Selon la synthèse d’Euro RSCG, les AG 2012 du SBF 120 sont moins contestées que l’an dernier, rapporte L’Agefi. Le dialogue en amont commence à porter ses fruits et les gestions elles-mêmes ont communiqué leur politique de vote aux émetteurs en début d’année précisant bien qu’elles seraient intransigeantes sur les critères de performance conditionnant la rémunération, et sur les opérations dilutives. De fait, Euro RSCG constate que les mesures anti-OPA, très contestées l’an dernier, n’ont été présentées que par 24% du SBF 120 contre 46% l’an dernier. Et si près des deux tiers des sociétés demandent toujours des autorisations financières, elles sont beaucoup moins dilutives.
Paris Orléans, la société de tête du groupe Rothschild, a publié le 27 juin un bénéfice net part du groupe divisé par trois à 37,2 millions d’euros au cours de son exercice annuel à fin mars, un recul lié notamment à un changement de périmètre dans les comptes de la société.Le groupe rappelle dans un communiqué qu’il avait bénéficié l’an passé de réévaluations comptables de 31,4 millions d’euros, correspondant à l’intégration dans les comptes des activités de la banque française, Rothschild & Cie Banque (RCB).Concernant l’exercice écoulé, Paris Orléans a pâti d’une hausse du coût du risque. Ses provisions pour impayés sont en effet passés de 13,7 millions d’euros à 26,2 millions d’euros sur un an. Du coup, son résultat d’exploitation a souffert puisque il s’affiche en recul de 25,5% à 170,9 millions d’euros.Malgré un contexte volatil des marchés financiers, les revenus des activités de Banque privée et de gestion d’actifs ne s’affichent qu’en léger retrait par rapport à ceux de l’exercice précédent, grâce à une forte collecte nette sur la période (+1,4 milliard d’euros) hors effet de la cession de l’activité de gestion d’actifs Sélection R en France (1,5 milliard d’euros). À fin mars 2012, les actifs sous gestion du Groupe s’élevaient à 37,1 milliards d’euros contre 37,2 milliards d’euros à fin mars 2011.La réorganisation de Paris Orléans, annoncée en avril dernier et qui prévoit de simplifier la structure du groupe, de renforcer son efficacité opérationnelle et de le transformer en société en commandite par actions, a été approuvée lors de l’Assemblée générale du 8 juin 2012.Les résultats de l’offre publique obligatoire lancée à l’issue de cette transformation ont été publiés le 25 juin 2012 : avec un taux d’apport à l’offre s’élevant à seulement 2,7% du capital après les apports, ils témoignent de l’attachement et de la confiance des actionnaires pour Paris Orléans.Cette réorganisation, souhaitée par la direction, permet la simplification du Groupe et par conséquent d’en unifier sa gestion en facilitant les prises de décision. «Grace à la réorganisation, le Groupe entend entreprendre différentes initiatives qui lui permettront à la fois d’accroitre son développement grâce aux synergies entre les trois métiers du Groupe et de réduire structurellement ses charges brutes d’environ 20 millions d’euros à horizon 2-3 ans notamment au niveau des fonctions supports»., souligne Paris Orléans dans son communiqué.
Schroders annonce le lancement, en Italie, de ses fonds Global Multi-Asset Income et ISF Global High Income Bond, compartiments de sa sicav Schroder ISF. Les deux produits seront commercialisés sur le marché italien dès le 2 juillet, précise InvestmentEurope.Global Multi-Asset Income est investi sur un éventail d’actifs à haut rendement, issus des marchés obligataires (crédit, high yield, dette émergente...) ou des marchés actions (développés et émergents). Le Global High Income Bond mise sur les obligations mondiales, combinant le haut rendement et les obligations émergentes.
Northern Trust a annoncé la promotion de Hidehiro Nakayama au poste de representative director et president, responsable du développement des activités d’asset management au Japon, rapporte Asian Investor.Hidehiro Nakayama, qui remplace à ce poste Kunihiko Nakao, parti en retraite il y a quelques jours, avait rejoint Northern Trust en août 2011 en qualité d’executive managing director à Tokyo. Il arrivait alors de chez Pictet AM.
