American Century Investments

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

American Century Investments
Private
Industry Financial services
Founded Kansas City, Missouri, U.S. (1958)
Headquarters Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.
Key people
Jonathan Thomas, CEO and president
James E. Stowers, Jr., Founder
Products Mutual funds, institutional separate accounts, commingled trusts and sub-advisory accounts
Number of employees
1,300 (2012)
Website American Century
American Century Towers, Kansas City, Missouri

American Century Investments is a privately controlled and independent investment management firm. Its headquarters are located at 4500 Main in Kansas City, Missouri, near the Country Club Plaza. The company was founded by James E. Stowers, Jr. in 1958 as "Twentieth Century Mutual Funds". Its 1,300 employees serve clients from offices in New York, London, Hong Kong, Mountain View, California and Kansas City, Missouri. Serving investment professionals, institutions, corporations and individual investors, American Century Investments offers a variety of actively managed investment disciplines through an array of products including mutual funds, institutional separate accounts, commingled trusts, and sub-advisory accounts.

After both suffering from cancer, Stowers and his wife founded the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in 1994. The Stowers dedicated their personal fortune to endow the Institute with gifts totaling $2 billion. Today the 600,000-square-foot (56,000 m2) biomedical research facility is situated on a 10-acre (40,000 m2) campus in the heart of Kansas City, near the headquarters of American Century Investments. More than 40% of ACI's profits support research to find cures for such genetically based diseases as cancer, diabetes, and dementia.[1][2]

In 2011, JP Morgan Chase sold their 41% stake in ACI to Toronto based bank CIBC.[3][4] CIBC resold its stake to Nomura Holdings for around $1 billion as it could not gain full control of ACI. The stake gave Nomura 10.1% of the voting rights.[5]

References

External links