C’est l’engagement que livre le secrétaire d’Etat au Budget Christian Eckert pour l’année 2014. «L’objectif de déficit public, fixé à 4,4% de PIB, sera tenu. La norme de dépenses de l’Etat sera respectée, comme l’objectif de dépenses d’assurance-maladie», assure le responsable politique qui voit là «un élément déterminant pour la confiance».
Membre du directoire de la BCE, Benoît Coeuré, dit dans un entretien voir «un large consensus autour de la table du conseil des gouverneurs sur la nécessité de faire plus» afin de faire remonter l’inflation et de stimuler l'économie. Il indique par ailleurs que les minutes devraient être publiées quatre semaines après les réunions à compter de l’an prochain.
Avec 360 milliards de dollars de réserves de change et une bonne liquidité des entreprises, les risques sur les tombées de dette restent circonscrits sur 2015
Un décret paru hier prévoit d'augmenter, dès 2016, de 25% le taux de la contribution due par les sociétés de gestion et de plus de 8% celle due par les prestataires des services d'investissement (PSI), rapporte L'Agefi.
State Street Corporation a annoncé aujourd’hui le renforcement de son mandat avec Swiss & Global Asset Management pour lui fournir une gamme de solutions de services d’investissements portant sur 70 milliards de dollars US d’actifs.
Selon nos informations, GDF Suez aurait retenu, avec l’aide de son consultant bfinance, 5 gestionnaires pour passer l’oral de son appel d’offres portant sur des mandats de gestion pour un total de 2 milliards d’euros d’engagements sociaux et d'épargne salariale en France et 2 milliards d’euros pour l’international. Les oraux devaient débuter la semaine du 15 décembre. Les 5 sociétés de gestion en finale seraient : Amundi (qui gère au moins 800 millions d’euros pour GDF Suez) Allianz GI (qui gère au moins 800 millions d’euros pour GDF Suez) Lyxor BNP Paribas IP AXA IM (qui gère au moins 800 millions d’euros pour GDF Suez) GDF Suez a prévu de réduire le nombre de compagnies d’assurance partenaires qui sont actuellement Prédica, Allianz, Sogecap, BNP Paribas Cardif, Axa, AG2R.
JPMorgan Asset Management a conclu le rachat auprès d’Aviva de sa plate-forme de gestion immobilière dans la région Asie-Pacifique (Australie, Japon, Singapour). La division JPMorgan Asset Management - Global Real Assets est déjà présente en Inde et en Chine. Les équipes combinées compteront 50 collaborateurs exerçant au travers de cinq bureaux (Hong Kong, Mumbai, Singapour, Shanghai et Sydney). Un sixième bureau doit ouvrir à Tokyo début 2015.
La Commission européenne a élargi à l’ensemble des États membres la collecte de renseignements sur les pratiques en matière de «rulings» fiscaux, ces accords passés entre une entreprise et un Etat. L’enquête s’effectue en vertu des règles relatives aux aides d'État. Elle invitera tous les Etats membres à lui communiquer des renseignements sur leur pratique en la matière de rulings fiscaux, et le cas échéant une liste de toutes les sociétés ayant bénéficié d’un ruling fiscal entre 2010 et 2013.
La devise russe se reprenait mercredi face au billet vert et à l’euro alors que la banque centrale russe a annoncé mercredi qu’elle allait prendre une série de mesures pour soutenir le rouble. Vers 17 heures, le rouble traitait à 62,6 pour un dollar, contre un cours de clôture à 67,9 la veille. La banque centrale a indiqué dans un communiqué qu’elle prépare avec le gouvernement une série de mesures pour renforcer, si besoin, le capital des banques et des entreprises financières. Elle ajoute prévoir de nouvelles adjudications de devises si nécessaire et annonce un gel de la réévaluation du portefeuille de titres des banques.
