Shibata Takumi | |
---|---|
柴田拓美 | |
Born | 1953 |
Nationality | Japanese |
Education |
Keio University Harvard Business School |
Occupation(s) | Financial executive Founding partner at Fiducia VC |
Shibata Takumi ( Japanese: 柴田拓美) is a Japanese fund manager who is one of Japan's most high-profile financial executives. [1] He is currently founding partner at Fiducia, a VC fund.
Previously, he was president and CEO of Nikko Asset Management for six years and had a 37-year career at Nomura Holdings including as chief operating officer (COO) from 2008 until 2012. [2] [3] [4]
Shibata graduated with a bachelor's degree in economics from Keio University in 1976 where he was debating champion of Japan’s English Speaking Society. [5] He earned an MBA from Harvard Business School in 1983. [6]
Shibata joined Nomura Securities in 1976. [7] In 2005, he was appointed president of Nomura Asset Management, and became vice president of the holding company in 2008. [8] He was a key player in the company's internationalization strategy. [9] During the 2008 global financial crisis, Shibata was the driving force behind the acquisition of Lehman Brothers' European and Asian operations and led their integration as the company's vice president. [7] [10] [11] [12] The deal transformed Nomura into a global player and strengthened its hold on the Japanese market; however, it resulted in steep losses in some divisions. [13] The deal led to Nomura's entrance to the Indian market. [14] He announced his resignation from Nomura as COO in 2012. [1] [15] At the time, there was an investigation into alleged insider trading at the company involving leaks of confidential information to clients ahead of IPOs. [16] After transitioning out of the COO role in August 2012, he continued to advise the company before fully retiring in March 2013 after 37 years with the company. [8] [17] During his time at the company, he spent 17 years outside of Japan including 12 years in London along with stings in Hong Kong and Boston. [5]
In June 2013, Nikko Asset Management, then Japan's third largest fund manager, announced that Shibata would become its chairman starting the following month. [11] [18] He took over as president and CEO of the company in January 2014. [19] [20] In the role, he focused on courting international investment with multi-asset products, which he said are attractive to global investors seeking diversified strategies. [21] Following the 2016 Brexit referendum, he expressed confidence that London would remain a global financial center. [22] In 2017, Shibata recommended high-growth sectors while stock picking and touted Nikko's global robotics fund which raised roughly $6 billion USD and was the first of its kind in Japan. [23] He stepped down as president and CEO after six years with the company in March 2019. [24]
Shibata went on to found Fiducia in June 2020. [25] The company announced its first fund, the Fiducia GrowthTech Fund, in February 2022 with a focus on deep tech and healthcare solutions. [26] [27] The fund launched with initial capital of ¥3.3 billion JPY but expected to raise ¥10 billion JPY within its first year of operations. [28]
Shibata was born in Yokohama in Japan's Kanagawa Prefecture in 1953. [29]
He sits on the board of Japan for UNHCR, the Tokyo Nikikai Opera Foundation, and JESC Music and Cultural Foundation. [30] [31] [32]