 million of foreign institutional investors' money invested in Indian equities.
"We are targeting to double the size of these assets in the next 12 to 18 months,” Ligia Torres, head of Asia-Pacific and emerging markets region at BNP Paribas Investment Partners, told Business Standard.
Torres, who was in Singapore recently for a seminar of BNP fund managers, heads the business line which has presence in 16 emerging markets.
Her division manages over Euro 61 billion across key asset classes with South Korea, Brazil, China and Hong Kong accounting for bulk of the assets.
Torres added that BNP Paribas is one of the most capitalised asset managers in India with a net worth of nearly Rs 200 crore (Rs 2 billion).
“This capital provides us with the strength to look for attractive opportunities to acquire a business that complements our AUM (assets under management) profile,” she noted.
BNP Paribas’ mutual fund business in India had witnessed significant growth after it bought a stake in Sundaram Mutual Fund in 2005.
In 2010, BNP’s acquisition of Belgian bank Fortis’ operations gave it control of Fortis’
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