Le Parlement européen a adopté mercredi le budget 2015 de l’Union européenne après avoir obtenu des Etats membres le paiement d’une partie des arriérés pour l’année 2014. Le niveau des engagements, qui détermine les autorisations de programmes, se monte à 145,3 milliards d’euros, celui des paiements à 141,2 milliards. Les eurodéputés ont obtenu des Etats une rallonge de 4,25 milliards sur 2014 alors qu’ils demandaient la résorption des 25 milliards de factures qui restent à payer. Le compromis prévoit que la rallonge budgétaire pour 2014 aille en priorité aux bénéficiaires les plus fragiles, collectivités locales, ONG ou petites entreprises.
Global investors are keeping faith with equities while raising cash as markets enter the volatile year-end period, according to the BofA Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey for December. An overall total of 214 panelists with US$604 billion of assets under management participated in the survey from 5 December to 11 December 2014.Asset allocators have hiked their cash holdings to an average 5 percent. Moreover, a net 28 percent are now overweight relative to their benchmarks. This is the survey’s highest reading on this measure since June 2012. Despite this defensive move, respondents show renewed confidence in the global economy. A net 60 percent now expect it to strengthen over the next year – up almost 30 percentage points in two months. Against this background, they are also more confident that corporate earnings will rise. At the same time, inflation expectations have fallen to their lowest level since August 2012. Commodities are a significant factor in this. A net 36 percent of fund managers view oil as undervalued following its recent price fall. In addition, expectations of European economic performance have improved. This reflects the likelihood of the European Central Bank beginning a program of quantitative easing next quarter – as 63 percent of respondents now expect, compared to November’s 41 percent. This translates into higher appetite for eurozone equities, notably banks, revealed in the survey. Appetite for eurozone equities has risen to a net 26 percent overweight, up from November’s net 8 percent.“We are seeing capitulation out of energy and materials to the benefit of the dollar, cash, eurozone stocks and global tech and discretionary stocks,” said Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch Research. “The prospect of ECB QE has brought growing consensus on European equities, but the weakening business cycle and falling commodity prices are working against true earnings recovery,” said Manish Kabra, European equity and quantitative strategist.
p { margin-bottom: 0.1in; line-height: 120%; }a:link { } The asset management firm Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management (Deutsche AWM) on 16 December announced that its physical replication ETF activity as of 1 December showed net inflows of EUR4.5bn. With more than 60 direct replication ETFs, its current offer now represents EUR17.9bn in assets under management. In total, assets at Deutsche AWM in UCITS ETFs comes to over EUR45bn.
p { margin-bottom: 0.1in; direction: ltr; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); line-height: 120%; }p.western { font-family: «Liberation Serif»,"Times New Roman»,serif; font-size: 12pt; }p.cjk { font-family: «Droid Sans Fallback"; font-size: 12pt; }p.ctl { font-family: «FreeSans"; font-size: 12pt; }a:link { } La Française will be making its funds available on the Italian internet platform Online Sim, Bluerating reports. Italian investors will also be able to purchase products from the French asset management firm via savings plans, without subscription or redemption commissions.
p { margin-bottom: 0.1in; line-height: 120%; }a:link { } State Street Global Advisors (SSGA), the asset management unit of State Street Corporation, on 16 December announced that it has reduced its management fees for its SPDR MSCI Europe UCITS ETF and SPDR MSCI Europe Small Cap UCITS ETF, funds, with 5 (from 30 to 25) and 10 (from 40 to 30) basis points, respectively. In October this year, SPDR cut the management fees on 15 of its foremost equity and bond ETFs, and proposed a merger of its 13 ETF funds domiciled in France onto its platform in Ireland so as to meet the changing needs of the ETF market in Europe. On 8 December, the SPDR MSCI Europe UCITS ETF and SPDR MSCI Europe Small Cap UCITS ETF, along with 11 other French funds, were successfully transferred to the Irish platform. The reductions in management fees announced today are part of the cuts announced in October, which will take effect only after the merger of the funds has been completed. “In Europe, demand for ETFs is continuing to grow, and they are continuing to play a key role in investment portfolios. The announcement today is a sign of our engagement to improve our ETF product range, and to better serve the needs of our clients, according to the evolution of the market,” says Olivier Paquier, director of SPDR ETF France, Spain and Portugal.
