Allianz AG, the leading German insurance conglomerate, acquired Pimco Advisors LP for $3.3 billion,   boosting assets under management from $400 billion to $650 billion and making it the sixth largest money   manager in the world. The cultural divide separating the two firms represented a potentially daunting   challenge. Allianz’s management was well aware that firms distracted by culture clashes and the morale   problems and mistrust they breed are less likely to realize the synergies and savings that caused them to   acquire the company in the first place. A major motivation for the acquisition was to obtain the well-known   skills of the elite Pimco money managers to broaden Allianz’s financial services product offering. Although   retention bonuses can buy loyalty in the short run, employees of the acquired firm generally need much   more than money in the long term. Pimco’s money managers stated publicly that they wanted Allianz to let   them operate independently, the way Pimco existed under their former parent, Pacific Mutual Life Insurance   Company. Allianz had decided not only to run Pimco as an independent subsidiary but also to move $100   billion of Allianz’s assets to Pimco. Bill Gross, Pimco’s Legendary bond trader, and other top Pimco money   managers, now collect about one-fourth of their compensation in the form of Allianz stock. Moreover, most of   the top managers have been asked to sign long-term employment contracts and have received retention   bonuses. Joachim Faber, chief of money management at Allianz, played an essential role in smoothing over   cultural differences. Led by Faber, top Allianz executives had been visiting Pimco for months and having   quiet dinners with top Pimco fixed income investment officials and their families. The intent of these intimate   meetings was to reassure these officials that their operation would remain independent under Allianz’s   ownership.   Discussion Questions:   1. How did Allianz attempt to retain key employees? In the short run? In the long run?   2.How did the potential for culture clash affect the way Alliance acquired Pimco?   3. What else could Allianz have done to minimize the culture clash?

Management, Loose-Leaf Version
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ISBN:9781305969308
Author:Richard L. Daft
Publisher:Richard L. Daft
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Allianz AG, the leading German insurance conglomerate, acquired Pimco Advisors LP for $3.3 billion,

 

boosting assets under management from $400 billion to $650 billion and making it the sixth largest money

 

manager in the world. The cultural divide separating the two firms represented a potentially daunting

 

challenge. Allianz’s management was well aware that firms distracted by culture clashes and the morale

 

problems and mistrust they breed are less likely to realize the synergies and savings that caused them to

 

acquire the company in the first place. A major motivation for the acquisition was to obtain the well-known

 

skills of the elite Pimco money managers to broaden Allianz’s financial services product offering. Although

 

retention bonuses can buy loyalty in the short run, employees of the acquired firm generally need much

 

more than money in the long term. Pimco’s money managers stated publicly that they wanted Allianz to let

 

them operate independently, the way Pimco existed under their former parent, Pacific Mutual Life Insurance

 

Company. Allianz had decided not only to run Pimco as an independent subsidiary but also to move $100

 

billion of Allianz’s assets to Pimco. Bill Gross, Pimco’s Legendary bond trader, and other top Pimco money

 

managers, now collect about one-fourth of their compensation in the form of Allianz stock. Moreover, most of

 

the top managers have been asked to sign long-term employment contracts and have received retention

 

bonuses. Joachim Faber, chief of money management at Allianz, played an essential role in smoothing over

 

cultural differences. Led by Faber, top Allianz executives had been visiting Pimco for months and having

 

quiet dinners with top Pimco fixed income investment officials and their families. The intent of these intimate

 

meetings was to reassure these officials that their operation would remain independent under Allianz’s

 

ownership.

 

Discussion Questions:

 

1. How did Allianz attempt to retain key employees? In the short run? In the long run?

 

2.How did the potential for culture clash affect the way Alliance acquired Pimco?

 

3. What else could Allianz have done to minimize the culture clash?

 

 

 

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