A private equity fund from HgCapital has sold three wind park for a three-digit amount in millions of euros. Tir Mostyn (North Wales, 21 megawatts), Scout Moor (near Manchester, 65 megawatts) and Bagmoor (in Lincolnshire, 15 megawatts) have been sold to the German asset management firm MEAG, which is investing as part of the Renewable Energies & New Technologies (RENT) project by its parent company, Munich Re. The program has a total budget of EUR2.5bn, of which EUR600m have already been spent since the beginning of 2011, MEAG announced on Monday. Assets at MEAG total EUR226bn, largely for the Munich Re group.
M&G, the asset management unit of Prudential, has posted net inflows in first half of GBP4.9bn, Prudential announced on 10 August at a presentation of its results for the half. This development is largely due to the retail market, on which net inflows have risen 53% to GBP4.3bn, while subscriptions have slowed in second quarter to GBP1.9bn, compared with GBP2.4bn in first quarter. For institutionals, net inflows totalled GBP600m, compared with inflows of only GBP100m in first quarter 2011. Assets under management at M&G have remained virtually unchanged compared with the end of December 2011, at GBP204bn, compared with GBP205bn. This development, Prudential explains, is partly due to a decision on the part of M&G to reduce its stake in its South African affiilate. The unit dedicated to asset management in Asia, known as Eastspring, has posted a net inflow of GBP426m for first quarter, and its assets under management have risen 7%, to GBP53.8bn, compared with GBP50.3bn as of the end of December 2011. The Prudential group has earned results for the half of GBP1.2bn, up 13% compared with first half 2011, due to good results for the group in the United Kingdom, and to M&G, which has posted operating profits of GBP199m for the half.
The largest groups in terms of market capitalisation are posting lower returns than their sectors and the market, according to research by Robert Arnott and Lillian Wu, chairman and researcher, respectively, at Research Affiliates. The researchers point out that “being a top player clearly brings with it a burder to bear. Governments, regulators, experts, rivals and consumers all want your skin,” Les Echos reports. By growing beyond reason, these dinosaurs lose effectiveness, agility and flexibility, which among other factors may result in negative performance. Over a longer period (1982-2010), the largest market cap in a sector posts 4% lower returns than its industry in the following ten years. The penalty is even larger in countries such as Canada and Australia, where the leader lags 5% to 10% behind per year. France and Italy are about average (-3%- to -5%). By sector, telecommunications and finance are the sectors in which leaders are most affected.
Earnings on structured products on the Scoach derivatives market have increased 11% to CHF2.71bn in July compared with the previous month. Compared with January, the best month on record, earnings are down 20%, the Swiss structured product association (ASPS) says in a statement. The increase has been particularly noticeable month on month for leveraged products, which have contributed over 60% to total earnings. As of the end of July, 35,154 products were listed, with the majority of these leveraged products (66%). Second place goes to return optimisation products (21%). New issues in July totalled 4,272, of which 80% were leveraged products. The five largest issuers of structured products in July were the Cantonal Bank of Zurich (market share: 24.8%), UBS (24.3%), Julius Bär (17.0%), Vontobel (16.8%) and Credit Suisse (5.7%). Other issuers account for 11.5%.
Julius Baer, the largest Swiss private banking group, on 13 August announced that it is acquiring the International Wealth Management (IWM) activities of Merrill Lynch based outside the United States and Japan, which currently have USD84bn in assets as of 30 June 2012, and which have over 2,000 employees, including over 500 financial advisers, from Bank of America (BofA), pending approval from regulatory bodies and shareholders.About two thirds of IWM assets under management come from clients domiciled in growth markets in Asia (more than half), Latin America and the Middle East. The transaction is composed of a combination of acquisitions of legal entities and transfers of activities, and will bring in an additional CHF57bn to CHF72bn in assets under management by the end of the two-year integration period, about two third of which will come from growth markets.A level of CHF72bn in additional assets under management will increase assets under management at Julius Baer by about 40%, to CHF251bn, and total client assets to about CHF341bn, both on a pro forma basis, by the end of the two-year integration period. While the majority of iwm activities take place in places where Julius Baer is already present, such as Geneva, London, Hong Kong, Singapore, Dubai and Montevideo, the acqusition will add new locations to the existing Julius Baer network in Bahrain, the Netherlands, India, Ireland, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Panama and Spain. After the integration, Julius Baer will be present in over 25 countries with 50 locations worldwide. With CHF72bn in asstes under management transferred, the proportion of assets under management from growth markets will increase from more than one third currently to nearly half on a pro forma basis.