p { margin-bottom: 0.1in; direction: ltr; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); line-height: 120%; }p.western { font-family: «Liberation Serif»,"Times New Roman»,serif; font-size: 12pt; }p.cjk { font-family: «Droid Sans Fallback"; font-size: 12pt; }p.ctl { font-family: «FreeSans"; font-size: 12pt; }a:link { } Illicit financial flows which are leaving emerging and developing markets reached a record level in 2012. They have exceeded the volume of aid and foreign investment in these countries, according to a report by the US NGO Global Financial Integrity (GFI), which reviewed illiticit capital flows from 151 countries. In 2012, these capital flows reached USD991.2bn, according to the most recent available data. They peaked at EUR6.6trn between 2003 and 2012, the report from the US NGO, entitled “Illicit financial flows from developing countries: 2003-2012,” indicates. “These capital flows, which already exceed the cumulative total of foreign direct investment and official development aid, are depriving poor or low-income economies of more than USD1trn per year,” the chairman of the organisation, Raymond Baker, says. “That is about USD1trn that could have contributed to the growth of those economies by creating jobs,” he added. In the same period, the ranking of coutnries which have the largest leaks of capital place China at the top (USD1.250trn between 2003 and 2012, and USD250bn in the year 2012 alone), followed by Russia (USD973bn in 10 years) and Mexico (USD514bn in 10 years).
Based on the staff costs, taxes paid and profits of the industry, it is estimated that the European asset management industry contributes an average of 0.35% per year to European GDP and has very significant potential to fill the gap left by banks in providing finance to European economy, according to Societal and Economic Impacts of the European Asset Management Industry, a report by Jens Hagendorff, Professor of Finance & Investment at the University of Edinburgh, sponsored by EY. The European asset management industry is large, with assets under management of over 115% of European GDP (or nearly EUR17 trillion). It directly employs around 95,000 individuals across Europe and is estimated to indirectly employ 530,000 full-time equivalents. The value added is particularly large in the UK, where it contributes 1% of GDP per annum, and in France, where it contributes 0.5% of GDP per annum. In absolute terms, the figures are also large – across Europe the report estimates that yearly value added of the industry is EUR50b. “What makes the size of the industry particularly noteworthy is the rate at which it is growing. Comparing OECD data for the UK in 1980 against comparable data for today shows that the industry has grown six-fold in little more than 30 years. This is largely because populations have become larger, older and wealthier and this trend shows no sign of slowing. Asset management is a European success story. Policymakers need to recognize the potential of the asset management industry to play a larger role in financing the ‘real economy’,” comments Roy Stockell, Wealth & Asset Management Leader for EMEIA at EY. Asset managers are already key to the financing of the economy. In 2012, the asset management industry held debt securities issued by euro area residents worth €4 trillion. This amounted to 23% of all debt securities outstanding at the time and corresponds to 32% of the value of euro area bank lending. The ratio increases to 43% if mortgage lending is excluded from bank lending figures. The report also considers equity financing. In 2012, European asset managers managed equity values at EUR1,374b, which corresponds to 31% of the market value of euro area listed firms and nearly 40% of the free float of European listed firms. The report estimates that nearly EUR500b of the value of the European equity market is due to the role European asset managers play in improving the corporate governance of the firms they invest in. “Long-term savings and risk management are at the heart of what the industry provides, which makes it suitable to provide long-term finance to European corporations. As such, the industry provides a crucial link between investors and the needs of the real economy», says Jens Hagendorff, Professor of Finance & Investment at the University of Edinburgh and author of the report. “It also should be noted that the European asset management industry does not attract a costly bailout guarantee and can therefore offer financing services in a more cost-efficient way than banks, generating a large saving for society.” (1) Societal and Economic Impacts of the European Asset Management Industry
p { margin-bottom: 0.1in; line-height: 120%; }a:link { } The British asset management firm BlueBay Asset Management, an affiliate of the Royal Bank of Canada, has appointed Jana Velebova to the position of portfolio manager on its emerging markets sovereign team. Velebova began her career as a fund manager at Threadneedle, and then in 2010 joined Rogge Global Partners, where she became a partner. She was based both in London and Singapore, and was responsible for emerging markets assets via a variety of global bond portfolios.
