P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Pablo Cohen, associate director at the Australian firm Access Capital Advisers, has been recruited by First State Investment as a senior analyst in its infrastructure team.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The British asset management firm Ignis Asset Management has reported a decline of 6% for 2012 to its operating profits, to GBP43m, from GBP46m the previus year, according to a statement released on 22 March. Assets under management at the firm fell 6.6% to GBP66bn, from GBP70.7bn as of the end of 2011. Ignis states that its operating profits were affected largely by a decline in performance commissions generated by one of its joint ventures, and a renegotiation of its joint venture agreements. The statement adds that administrative back office functions at Ignis have been outsourced to HSBC.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The UK asset management firm Schroders, which had GBP212bn in assets under management as of the end of 2012, on Friday confirmed in a statement to the markets that «it is in discussions regarding a possible cash offer, with loan note alternative, for the entire issued ordinary share capital of Cazenove Capital.» The latter firm is an independent asset management firm based in London, with GBP18.7bn in assets under management, GBP12.9bn of it in wealth management, and GBP5.8bn in funds (as of the end of February). By regulation, Schroders will have until 5 p.m. on 19 April 2013 to announce either a firm intention to make an offer for Cazenove Capital or that it does not intend to make an offer for Cazenove Capital. This deadline will only be extended with the consent of the Takeover Panel in accordance with the Code on Takeovers and Mergers.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Assets under management by the Liechtensteinische Landesbank (LLB) rose 3.7% in 2012, to a total of CHF49.9bn, compared with CHF48.1bn as of the end of December 2011. Inflows were satisfactory on the bank’s traditional markets: Liechtenstein, Switzerland, Austria, Central and Eastern Europe, and the Middle and Near East, but activities on other markets saw outflows of CHF392m. Consolidated profits totalled CHF97.9m, a spectacular increase compared with the previous year, when they totalled only CHF15.4m. This development is largely due to a steep fall in spending, which was down 7.3% to CHF298.1m.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } If remuneration rules passed by the monetary affairs committee (ECON) of the European Parliament on 21 March were applied as they are to managers of UCITS-compliant mutual funds, UK asset management firms would be disproportionately affected by rules limiting bonuses, as bonuses at these firms tend to represent a larger percentage of remuneration, says Jon Terry, a partner in the reward team at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).The specialist claims that many British asset management firms would be obliged to completely overhaul the way in which they pay their fund managers and management personnel, due to the large proportion of remuneration which would be affected by the new rules. In fact, says Terry, asset management firms are said to be concerned by the fact that the monetary affairs commission is proposing a much more explicit definition of the individuals subject to the rules than the one which is applicable to banks or hedge fund managers. If the proposals are passed in their initial form, it would significantly increase the number of people affected by the new rules in senior management, as well as front, middle and back offices.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Cotizalia reports that since the beginning of the year, 37 Spanish guaranty funds have lowered their management commissions, which currently stand at an average of 1.35%, a level which is closer to actively-managed products. In addition, several guaranty fund managers are now offering 1% to 2% rewards on sums transferred in fund trades.The turbulence is due to the fact that market conditions are currently unfavourable for guaranty funds. Those with a large proportion of equities have seen net outflows of EUR401m in the first two months of the year.