In early 2009, all the funds by Jens Ehrhardt (head of DJE Kapital) had top ratings from Feri. As of 30 June, this remains true for only 57% of them, Handelsblatt reports. This is due to the fact that the Hamburg-based independent asset manager is highly oriented to equities. DJE now ranks 15th among 71 independent asset management firms in the rankings. It has lost ground since many of its rivals are doing better in the rankings by offering only their best funds, and focusing on highly specilised areas of expertise, while Jens Ehrhardt’s prestige requires him to compete in all categories. In addition, Ehrhardt is 70 years old, and must prepare for a transition at the firm to his son Jan, 37.
Rwanda is planning to create a sovereign fund as part of a long-term project to enlist the help of other countries, Financial News reports, citing the local press.
The Dai-ichi Life Insurance Company, the third largest life insurer in Japan, plans to acquire between 15% and 20 % of Janus Capital Group’s outstanding common shares. It is part of a “strategic alliance” announced on August 10.As part of this alliance, Dai-ichi Life will support Janus’ distribution initiatives in Japan and plans to invest USD2 billion of its general account assets with the US asset manager, including seed capital for investment strategies.Finally, it is expected that an individual designated by Dai-ichi Life will be appointed to Janus’ board of directors.As part of the agreement, JCG sold Dai-ichi Life a series of conditional options to purchase, in aggregate, up to 14,000,000 shares of JCG’s common stock.
After two consecutive months of redemptions, funds on sale in Sweden in July posted net inflows of SEK2.3bn (EUR0.2bn), according to the Swedish fund association (Fondbolagens Förening). Inflows were virtually equally driven by equity and bond funds, which took on SEK1.5bn and SEK1.6bn (about EUR0.19bn), respectively. For equity funds, savings investors went primarily for Swedish equity funds (SEK1.7bn). Balanced funds, money markt funds and hedge funds have all seen slight net outflows (-SEK0.2bn, -SEK0.4bn, and -SEK0.2bn, respectively). Since the beginning of the year, funds on sale in Sweden have posted net subscriptions of SEK14bn (EUR1.7bn), of which SEK11bn were for bond funds. As of the end of July, assets under management by funds in Sweden totalled SEK1.927bn (EUR253bn), of which 52% were in equity funds.
The Danish asset manager Jyske Invest is going to close two funds, Jyske Invest Swedish Equities and Jyske Invest Global Real Estate Equities. “The reason why we wish to close the two funds is that the demand for investment certificates in the funds has been on the decline for a long time,” explains the asset manager.“The low demand for units of Swedish Equities and Global Real Estate Equities has resulted in too high costs for administration of the funds.”Moreover, Jyske Invest is converting Jyske Invest Eastern European Equities into Jyske Invest Russian Equities. From now on, the name of the fund is therefore Jyske Invest Russian Equities, and its investment universe is Russian equities.With the conversion, the fund changes its investment strategy but the change is limited as the fund’s portfolio was already composed of two thirds of Russian equities before the conversion. The Danish Financial Supervisory Authority has approved the closure and the conversion of the funds.
Asset management firms and ETF providers have asked the Singapore stock exchange to revise its mechanism for setting prices for ETFs, Asian Investor reports. Currently, the 93 ETF funds listed on the Singapore stock market are valued on the basis of their listing at the end of the trading day. Market participants would prefer to consider bid/offer prices, as is done on other stock markets, such as Hong Kong.