p { margin-bottom: 0.1in; line-height: 120%; }a:link { } As part of a renewal of its expiring mandates, the Établissement de Retraite additionnelle de la Fonction publique (ERAFP) is launching an open call for offers for the award of three financial management mandates.At the conclusion of the request for proposals, the asset management firms selected will be awarded a “Pacific SRI Equities” mandate, whose management objective will be to obtain higher long-term performance than the MSCI Pacific. Stock-picking will be based on fundamental analysis of businesses and on regular contact with the management of businesses. In line with the decision of the board of directors to implement a 100% SRI investment policy, investments must be made with a long-term outlook and must comply with the SRI framewrk of the ERAFP. Investments will be made in countries of the MSCI Pacific index (Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, New Zealand and Singapore). For indicative purposes, the sums placed initially under this lot will total about EUR400m, distributed between two managers. The third will receive a standby mandate. Mandates will be for an initial duration of five years, with the option for the ERAFP to renew the contract for three successive periods of one year each.
p { margin-bottom: 0.1in; direction: ltr; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); line-height: 120%; }p.western { font-family: «Liberation Serif»,"Times New Roman»,serif; font-size: 12pt; }p.cjk { font-family: «Droid Sans Fallback"; font-size: 12pt; }p.ctl { font-family: «FreeSans"; font-size: 12pt; }a:link { } With EUR135.52bn in assets as of the end of September, net assets in funds on sale in Belgium rose 4.2% in third quarter 2014, or EUR5.43bn. According to figures from the Belgium asset management association (BEAMA), this increase is largely due to significant net inflows. In the first 9 months of the year, the Belgiun fund industry has gained EUR18bn, or 5.3%. In detail, net assets in funds which invest primarily in fixed income funds increased by 3.4% in the quarter under observation. The increase is EUR1.28bn, or 4.2% in the third quarter of 2014, and represented a total of EUR31.28bn as of the end of September 2014. Net assets in money market funds or funds of money markets fell by EUR0.16bn, or 7.43%, between July and September 2014. In September 2014, money market funds represented a total of EUR1.96bn. Net assets in funds which invest the majority of their assets in variable income stocks, such as equity funds, for example, rose 4.4% in the same period. More precisely, it was equity funds which posted the most marked growth. These were up by 5.7%, or EUR2.39bn, beween July and September 2014, driven by net inflows. As of the end of September 2014, assets in equity funds represented EUR43.94bn. Pension savings funds, for their part, accentuated their all-time high levels. Net assets in pension saving funds has increased EUR0.18bn to a total of EUR15.26bn as of the end of September 2014.
La filiale du groupe écossais Aberdeen en Allemagne, Aberdeen Asset Management Deutschland, ne veut plus entendre parler des fonds immobiliers ouverts au public. Après ses déconvenues avec les fonds immobiliers Degi Europa et Degi International dans le sillage de la crise financière de 2008, Aberdeen a décidé de ne plus s’intéresser aux fonds immobiliers ouverts, en tout cas dans l’immédiat, a indiqué Hartmut Leser, président du directoire de la filiale allemande au Börsen Zeitung. Aberdeen, qui gère quelque 4,5 milliards d’euros dans l’immobilier, concentre ses efforts sur la clientèle institutionnelle.
