Charter Hall has pulled out of negotiations with Westpac Bank to buy infrastructure subsidiary Hastings Funds Management.
The relevation comes a month after a was under way.
Neither party offered an explanation for the end to negotiations.
Real estate fund manager Charter Hall told the Australian stock exchange that it was 鈥渄etermined not to proceed with further due diligence鈥.
Westpac confirmed that negotiations had ceased and said it 鈥渨ill continue to assess sale options and remains committed to Hastings鈥 clients and the business鈥.
Last month, Charter Hall, which manages AUD19bn (鈧12.9bn) in Australian real estate, said the proposed sale provided an attractive expansion opportunity.
It would have boosted Charter Hall鈥檚 funds under management to AUD34 billion, raising it to the top tier of Australian fund management firms alongside the likes of QIC and AMP Capital.
Analysts have suggested that it would have cost Charter Hall at least AUD250m to buy Hastings, which owns and manages assets such as airports, ports, toll roads and utilities around the world.
Westpac Bank is expected to continue to look to sell the business that it acquired in the early 2000s.
Last year, TIAA and Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company were named as two potential interested parties, but the talks ended.