Amova Asset Management

since 1959
  • 501-1,000 employees
  • Investment Management

Amova Asset Management

Headquartered in Japan with a global presence, Amova Asset Management is a leading asset manager and progressive investment solutions provider, driven by the promise to help you progress towards your goals.

Our clients include institutional investors, intermediary, and individual investors. We provide tailored solutions that instill confidence and support your long-term goals in an evolving investment landscape.

We combine:
— More than 65 years of commitment to performance excellence with USD260.3 billion* in assets under management
— A global network of investment teams and partners—supported by over 200 investment professionals and an extensive network of distributors across 10 countries and regions (as of 1 July 2025)
— High-conviction, active fund management across Equity, Fixed Income, Multi-Asset, and Alternative strategies
— A diverse suite of passive strategies covering a wide range of indices and some of Asia’s leading exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
— Investor focus and genuine partnership rooted in trust, transparency, and high standards of client care

We are committed to creating lasting value through responsible decisions that support our clients, partners, and broader community. This shared mission—shaping a brighter future together with our stakeholders—is at the heart of who we are.

Amova Asset Management, a proud member of Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Group.

* as of 30 June 2025

Expertise

equities, fixed income, multi-asset, ETFs, Japan equities, and multi-manager

Japan amplification risk: yen weakness and terms-of-trade shock
  • 15 hours ago

Japan faces rising amplification risk as yen weakness and external shocks deepen terms-of-trade pressures. Inflation pass-through remains limited, but policy credibility and growth resilience may h...

Navigating Japan Equities: Monthly Insights from Tokyo (April 2026)
  • 15 Apr 2026

This month, we assess how energy-related geopolitical risk could influence the BOJ’s path towards monetary policy normalisation and affect Japan’s nascent wage-led recovery.

Lost in the noise: Japan’s quiet progress on growth and capital efficiency
  • 01 Apr 2026

Despite market volatility, a strong political mandate, targeted public‑private investment and tightening governance expectations are quietly improving Japan's growth prospects, capital deployment d...

Lost in the noise: Japan’s quiet progress on growth and capital efficiency
  • 01 Apr 2026

Despite market volatility, a strong political mandate, targeted public‑private investment and tightening governance expectations are quietly improving Japan's growth prospects, capital deployment d...

Balancing Act Monthly Insights: Global Multi-Asset (March 2026)
  • 30 Mar 2026

For growth, we upgraded both developed market (DM) equities and commodities to overweight. For defensives, we downgraded high yield to a small underweight while increasing DM sovereigns to an overw...

Japan’s renaissance: macro, micro and physical AI
  • 26 Mar 2026

Japan is entering an exciting new phase, with several advantages that distinguish it from other major markets. There will inevitably continue to be periods of volatility as geopolitical tensions pl...

External shocks complicate Fed and BOJ policy paths
  • 23 Mar 2026

The Fed and the BOJ held policy rates steady, but external energy and geopolitical shocks have complicated their policy outlooks. New risks raise the bar for action, even as formal guidance remains...

Global Investment Strategy Committee Outlook Q2 2026
  • 19 Mar 2026

The GISC maintains a constructive base-case on moderating but positive global growth. At the same time, the ongoing oil and logistics shock prompted by the war in Iran presents uncertainties and th...

Iran conflict shock: risks may run deeper than markets assume
  • 13 Mar 2026

Markets initially viewed the Iran conflict as a simple oil shock, but strains in shipping, insurance and logistics suggest a more persistent disruption. For Japan, the risk lies in worsening terms...