La banque publique d’investissement allemande KfW a annoncé son intention de développer son offre d’obligations vertes. La banque publique envisage de lancer de nouvelles émissions de «green bonds» pour un volume d’environ 3 milliards d’euros. Après avoir proposé des émissions libellées en euro et dollar américain au second semestre 2014, la banque publique prévoit de proposer de nouvelles devises, par exemple le dollar australien ou la livre britannique, et de nouveaux produits, par exemple des placements privés. La banque veut également profiter de sa réputation sur le segment des obligations vertes pour promouvoir de nouvelles normes minimales. Après une très forte croissance en volume l’an dernier, il s’agit désormais de favoriser la croissance qualitative de ce segment, explique la KfW dans un communiqué. Dans cette perspective, la banque envisage de gérer son propre portefeuille d’obligations vertes. La banque poursuit parallèlement ses efforts sur le marché de la titrisation, avec un volume de 800 millions d’euros pour 2015. Outre le financement des PME allemandes, la banque envisage d'étendre son activité de titrisation au marché européen des entreprises moyennes.
Le gestionnaire d’actifs allemand Allianz Global Investors a annoncé l’élargissement de sa gamme de fonds disponibles auprès des investisseurs britanniques avec l’introduction d’une nouvelle classe de part en Sterling (Sterling R share class) pour 12 de ses principaux véhicules d’investissement. Les fonds concernés seront ainsi disponibles sur les plateformes britanniques Cofunds, Vantage Service de Hargreaves Lansdown, Old Mutual, Raymond James, Standard Life et Transact, a précisé AllianzGI dans un communiqué.Avec l’introduction de cette classe de part, le gestionnaire d’actifs a lancé quatre nouveaux fonds pour les investisseurs retail britanniques: Allianz Global Fundamental Strategy, Allianz Best Styles Global Equity, Allianz Best Styles US Equity et, enfin, Allianz EM Flexible Bond. Par ailleurs, deux fonds existants deviennent disponibles en sterling pour la première, à savoir Allianz Europe Equity Growth Select et Allianz US Smal Cap Equity.Les 12 fonds disponibles avec la classe de part R sterling sont les suivants: - Allianz Europe Equity Growth Select- Allianz US Small Cap Equity- Allianz China Equity- Allianz Japan Equity- Allianz Oriental Income- Allianz Global Agricultural Trends- Allianz Global Small Cap Equity- Allianz Global Fundamental Strategy- Allianz Best Styles Global Equity- Allianz Best Styles US Equity- Allianz Income and Growth- Allianz EM Flexible BondLes douze fonds avec cette nouvelle classe de part sont des sicav domiciliées au Luxembourg.
Cerberus a acquis deux portefeuilles de prêts immobiliers en difficulté pour un total de 2,3 milliards de livres, pariant sur la reprise des marchés de l’immobilier commercial au Royaume-Uni et en Irlande, rapporte le Financial Times. Cela concerne un portefeuille de prêts d’immobilier commercial de 1,2 milliard de livres détenu par National Australia Bank et un autre portefeuille de prêts d’immobilier commercial irlandais de 1,1 milliard de livres appartenant à Royal Bank of Scotland.
La société de gestion britannique Kames Capital annonce le recrutement d’un spécialiste produit sur les actions. Luc Simoncini travaillera en étroite collaboration avec l'équipe de gestion actions ainsi qu’avec l'équipe commerciale, précise Fondsprofessionell. L’intéressé était jusqu'à présent responsable sell side chez Mediolanum International Funds à Dublin.
Le gestionnaire d’actifs britannique BlueBay Asset Management, filiale de Royal Bank of Canada, a recruté Jana Velebova au poste de gérante de portefeuille au sein de son équipe «Emerging Markets Sovereign». L’intéressée a débuté sa carrière de gérante fonds chez Threadneedle avant de rejoindre Rogge Global Partners en 2010 où elle est devenue associée («Partner»). Travaillant à la fois à Londres et à Singapour, elle était responsable des actifs des marchés émergents à travers différents portefeuilles obligataires mondiaux.