The Norwegian public pension fund, one of the largest sovereign funds in the world, has suffered from the falling stock markets in second quarter, the Norwegian central bank, responsible for managing the fund, announced on 10 August. The Norwegian fund, which is supplied by oil revenues from the country and invested in international equities and, to a lesser extent, real estate, underwent negative returns in the past quarter of 2.2%, a loss of about NOK77bn. The negative performance of investments in equities (-4.6%) wiped out gains on bonds (+1.5%). The market value of the fund was nonetheless up NOK65bn as of the end of June compared with the previous quarter, to NOK3,561bn, or nearly EUR490bn, due to inflows of new oil revenues (+NOK72bn) and currency effects related to a weaker Norwegian kroner compared with other currencies (+NOK70bn).
Bertrand Hau, directeur financier d’Ageas France dans le cadre d’un article paru dans Option Finance numéro 1181 : Le portefeuille immobilier représente quant à lui 8 % de notre allocation d’actifs. Nous détenons, historiquement, en direct des immeubles de bureaux en région parisienne. Depuis deux ans, nous investissons également plus régulièrement dans des fonds dédiés réservés aux institutionnels, qui misent dans des locaux techniques, des commerces ou encore des bureaux. Grâce à cette stratégie, nous avons doublé notre poche immobilière en 2010 et 2011. Nous avons d’ailleurs pour objectif d’atteindre entre 9 à 10 % d’actifs immobiliers cette année. Pour atteindre ce but, nous comptons diversifier le portefeuille immobilier en investissant dans le secteur de la santé. De plus nous n’hésitons pas à réinvestir dans les fonds dans lesquels nous avons déjà investi quand l’opportunité se présente. Pour le moment, nous avons déjà sélectionné différents gestionnaires d’actifs comme la Française AM, BNP Paribas Real Estate ou encore des acteurs de plus petite taille comme Imocom Partners.
La Belgique manquera probablement son objectif de réduction du déficit, le ralentissement brusque et inattendu enregistré au deuxième trimestre (-0,6%) suggérant que l'économie du pays pourrait finalement se contracter cette année, a prévenu le gouverneur de la banque centrale belge, Luc Coene. Le pays veut ramener son déficit à 2,8% du PIB cette année, contre 3,7% l’an dernier.
Selon le département du Trésor, le déficit budgétaire des Etats-Unis a nettement reculé au mois de juillet en rythme annuel, reflétant une hausse des recettes publiques et une baisse des dépenses. Il s’est établi le mois dernier à 69,6 milliards de dollars (56,6 milliards d’euros) contre 129,4 milliards de dollars un an plus tôt.
L’ex-ministre allemand des Finances, l’un des adversaires potentiels de la chancelière Angela Merkel aux élections de 2013, s’est dit favorable à l'émission d’euro-obligations. Il a ainsi indiqué au Süddeutsche Zeitung soutenir l’appel de Sigmar Gabriel, président du SPD, à des émissions de dette commune et à une plus grande intégration budgétaire dans la zone euro.
Selon le Sunday Telegraph, l’Office d’investissement du Régime de pensions du Canada (CPPIB) estime qu’il est trop risqué d’investir dans les projets d’infrastructures au Royaume-Uni, alors que le gouvernement cherche des soutiens pour 250 milliards de livres de dépenses. Son responsable, Mark Wiseman, indique ne pas vouloir investir dans des projets qui comportent d’éventuels «risques de construction».
Le produit intérieur brut de la Russie a progressé de 4,0% au deuxième trimestre en rythme annuel, contre 3,4% un an auparavant, montrent les chiffres préliminaires publiés vendredi par l’Office fédéral de la statistique. Au premier trimestre 2012, l'économie russe a progressé de 4,9%.