Julius Bär a annoncéle 27 juin qu’il allait unifier la dénomination de ses produits structurés pour en augmenter la transparence et la compréhension. L’ensemble des produits du groupe bancaire reprendront dès le second semestre 2012 le nom des catégories officielles de l’Association suisse des produits structurés (ASPS), indique un communiqué.
Selon un prospectus provisoire (Form N-1A) déposé auprès de la SEC le 25 juin, AdvisorShares envisage de lancer un ETF susceptible d’investir de manière active comme celui de Pimco (Enhanced Short Maturity Strategy ETF, lire Newsmanagers du 21 mars) dans tous les compartiments obligataires : il s’agit du Newfleet Multi-Sector Income ETF dont l’aconyme devrait être MINC et qui sera «sous-conseillé par Newfleet Asset Management.Le taux de frais sur encours n’a pas encore été fixé.Le portefeuille sera investi dans des titres de dette d’une duration moyene comprise entre un et trois ans. Il pourra consacrer 20 % de ses encours à des valeurs notées en catégorie spéculative. La proportion de titres d'émetteurs non établis aux Etats-Unis pourra aller jusqu'à 30 %.
Après plus de cinq années passés chez Financière de l’Echiquier comme directeur du marketing, Nicolas Lesur, a annoncé, par mail, son départ à la fin du mois de juin de la société de gestion présidée par Didier Le Menestrel.
Natixis Asset Management a annoncé sur site, mardi 26 juin, que le conseil d’administration de la sicav CNP Assur Capi dont elle assure la gestion, a décidé de procéder à la création d’une nouvelle catégorie d’action. A compter du 2 juillet 2012, cette nouvelle catégorie d’action, dénommée Action « R » (*), sera ouverte à tous souscripteurs, et plus particulièrement destinée aux clients UC de CNP et de ses filiales. De fait, la catégorie d’action existante (**) sera requalifiée Action « I ».La nouvelle catégorie d’actions revêt les caractéristiques suivantes :- Frais de fonctionnement et de gestion maximum de 0,60 % TTC de l’actif net (hors OPCVM)- Pas de commission de performance- Aucune commission de souscription- Aucune commission de rachat- Valeurs liquidative initiale de 100 €- Décimalisation en millièmes d’actions- Aucun minimum de souscription- Capitalisation et/ou distribution des résultats(*) code ISIN FR0011278712(**) code ISIN FR0000296386
Schelcher Prince Gestion vient de recruter Carole Imbert en qualité de responsable de la recherche financière. La société de gestion dirigé par Sébastien Barbe renforce ainsi son propre bureau d’analyse dans les domaines des taux, du crédit et des convertibles.Agée de 41 ans, Carole Imbert a exercé les responsabilités d’analyste sell-side actions pendant neuf ans, chez Natexis, CPR, puis Exane avant de prendre les fonctions de responsable des Relations Investisseurs et de la Communication Financière pendant dix ans chez BIC puis chez Eurazeo.
La banque franco-belge Dexia, en cours de démantèlement, a annoncé le 27 juin être entrée dans la phase finale des négociations avec trois investisseurs internationaux en vue de la cession de sa filiale de gestion d’actifs Dexia Asset Management. La vente de Dexia AM doit conclure le programme de démantèlement de la banque, décidé en octobre 2011.Dexia a notamment déjà entrepris la cession de Dexia Banque Belgique (rebaptisée Belfius Banque et Assurances), de sa filiale luxembourgeoise (Dexia Banque Internationale au Luxembourg), de sa filiale turque Denizbank et de sa part de 50% dans la coentreprise de conservation de titres qu’elle détenait avec la Banque royale du Canada.Dexia a par ailleurs annoncé la démission de son président, Jean-Luc Dehaene, et de son directeur général, Pierre Mariani, dans le cadre d’une réorganisation de la direction de la banque franco-belge en cours de démantèlement.La banque explique dans un communiqué que Jean-Luc Dehaene quittera ses fonctions le 1er juillet et que le Belge Karel De Boeck assurera l’intérim. Pierre Mariani ne quittera quant à lui ses fonctions qu’après l’approbation des comptes du premier semestre 2012.
The Wall Street Journal reports that Peter Madoff, the younger brother of Bernard Madoff, is planning to plead guilty in his criminal hearing. This will be the first time that a member of the Madoff family has pleaded guilty in the three and a half years since the fraud was discovered.
