P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Italian asset management firm Azimut has unveiled a new unit, Azimut Global Advisory, which will focus on paid financial advising, Bluerating reports. The project, based on open architecture, will be led by the brothers Alberto and Alessandro Parentini.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Net inflows at La Banque Postale Asset Management last year totalled EUR3.5bn, up EUR2.8bn compared with 2011, according to statistics released on 5 March by La Banque Postale.The effect, associated with improved returns, have resulted in growth of EUR13bn in assets, to EUR137.5bn, largely in the bond (+EUR9.5bn) and money market (+EUR3.4bn) asset classes.Profits for the asset management unit have been maintained due to good cost-control. Net banking proceeds are stable at EUR120m. Operating costs for the sector are under control and are virtually stable compared with 2011, at EUR68m. The cost/income ratio for the asset management affiliates is identical to 2011, at 54.7%.Net profits for the part of the La Banque Postale group rose 39.3% last year to EUR574m, with net banking proceeds of EUR5.24bn (+2.5% excluding one-time elements).La Banque Postale has also announced that it will be continuing to develop its wealth management affiliate. Since October 2012, La Banque Postale has been in exclusive negotiations with Crédit Mutuel Arkéa to acquire all capital in the Banque Privée Européenne (BPE). Final agreements are expected to be signed on 2 April 2013, La Banque Postale states.La Banque Postale will then have a complete platform of the products, resources, tools and expertise necessary to offer a dedicated product range to its 500,000 wealth management clients, with the support of a dedicated network.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The OFI Group, via its longstanding holding company Ofivalmo Partenaires, on 5 March announced that it has acquired a minority stake of 10% in the Swiss microfinance specialist BlueOrchard. The strategic planned investment was announced in January by OFI (see Newsmanagers of 25 January 2013).BlueOrchard Finance S.A., the European leader in the management of micro-credit, was founded in 2001. For eleven years, BlueOrchard Finance S.A. has been able to increase not only its assets under management, which now total USD620m, but also its product range, to meet demand from institutional and private investors seeking to combine financial returns and social impact.Following the acquisition of the minority stake in BlueOrchard Finance S.A., Ofivalmo Partenaires will be represented on the board of directors of the Geneva-based firm.Assets under management at the OFI group totalled EUR53.5bn as of the end of January 2013.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } SEI has been selected by Sciens Alternative Investments, an entity of the Sciens Capital Management group, to provide administration services for its managed account platform. SEI will also provide collateral management services to the Sciens middle office.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } From 11 March, OppenheimerFunds has announced, Laton Spahr is becomgina portfolio manager for the Oppenheimer Value Fund, Oppenheimer Select Value Fund and Oppenheimer Small- & Mid- Cap Value Fund, as well as for all associated strategies. He will also be co-portfolio manager of the Oppenheimer Equity Fund.Spahr will be responsible for a team of three people, who like him are employed by Columbia Management Investment Advisors (an afiliate of Ameriprise Financial, like the British firm Threadneedle): Eric Hewitt, Kyle Bergacker and Daniel Hozan. At Columbia, Spahr was a senior portfolio manager for value and income strategies, for institutional and retail products.Since 28 February, John Damian and Mitchell Williams “are no longer the portfolio managers of their respective products,” while Levine is interim portfolio manager for the strategies concerned until 11 March.For its part, Columbia has announced that it has recruited Jeffrey L. Knight as head of global asset allocation. He had most recently been manager of several mutual funds and institutional strategies, also as head of global asset allocation, at Putnam Investments.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } Since 2008, falling discount rates have, despite four years of good performance for investments, provoked a rise of about USD84bn in the coverage shortfalls for the 19 US pension funds with liabilities of over USD20bn, according to a study by Russell Investments. The funds taken by themselves represent nearly 40% of assets and liabilities for all US publicly-traded companies. They finished 2012 with a net shortfall of USD220bn, compared with USD182bn one year earlier.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } Assets under management at the Banque Privée Edmond de Rothschild group (BPER group) last year rose 5.4% to CHF101.6bn. Net inflows totalled CHF2.5bn, a press release says.Net profits, however, rell to CHF66.4m, compared with CHF125.1m in 2011. This decline is largely due “to a decline in returns on savings, reduced client activity, an unfavourable evolution of the asset mix, and a reduced contribution from fund activities, which weighed heavily on our revenues.” The group was also obliged to bear one-time restructuring costs, as well as significant investment to establish a platform in Hong Kong and to modernise IT systems.The group emphasizes that it has pledged to deploy a strategic plan that will be focused on a number of priority actions, “such as capitalisation around a strong Edmond de Rotschild brand, and confirmation of engagement in the private banking and asset management professions, in Europe and internationally, voluntaristicly and pragmatically.”
