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A senior Morgan Stanley dealmaker is reportedly leaving to launch a boutique firm

Nov 14, 2016, 22:09 IST

A man uses his mobile phone at the Imperia (Empire) Tower of the Moscow International Business Center also known as &quotMoskva-City", in Moscow, Russia, Aug. 5, 2015.Reuters/Maxim Zmeyev

The veteran Morgan Stanley banker Lars Andersson is reportedly leaving the firm to strike out on his own.

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That's according to the Financial Times' Arash Massoudi, who reports that Andersson, who advised Monsanto on its $66 billion deal for Bayer in September, will launch his own boutique bank.

The new firm will focus on life sciences and tech, according to the report.

Andersson had been a vice chairman of investment banking at Morgan Stanley, based in New York.

Boutique firms have been increasingly stealing business from their global rivals.

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Boutiques have advised on major deals this year, including Softbank's $32 billion deal for ARM Holdings, Abbott Labs' $25 billion deal for St. Jude Medical, Pfizer's $14 billion deal for Medivation, and Verizon's $4.8 billion deal for Yahoo.

Read the full story in the FT»

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