Fears that a bailout package for Cyprus that called for a one-off levy on existing depositors might prompt bank customers in Spain, Italy and Portugal to head for the exits gave investors and markets pause for thought in mid-March. Flows into EPFR Global-tracked Equity Funds slipped to less than a fifth of the previous week’s level.Overall, EPFR Global-tracked Equity Funds took in a net USD2.5 billion during the week ending March 20 as they extended their longest inflow streak in over a decade. US Equity Funds took in over USD2 billion.Japan Equity Funds extended their recent run as the latest inflows pushed the year-to-date total past the USD7.5 billion mark and kept this fund group on track for its biggest quarterly inflow since 4Q05. Bond Funds took in USD3.68 billion while Money Market Funds posted outflows for the eighth time in the past 10 weeks as their flows follow a pattern remarkably similar to the one they established between 4Q11 and 2Q12.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The UK equity fund manager Ed Meier will be leaving Schoders to join Richard Buton and Errol Francis at Old Mutual, Fundweb reports. Buxton resigned form his position as director of UK equities recently. He had spent 12 years at the firm. Meier will join Old Mutual in mid-June, and will report to Buxton.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The US private equity investor Apollo Global Management on Friday bought FinanMadrid, the unit of the nationalised Spanish bank Bankia dedicated to lending for the purchase of automobiles and consumer credit, for an undisclosed amount, Handelsblatt reports. Apollo says the transaction includes a portfolio of over 18,000 client accounts, and EUR873m of loans.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Wall Street Journal reports that, according to the London Daily Telegraph, Trian Management Fund, the activist fund managed by Nelson Peltz, has acquired further shares in Pepsico (Pepsi-Cola, Lay’s), whose shares gained 3% on Friday. According to market rumours, Trian may use its stake, as well as the stake it holds in Mondelez (Cadbury ,Trident) to require PepsiCo to spin off a beverages entity and a separate snacks company, which it would then merge with Mondelez, or else that the firm break up and merge.For its part, the hedge fund manager Relational Investors also owns a stake in Pepsico since last year, and has already requested that the less profitable beverages unit be spun off.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to a message to clients sent Tursday by CEO James Hirschmann, Steve Walsh, CIO of Wamco (USD461.9bn in assets as of the end of December) will be retiring in March 2014, Reuters reports, as relayed by Mutual Fund Wire. Walsh has been CIO since 2008; his successor will be Ken Leech, who becomes co-CIO of Wamco. Leech had previously been CIO of the Legg Mason affiliate from 1998 to 2008. He is currently chairman of the global strategy committee for bond portfolios.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Mutual Fund Wire relays reports in Bloomberg that Manhattan US District Judge William Pauley has admitted a lawsuit filed by a group of investors in mutual funds against the providers Smith Barney Fund Management and Citigroup Global Markets as eligible for hearing. The plaintiffs claim that they suffered damages between 11 September, 2000 and 24 June, 2004, due to a system of kickbakcs by which Citigroup pocketed savings on commissions instead of passing them on to Smith Barney clients.
Le premier trimestre 2013 devrait être l’un des meilleurs pour certains hedge funds, malgré les inquiétudes qui se bousculent sur le front économique, rapporte le Financial Times. Certains pensent même que cela pourrait marquer un retour en grâce du secteur. Par exemple, Lansdowne Partners, principale société de hedge funds actions en Europe, a vu son fonds vedette augmenter de 7,75 % sur les deux premiers mois de l’année. Le fonds phare de Crispin Odey, responsable d’Odey Asset Management, a gagné 11 % cette année…
Les inquiétudes suscitées par la déconfiture chypriote ont freiné la collecte actions, les fonds d’actions européennes enregistrant des rachats massifs durant la semaine au 20 mars.Selon les statistiques communiquées par EPFR Global, les fonds d’actions dans leur ensemble ont malgré tout enregistré une collecte nette de 2,5 milliards de dollars, les seuls fonds d’actions américaines ayant drainé un peu plus de 2 milliards de dollars, surtout sur les petites et moyennes capitalisations. Les fonds obligataires ont terminé la semaine sous revue sur une collecte nette de 3,68 milliards de dollars tandis que les fonds monétaires subissaient des rachats pour la huitième fois au cours des dix dernières semaines. EPFR Global relève que les fonds d’actions japonaises continuent d’attirer des flux, la collecte totale depuis le début de l’année s’inscrivant désormais à plus de 7,5 milliards de dollars.