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } M&G Investments, which has been present on the Swiss market for seven years, has opened an office in Geneva, and is adding to its local team with the recruitment of a new employee, Agefi Switzerland reports. M&G Investments is hoping to meet growing demand on the part of its clients in French-speaking Switzerland. Valentine Bugeja has been appointed as head of sales for development of the family office and independent financial adviser segments in French-speaking Switzerland. She began in her new role in February 2013.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Richard Semark is expected to become head of the UBS MTF platform, one of the largest dark pools in Europe, the Financial Times reports. Semark succeeds Robert Barnes, who is reported to be preparing to leave his position after more than 18 years at the group. UBS has declined to comment on the reports.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } The 20 largest hedge funds in the world made USD32.4bn for their investiors last year, less than one fifth of the USD172bn the industry made overall, the Financial Times reports, citing figures from LCH Investments (Edmond de Rothschild group). In the past, the 20 largest hedge funds made nearly half of all the profits in the industry.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Morningstar hedge fund index, the Morningstar MSCI Composite Hedge Fund Index, gained 1.9% in the month of January, and has gained 6.3% in the past twelve months. Virtually all components of the index remained positively oriented in January, exepting short bias and systematic trading strategies. Among the notable results of the month, the Morningstar MSCI Small Cap Hedge Fund Index posted gains of 3.9%, and the Morningstar MSCI Emerging Markets Hedge Fund Index has gained 3%.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Oxfam is studying KBC and Dexia, as well as French banks and investors with a presence in Belgium such as BNP Paribas, ING Bank and Axa, to examine the extent to which these institutions are speculating on food commodity markets, Financial Times Fund Management reports. Its objective is to discourage them from this practice, on the grounds that it drives up the prices of these food resources worldwide. The study is expected to conclude in April.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } Finance ministers from the 27 EU countries meeting in Brussels on 5 March supported a compromise proposal advanced last week by the European Parliament for legislation to apply the rules of Basel III to Europe, including new bonus limits, Les Echos reports. No formal decision has been taken, but Ireland, which holds the EU presidency this half, observed at the conclusion of the meeting that a vast majority supported the compromise proposal. The United Kingdom is now completely isolated on the issue of limits for bonuses paid to bankers, with no way to prevent the equivalent of this legislation being passed elsewhere in the world. In the future, variable pay scales may not exceed those for the fixed portion of salary, except if shareholders decide to raise the limit to up to twice the annual salary.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Elizabeth Corley, CEO of Allianz Global Investors, is pessimistic about equities and bonds, Financial Times Fund Management reports this week. The affiliate of the German firm is encouraging invetors to focus on other aset classes, such as convertible bonds, index products, commodities and infrastructure. AGI has also created a renewables team, and is planning to launch a fund dedicated to this theme covering Europe, and potentially other developed countries. Corley also thinks that Asian high yield bonds denominated in local currencies offer “real opportunities.”
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The CNMV on 4 March published a notification from the oil firm Repsol stating that the Singapore sovereign wealth fund Temasek (EUR115bn in assets) has acquired the remainder of the Spanish group’s holding in its own shares, equivalent to 5.04% of capital, for EUR1.036bn (64.7 million shares, at EUR16.01 each). Temasek now has a 6.3% stake in Repsol.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The hedge fund firm Marshall Wace and the Asian financial group GaveKal Holdings have decided to dissolve their joint venture, founded in June 2008, Financial News reports. The two parties found that there was a lack of synergy. Marshall Wace will absorb the long/short funds from the joint venture, and GaveKal will take over management of the long-only funds.