According to a provisional prospectus (Form N-1A) filed with the SEC on 25 June, AdvisorShares is planning to launch an ETF which would be able to invest actively, like the Enhanced Short Maturity Strategy ETF from Pimco (see Newsmanagers of 21 March) in all fixed income categories: it is the Newfleet Multi-Sector Income ETF, whose acronym will be MINC, and which will be sub-advised by Newfleet Asset Management.The total expense ratio has not yet been set.The portfolio will be invested in debt securities with an average total duration of one to three years. It may dedicate up to 20% of its assets to shares rated as non-investment grade. The percentage of securities from issuers not located in the United States may be up to 30%.
With GSessions, Goldman Sachs has recently opened a trading platform for large volumes of corporate bonds, the Wall Street Journal reports. The objective is to attract hedge funds, mutual funds, pension funds and other major investors, and to fight competition from BlackRock and other asset management firms, which may be taking clients from Goldman Sachs.
With Palmira Capital Partners, a specialist in logistical real estate, Henderson Global Investors (HGI) is preparing to launch an institutional fund this summer, which will invest in logistical properties in Germany, the Henderson German Logistics Fund, Fondsprofessionell reports. The volume objective for the product, which will be offered to insurers, pension funds and complementary retirement entities in Germany and Austria, will be EUR200m-EUR250m, 60% of which will be owners’ equity.Assets will be retained for seven to eight years, and HGI will distribute 8% per year and performance is slated to be 8.5% p.a.. The first closing, with EUR50-70m in subscriptions, will come in late July, says Timothy Horrocks, CEO of HGI for Germany.
The British Barclays bank on 27 June announced that it will be paying a fine of GBP290m to settle legal investigations in the United Kingdom and the United States, and its head has confessed and agreed not to accept a bonus this year. The bank says in a statement that it has settled amicably with several financial regulatory authorities, as part of an investigation of the entire banking sector in the matter of the setting of interbank interest rates on a series of derivatives. In another statement, the Financial Services Authority (FSA) says that it has fined the bank GBP59.5m for represensible conduct in relation to interbank reference rates on the London market, the Libor and for the European interbank rate (Euribor). It says that it is the largest fine ever imposed by the FSA. In addition to the FSA, Barclays reports that it has also reached settlements in the United States with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the Justice Department. The latter has also granted Barclays immunity in investigations into violations at competing banks. Following this case, and to reflect his collective responsibility as director, the CEO of Barclays, Bob Diamond, has announced that he has decided to forego his bonus this year. Three other members of management have taken the same decision: the CFO, Chris Lucas, the COO, Jerry del Missier, and the executive director in charge of investment banking, Rich Ricci.
The British Financial Services Authority (FSA) on 27 June launched a consultation on regulation on the activities of platforms, which includes a proposed prohibition on kickbacks from product providers, as well as increased transparency about fees charged. According to the FSA, a ban on kickbacks paid by fund managers to platforms would represent a shortfall for the operators of these platforms of about GBP10m to compensate for. The costs related to the rules proposed by the FSA are in a range from GBP11.6m to GBP37.8m, according to estimates by Deloitte. The FSA hopes to release final rules on platforms by the end of the year, to come into effect on 31 December 2013.
Georgia Pardoe, director of marketing at Neptune Investment Management, has left the management firm, effective immediately. She will not be replaced, Money Marketing says. Alasdair Johnson, head of marketing, will assume her former responsibilities.
Nearly all asset management professionals meeting in Monaco for the Fund Forum International feel that there is no doubt that the movement of consolidation in their sector is set to increase. Nearly 40% of participants at a conference on the subject find that mergers and acquisitions are necessary to accelerate rationalisation in the sector. 19% of respondents estimate that that would improve the performance and quality of products, and 17% say it would also help firms comply with regulations.Although many asset management firms are now letting word get around that they are up for sale, few buyers are on the market. In fact, an acquisition, if it allows a firm to reach critical size, may also have a negative effect. Bernhard W. Langer, chief investment officer for global quantitative equity at Invesco, says that to finalise an operation takes 12 to 15 months. During that time, the firm will continue to operate at a reduced scale, and may lose market share.Martin Gilbert, CEO of Aberdeen Asset Management, and James Charrington, charman EMEA at BlackRock, two firms familiar with acquisition operations, warn against acquiring boutiques. One needs to have the spirit that the boutiques have often been created by managers who left larger asset management firms to work independently. A decision to sell often represents a will to take profits. Gilbert says acquiring an affiliate of a bank is easier. It may be true that, as Gilbert says, “all you are buying is a distribution network.” But that is much easier to integrate, particularly if the acquisition involves capital and commercial agreements, as there were between Aberdeen and Credit Suisse.Although the affiliates of banks are more likely to find buyers, what does the future hold for boutiques, which are often facing succession issues? According to Eric Helderlé, CEO of Carmignac, the example of Fidelity, which has been able to grow over three generations, shows that it is possible for management structures supporting the firm to remain independent over time. “To do that, you need to ensure that talent at the asset management firm is not concentrated in the hands of only one man, or a few men, in order to ensure that the culture of the firm can survive,” he says.