Ayant obtenu l’agrément de la CSSF luxembourgeoise, le belge Petercam a pu annoncer le lancement officiel du compartiment SRI Emerging Market bond fund de sa sicav luxembourgeoise Petercam L Bonds (lire Newsmanagers du 21 janvier). Le nouveau produit, qui est un fonds ISR purement d’obligations d’Etat de pays émergents en monnaies fortes et en devises locales, est disponible en quatre classes de parts, dont deux de capitalisation et deux de distribution.Le rendement à échéance se situe à 6 % pour le portefeuille initial, sans préjudice pour la qualité, puisque 60 % des titres en portefeuille seront de qualité investissement.CaractéristiquesDénomination : Petercam L Bonds, SRI Emerging Market BondCodes Isin :LU0907927171 Retail distributionLU0907927338 Retail capitalisationLU0907927841 Institutionnel distributionLU0907928062 Institutionnel capitalisationCommissions de gestion Retail : 1 %Institutionnel : 0,50 %
Quelque de trois semaines après l’acceptation de l’initiative sur les rémunérations abusives, une nouvelle société spécialisée dans le conseil en matière de vote par procuration à destination des investisseurs institutionnels vient de voir le jour. Il s’agit de la société Swiss Proxy Advisors ou Swipra, domiciliée à Zurich, qui vient concurrencer les poids lourds du secteur que sont Ethos ou Actares, selon un communiqué publié le 22 mars.Swipra a été fondée par la fondation collective Vita Sammelstiftung, le fonds de pension helvétique de Credit Suisse et la Conférence des administrateurs de fondations de placement (KGAST).. Les clients de Swipra auront accès à ses recommandations en matière de droit de vote des actionnaires sur une plateforme Internet dès l’an prochain. Celles-ci seront publiées à chacune des assemblées générales des 50 plus grandes entreprises cotées à la Bourse suisse.
Le fonds de soutien aux banques espagnoles aurait engagé McKinsey et la banque d’investissement Nomura International pour le conseiller afin d’adopter une stratégie de long terme dans la gestion de ses actifs toxiques hérités des banques nationalisées du pays, indique le journal de sources proches du dossier. Une mesure qui fait suite aux difficultés rencontrés par le Frob pour céder ses actifs.
Le numéro un européen de la gestion immobilière réduit la voilure en France. Axa Real Estate, à la tête d’un portefeuille d’actifs valorisés à 42 milliards d’euros, dont près d’un tiers en France, entend réduire cette dernière part d’ici à deux ans, et se trouve déjà en négociations pour céder certains immeubles. C’est ce que confie au quotidien son directeur général Pierre Vaquier, pour qui «les fondamentaux de l’économie sont faibles». Le dirigeant assure que la France «devient une économie de milieu de tableau», notamment par manque de réformes en comparaison de ce qui s’est fait ailleurs en Europe. Axa Real Estate privilégie l’Allemagne, le Royaume-Uni ou les pays scandinaves.
Le fonds de pension public japonais envisage d’investir une part plus importante de ses actifs dans des actions étrangères, ainsi que dans des projets d’infrastructures, indique le journal qui ne cite pas ses sources. Pour l’heure, les obligations japonaises représentent 67% du portefeuille du fonds, qui doit céder 6.400 milliards de yens d’actifs cette année pour procéder aux paiements des retraites.
Dell fait l’objet d’offres concurrentes à la suite de l’accord passé le mois dernier entre son fondateur Michael Dell et le fonds de capital investissement Silver Lake en vue de le retirer de la cote. Réunis au sein d’un consortium, ils proposent de racheter le groupe texan pour 24,4 milliards de dollars, soit 13,65 dollars par action. Mais Blackstone Group, conseillé par Morgan Stanley, a soumis une offre provisoire avant la date limite de samedi, a rapporté Bloomberg de source proche du dossier. Celle-ci s'élèverait à 14,25 dollars par action en numéraire. L’investisseur Carl Icahn semble également de la partie avec une offre à 15 dollars par action qui repose sur une recapitalisation avec effet de levier comprenant un plafond de 58% sur le niveau de cash utilisé dans l’opération. L’action Dell a clôturé à 14,14 dollars vendredi. Dell et Blackstone se sont refusés à tout commentaire.