The Financial Services Authority (FSA) on March 5th published its Internal Audit Report on the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) covering the period January 2007 to May 2009. The report identifies that the FSA, at all levels of management, was aware of severe dislocation in the LIBOR market in the period. This report concludes that the FSA’s focus on dealing with the financial crisis, together with the fact that contributing to and administering LIBOR were not ‘regulated activities’ (which they will be from April 1st, 2013), led to the FSA being too narrowly focused in its handling of LIBOR related information. Second, taking the information cumulatively, the likelihood that lowballing was occurring should have been considered. And, third, the information received should have been better managed.The report identifies important areas where the FSA should have performed better, and makes valuable recommendations for the future, but does not suggest major regulatory failure on the scale identified in the Northern Rock (March 2008) or RBS (December 2011) reports. Finally, the internal audit draws out six lessons to be learnt for the future regulatory authorities, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), to consider. They refer to activities outside the regulatory perimeter, the clear division of responsibilities bertween the authorities, the appropriate embedment of the lessons of the report in the cultures of the regulatory authorities, the use and record of information and intelligence by these authorities, the way information circulates and escalates and, lastly the integration of the lessons from the report in the development of the record management policies.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Cazenove Capital has launched a multi-asset class fund to meet demand from clients, Fundweb reports.The Cazenove Multi-Asset Fund was launched on 28 February. It provides access, via an offshore vehicle, to the strategy used in the Diversity Fund, whose assets under management total GBP1.1bn.According to a Cazenove spokesperson, “the new fund is not identical to the Diversity fund, but it is managed by the same people, and uses a multi-asset class approach.”
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } With strong growth in their wealth, Chinese high net worth investors are increasingly considering setting up family offices, often in Hong Kong or Singapore, Asian Investor reports. The number of Chinese high net worth individuals whose investable assets exceed USD1m rose 5% in 2011 to 562,000, according to statistics from Capgemini and RBC Wealth Management in their Asia-Wealth Report 2012.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } UBS is planning to list several ETFs in Hong Kong in the second half of this year, following the launch of an activity dedicated to ETFs in the region and the recruitment of a sales team in Hong Kong, Financial News reports. The products will be registered locally, and the bank is planning to list some of them in Singapore as well.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } According to reports in Funds People, Lyxor Asset Management is said to have already submitted an application for a license to sell the Lyxor ETF MTS Spain Government Bond All-Maturity in Spain, following its recent introduction on Euronext Paris. The product, investing in Spanish government debt, is aimed at investors betting on convergence of the spread in returns between Spanish public debt and German bunds. It is the second ETF which the French asset management firm has listed in Spain since the beginning of the year; the first was the Lyxor ETF MSCI ACWI Gold.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The German firm Union Investment Real Estate (UIRE) has acquired the four-star Barceló Raval hotel in Barcelona (186 rooms), which is leased for a renewable 20-year term to the third-largest Spanish hotel chain, Barceló, for EUR37m. The property will be added to the portfolio of the open-ended real estate fund UniImmo: Europa.The hotel portfolio of UIRE, which already includes the Barceló hotel in Hamburg, covers 22 properties, and has a volume of EUR1.7bn, of which EUR400m have been invested in the past three years.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } At the end of 2012, BlackRock launched an absolute return fund which deploys a long/short strategy on emerging market equities, the Emerging Markets Absolute Return sub-fund of its BlackRock Strategic Funds Sicav. The Luxembourg-registered product uses top-down and bottom-up approaches to achieve a net exposure to -10% to +20% to the market, with 20 to 35 positions, as well for long and for short.CharacteristicsName: BlackRock Strategic Funds Emerging Markets Absolute ReturnISIN code: LU0852332542Management commission: 1%Performance commission: 20%Hurdle rate: Libor 3-month