Jean-Guido Servais, director of marketing and public relations at JPMorgan Asset Management (JPMAM) in Germany, Austria and Switzerland since June 2006, has been appointed as head of marketing for continental Europe, with effect from 1 June. In this role, he will report directly to Richard Chambers, global chief marketing officer for JPMAM in New York.In addition to his responsibilities in this newly-created position, Servais will retain his former responsibilities.
The London Stock Exchange has admitted four more ETFs from db x-trackers (Deutsche bank group) to trading from 11 June, one based on the S&P 500 ( LU0490619275, 4C share class), the other on the MSCI Japan (LU0659580236, 6C share class). But the novelty resides in the introduction as a secondary listing of Luxembourg-registered “frontier market” products, one of them based on the MSCI index of 25 Pakistani shares, and one on the MSCI index of 64 Bangladeshi companies. These db x-trackers sub-funds are managed by DB Platinum Advisors, also an affiliate of the Deutsche Bank group.CharacteristicsName: db x-trackers MSCI PAKISTAN IM TRN INDEX ETFISIN codes: LU0659579147 (1C share class) and LU0755278701 (2C share class)Total expense ratio: 85%Name: db x-trackers MSCI BANGLADESH IM TRN INDEX ETFISIN codes: LU0659579220 (1C share class) and LU0755277992 (2C share class)Total expense ratio: 0.85%.
Schelcher Prince Gestion has recruited Carole Imbert as head of financial research. The asset management firm led by Sébastien Barbe adds to its own analysis office in the areas of fixed income, credit and convertibles. Imbert, 41, has served as a sell-side equities analyst for nine years, at Natexis, CPR, and then Exane, before becoming head of Investor Relations and Financial Communications for ten years at BIC and then Eurazeo.
After more than five years at Financière de l’Echiquier as director of marketing, Nicolas Lesur has announced, by mail, that he is leaving the asset management led by Didier Le Menestrel at the end of the month.
The Franco-Belgian Dexia bank, which is in the process of being dismantled, on 27 June announced that it is in the final phase of negotiations with three international invetors, to sell its asset management affiliate Dexia Asset Management. The sale of Dexia AM will conclude the process of dismantling the bank, which ceased operations in October 2011.Dexia has already undertaken the sale of Dexia Banque Belgique (now renamed as Belfius Banque et Assurances), its Luxembourg affiliate (Dexia Banque Internationale in Luxembourg), its Turkish affiliate Denizbank, and its 50% stake in the securities custody joint venture which it operates with the Royal Bank of Canada.Dexia has also announced the resignation of its chairman, Jean-Luc Dehaene, and its CEO, Pierre Mariani, as part of a reorganization of the management of the Franco-Belgian bank now in the process of being dismantled.The bank explains in a statement that Dehaene will be leaving his position on 1 July, and that the Belgian Karel de Boeck will serve in the position in the interim. Mariani will be leaving his position only after the first half 2012 books have been approved.
The Teachers’ Retirement System of the State of Illinois, USD37bn in assets) admits that its performance projections, which were 8.5% per year for the past 25 years, have become unrealistic, the Wall Street Journal reports. The performance objective will now be revised downward, which will increase the fund’s liabilities be several billion dollars.