La Finlande reste opposée au rachat par la BCE d’obligations souveraines espagnoles et italiennes, prévient son Premier ministre, Jyrki Katainen, dans un entretien à Der Spiegel. D’autres solutions doivent être trouvées pour lutter contre la crise de l’euro, estime le dirigeant finlandais, qui souligne que les achats de dette menés par la BCE dans le passé n’ont été que des remèdes de court terme.
Dévoilé demain, en même temps que les chiffres français et allemand, le PIB de la zone euro est attendu en baisse de 0,2% pour le deuxième trimestre. La situation de l’Allemagne inquiète aussi. Le pays pourrait virer au rouge au troisième trimestre.
Dévoilé demain, le PIB de la zone euro est attendu en baisse de 0,2%. Une nouvelle contraction au troisième trimestre enverrait la région dans le rouge
Les rendements des dettes à deux ans espagnoles ont gagné 39 points de base à 3,71%, vendredi en milieu de journée, et ceux des dettes italiennes à deux ans 22 points de base à 3,31%.
Les hedge funds ont réalisé en juillet des gains pour le deuxième mois consécutif, tirés par les stratégies macro. L’indice HFRI Macro: Systematic Diversified a enregistré un gain de 2,8%, selon des statistiques communiquées par HFR.L’indice HFRI Fund Weighted Composite a progressé de 1,1%, enregistrant ainsi sa plus forte performance depuis février, avec des contributions positives des stratégies macro, relative value arbitrage, equity hedge et event driven. L’indice HFRI des marchés émergents affiche son meilleur résultat depuis février dernier avec un gain de 1,1%. L’indice HFRI des fonds de fonds a pour sa part progressé de 0,7% après trois mois consécutifs de baisses.
BNY Mellon vient de recruter Paul Schulte, de la China Construction Bank International, comme responsable de la stratégie d’investissement Asie-Pacifique, un poste nouvellement créé. Il aura pour mission de faire de la recherche sur les tendances d’investissement, l’activité de marché et l’économie dans la région.Basé à Hong Kong, Paul Schulte sera placé sous la direction d’Alan Harden, CEO de l’activité de gestion d’actifs de BNY Mellon pour la région Asie-Pacifique, et Jack Malvey, chef stratégiste pour les marchés mondiaux, basé à New York. Il rejoint par ailleurs le comité exécutiv de gestion d’actifs Asie-Pacifique de BNY Mellon et le comité opérationnel de BNY Mellon pour la région. Chez CCBI, Paul Schulte était responsable mondial de la stratégie financière.
Threadneedle Investments a lancé le Threadneedle Global Opportunities Bond en Suède, rapporte Investment Europe. Le fonds de droit luxembourgeois est géré par Jim Cielinski.
Au premier semestre 2012, Aviva Investors a accusé une baisse de son bénéfice d’exploitation à 34 millions de livres contre 39 millions sur les six premiers mois de 2011. Ce repli s’explique par une baisse des frais de performance et la vente d’Aviva Investors Australia, que la hausse des revenus issus des frais de gestion et la baisse des dépenses n’auront pas suffi à compenser, commente le groupe dans ses résultats semestriels.Aviva Investors a vu ses encours progresser de 4 % à 274 milliards de livres. La part des encours gérés pour le compte de clients externes a augmenté de 6 % à 55 milliards de livres.
Afin de renforcer son offre sur le marché britannique, Russell Investments envisage d’ici à la fin de l’année une version retail du fonds Multi Asset Growth Strategy dont les actifs s'élèvent actuellement à quelque 760 millions de livres, rapporte Investment week.Ce fonds se propose de dégager des rendements similaires à ceux des actions mais avec une forte réduction de la volatilité. Russell Investments travaille également sur un produit de revenu multi-classes d’actifs.
Ann Andresen a quitté Sparinvest après y avoir passé cinq ans en tant que gérante, révèle Citywire Global. Elle gérait quatre fonds d’obligations danoises. Ces produits ont été repris par Claus Caroe, le responsable de la gestion taux, a indiqué Sparinvest.