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Markets
05 November 2025 by Olivia Grace-Curran

ASIC launches roadmap to strengthen capital markets and boost economic growth

Australia and ASIC want to be backers, not blockers, of investment and capital, according to the corporate watchdog, which has released a roadmap to ...
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Firms team up to expand alternative capital access

Revolution Asset Management has formed a strategic partnership with non-bank lender ColCap Financial to expand ...

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BlackRock to launch Bitcoin ETF in Australia

BlackRock Australia plans to launch a Bitcoin ETF later this month, wrapping the firm’s US-listed version which is US$85 ...

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RBA holds as inflationary pressures 'may remain'

The September quarter's inflation figures have put a stop to November's long-expected rate cut. The Reserve Bank of ...

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Climate alliance drops 2050 target, State Street limits membership

Global climate alliance Net Zero Asset Managers will relaunch in January with refreshed commitments after suspending ...

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Cboe to exit Australia

Just weeks after receiving ASIC approval to operate as a listings market, the alternative exchange has announced its ...

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van Eyk drops Deutsche, Tyndall, Invesco

  •  
By Charlie Corbett
  •  
2 minute read

Research house van Eyk has reshuffled the underlying manager allocations in its Blueprint Australian shares fund, dumping mandates with Deutsche Asset Management, Tyndall and Invesco.

Research house van Eyk has reshuffled the underlying manager allocations in its Blueprint Australian shares fund, dumping mandates with Deutsche Asset Management, Tyndall and Invesco.

The $133 million Invesco mandate was dropped in March just weeks after van Eyk signed up the manager.

It followed the resignation of Invesco's long-serving head of Australian equities, Rohan Walsh, who left to start up a boutique.

Tyndall lost a $91.2 million mandate in March and Deutsche Asset Management lost a $131.3 million mandate in January. 

 
 

Deutsche Australia's Australian fixed income and Australian equities portfolios were bought by Aberdeen Asset Management in April for $148 million.

Van Eyk awarded Fidelity Investments a $171 million Australian equities mandate in March.