Market volatility and the correlation of new asset classes which have followed the credit crunch of 2008 are not going away soon – at least because the sovereign debt crisis is taking out a loan against future growth.According to an international study of institutional investors undertaken by Create Research and Global Investors, nearly 80% of institutionals are expecting extended turbulence on the markets, and over 60% of them are expecting at least two systemic crises before the end of the decade. Fear, more than fundamentals, will guide the behaviour of the markets, and price anomalies will prosper.Such anomalies will, of course, represent a source of opportunity, a point of view shared by 71% of respondents. However, only 13% of investors surveyed think they will be able to profit from this volatile environment in the next few years.According to the survey, several obstacles are preventing asset managers from profiting from the situation. The sector cruelly lacks managers able to more deeply understand risk premiums, asset correlations and tactical bias in periods of dislocation. In 2009, the survey finds, only a minority of asset managers had drawn lessons from the financial crisis.Global comprehension of these phenomena is more difficult in light of the rising number of specialist mandates to the detriment of diversified mandates. Other obstacle identified by the survey include client mistrust due to moediocre performance in the wake of the crisis, and gregarious instincts of investors, who often fail to remember the basic precept “buy to the sound of the cannon, sell to the sound of the violin.”The consequence of this situation is that a considerable number of asset managers will need to revise their development model if they want to make volatility an investment opportunity.Among the areas for development identified by the study are development of multi-asset class expertise, improved distribution of interests, involving investment professionals, and associated not only with gains but also with losses, the promotion of rapid execution, and conviction investment, and finally, promotion of inceased client engagement, to reduce timing errors and regret risks. This is the price to pay, if the sector is to move away from looking into a lost decade.
James Dilworth, CEO of Allianz Global Investors (AGI) for Europe, has said that all the companies of the AGI group in Europe will have been merged by the end of 2013 or early 2014, Handelsblatt reports. That will result in trimming the range of products, a unified IT infrastructure, and reduced costs, which will also involve staff reductions.The head of AGI Europe also says that there will now no longer be active cooperation with Pimco, as the US firm is not no longer part of AGI, and has become a direct affiliate of Allianz, at the same level as, and thus in competition with AGI.The manager also states that after net inflows of EUR1.2bn in first quarter, AGI has seen outflows, but still shows net subscriptions since the beginning of the year.
With SAM (for: Strategische Anlage Modellierung), Fidelity Worldwide Investments is offering German retail fund subscribers wealth management and advising. Whether it be for short-term investments, an individual savings retirement plan or to create savings for a real estate investment, SAM is designed as a complete solution. SAM portfolios are adapted to the needs of individual clients, with automated monitoring up to the time of payment, and risks systematically and progressively reduced from five years to the end of the savings period, without the client needing to pay attention to them constantly. This service is available for investments of EUR10,000 and up.After determining via a questionnaire what the client’s expectations are, the SAM system selects the three best funds in each category among the 8,000 funds on sale in Germany from 220 asset management firms, so long as they are rated at least 4 stars by Morningstar and they have an adequate track record and asset levels. In addition, SAM analyses the performance of pre-selected funds with regard to their risks of loss and volatility. That then allows for the creation of profiled portfolios (from prudent to dynamic) able to pass through difficult market phases without excessive fluctuation.
Northern Trust has announced the promotion of Kidehiro Nakayama to the position of representative director and presdent, in charge of development for asset management activities in Japan, Asian Investor reports. Nakayama, who in this position replaces Kunihiko Nakao, who retired a few days ago, joined Northern Trust in August 2011 as executive managing director in Tokyo. At that time, he was at Pictet AM.
Schroders has announced the launch of its Global Multi-Asset Income and ISF Global High Income Bond funds, sub-funds of its Schroder ISF, in Germany. The two products will be released on the Italian market from 2 July, InvestmentEurope states.Global Multi-Asset Income is invested in a range of high yield assets, from bond markets (credit, high yield, emerging market debt), and equity markets (developed and emerging). The Global High Income Bond fund bets on global bonds, combining high yield and emerging market bonds.
The Julius Baer bank has appointed Daniel Vegue Dominguez as director of External Asset Managers (EAM) for Latin America, Agefi Switzerland reports. He will begin in his new role on 1 October 2012. Dominguez and his team will be leaving Credit Suisse, where they served in similar roles. Dominguez will report to Roi Yves Tavor, regional director of EAM for Latin America, Spain and Israel. Latin American EAM activities will be operated from Zurich, Geneva and locally.