By Rob Copeland 

British insurance giant Aviva PLC will shutter a U.S.-based hedge-fund arm by the end of the year, according to people familiar with the matter.

The decision to close the unit, a so-called fund of hedge funds that invests money across a range of external managers, was made after a major client asked for its money back, one of the people said. The Aviva unit had roughly $2 billion under management, said people familiar with the matter, and boasted relationships with some of the most high-profile firms in the industry.

"Following a comprehensive review of the business, we have decided to exit the business of investing in third-party hedge funds," an Aviva spokesman said in a statement in response to questions from The Wall Street Journal. "We are working with our affiliates and the underlying hedge fund managers on an orderly transition plan."

The fund-of-funds industry has been in a pinch since the financial crisis, when a combination of market losses and investor panic stemming from money manager Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme hurt firms that pool money from clients and invest in hedge funds.

In total, funds of funds worldwide oversee $762 billion, down from $1.16 trillion at their peak in 2008, according to researcher HedgeFund Intelligence.

To adapt, some of Aviva's competitors have sold themselves to bigger players like the Man Group PLC., the world's largest publicly traded hedge-fund firm. Others reinvented themselves as specialists in discovering new talent in small hedge-fund managers, or as experts in particular strategies.

Aviva occupied a middle ground. Its underlying managers have included activist firms Corvex Management LP and Pershing Square Capital Management LP, as well as macro shop Discovery Capital Management LLC, people familiar with the matter said.

Those hedge funds will likely have to pay back Aviva's money by the end of the year, which could require them to sell off assets if they don't have the cash on hand or sufficient fundraising coming in to offset the redemption.

The closing of the fund-of-funds unit isn't believed to be related to Aviva's pending multibillion-dollar takeover of Friends Life Group Ltd to create the largest insurance, savings and asset-management company in the U.K.

Aviva's London-listed shares are down 6% this week after it announced the acquisition.

Aviva, which provides general insurance, life insurance and pensions, has said the combined group would be "better positioned to take advantage of the evolving U.K. life insurance market with greater capacity to invest and innovate."

Write to Rob Copeland at rob.copeland@wsj.com

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

Aviva (LSE:AV.)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2024 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Aviva Charts.
Aviva (LSE:AV.)
Historical Stock Chart
From Apr 2023 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Aviva Charts.