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } The FBI has teamed up with a new unit at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Quantitative Analytics Unit, which examines hedge funds and other companies that use transaction strategies with algorithms, the Financial Times reports. The structure seeks to identify abuses which may result from the emergence of high-frequency trading companies and the use of dark pools.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to statistics from the Swiss firm Alix Capital, UCITS-compliant hedge funds in February posted average returns of 0.14%, compared with 1.03% in January, or 1.17% since the beginning of the year. UCITS-compliant funds of hedge funds had 0.23%, compared with 1.31% the previous month, for a total of 1.54% for the first two months.Three strategies showed losses in February: CTA (-0.80%), commodities (-0.40%), and event-driven (-0.04%). The strongest gains were for FX (+0.56%) and long/short equity (+0.40%)As of the end of February, total assets in UCITS-compliant hedge funds totalled EUR143bn, for the 870 funds of the UCITS Alternative Index, compared with EUR141bn for 880 products as of the end of January.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Royal London Asset Management (RLAM) on 5 March announced inflows of EUR2.3bn in 2012, up 66% year on year. Inflows to bond funds represented 88% of this total, the asset management firm says in a statement. As of the end of December, assets under management at RLAM totalled GBP47.6bn, up 8% compared with the end of December 2011.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Sir Paul Ruddock, head and co-founder of the alternative management firm Lansdowne Partners, will resign from his position in June next year. The British financier would like to leave the asset management sector in order to dedicate himself to philanthropic activities. Assets under management at Lansdowne, which is now seeking a successor for Sir Paul, total about GBP12.4bn, after peaking at GBP16.8bn about two years ago. Its flagship fund, the Developed Markets fund, last year earned returns of 18%, and has gained 7.6% since the beginning of this year.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } Investors in equities are much more confident about the outlooks for the markets in 2013 than their colleagues specialised in bond investments, according to an annual survey undertaken by Aviva Investors of a sample of asset managers with GBP2.5trn in assets under management based in the United Kingdom, the United States and Europe.Nearly 70% of equity professionals have more confidence in the markets than a year ago, perhaps because returns on equities beat projections throughout the past year. For bond managers, only one in four professionals is more confident than at the same time last year. Pessimism about the euro zone remains high, but more so among bond investors, 90% of whom predict that uncertainty will persist, compared with only 71% of equity investors.Equity investors are predicting a rise in merger and acquisition deals in 2013, compared with only 17% one year ago. They are also highly optimistic about the financial sector, though 44% of them were underweight last year.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Singapore sovereign fund GIC, whose assets under management total about USD230bn, has announced the appointment of Jeffrey Jaensubjakij as head of asset management activities at GIC Asset Management. He succeeds Lim Chow Kiat, who last month was appointed as chief investment officer for the group. Jaensubhakij will leave his current position in Europe, and will transfer from London to Singapore. He will begin in his new role on 1 April.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The average amount paid in bonuses in the finance sector in the United Kingdom fell 2% last year compared with the previous year, the most recent eFinancialCareers survey has revealed, at a time when the City is preparing to fight limits on bonuses for bankers planned by the European Union in court. The decline, which remains moderate, compared with a 36% decline on Wall Street, is due more to staff cuts than to cuts to bonuses, the finance job offer website remarks. The 2% figure conceals significant disparities, however. Front office employees still receive bonuses nearly four times larger than their back-office colleagues, and their bonuses rose by 15% this year. Middle office saw the largest reduction to their bonuses: -25% compared with the previous year. Buy side professionals, meanwhile, do better than their sell-side colleagues: their average bonuses in 2012 rose 13% compared with the previous year. The number who received no bonus rose from 10% in 2011 to 13% in 2012. While average bonuses paid in 2012 fell, satisfaction with bonuses increased slightly: of 606 finance professionals surveyed, 4 out of 10 (40%) say they are satisfied with their bonsues, compared with 36% in 2011. A slightly larger number of respondents has declared that the bonuses they received “met their expectations” in 2012, more than in 2011 (38% compared with 36%). However, a significant percentage remain disssatisfied: nearly half (45%) are disappointed, and a similar percentage (44%) say that their bonuses to not meet their expectations.