Selon Fundweb, Franklin Templeton a décidé de faire absorber le Templeton UK Equity Fund par le Franklin UK Managers’ Focus Fund et le Franklin US Equity Fund par le Franklin US Opportunities Fund. D’autre part, les fonds Franklin Biotechnology et Franklin Global Reit seront liquidés à fin mai. Ces mesures doivent permettre d’augmenter l’efficacité de la gamme en se concentrant sur les compartiment de l’OEIC, a précisé Ian Wilkins, country head de Franklin Templeton pour le Royaume-Uni.
Pour 2011, le gestionnaire danois Sparinvest déclare un bénéfice avant ilmpôt de 13,7 millions d’euros, dont 0,8 million provenant de l’acquisition d’EgnsInvest, contre 12,5 millions pour 2010 et 10,1 millions pour 2009.Les encours ressortaient fin 2011 à 9,1 milliards d’euros contre 8,8 milliards et 7,5 milliards respectivement fin 2010 et fin 2009.Toutefois, le rendement des fonds propres est tombé à 22 % contre 29 % pour 2010.
bfinance étoffe ses équipes. Le consultant annonce la nomination de Douglas Hansen-Luke, qui était dernièrement directeur général de Robeco Middle East, au poste de directeur général pour la zone Moyen Orient-Afrique et Asie centrale. Il sera assisté par Alex Denby, qui a rejoint bfinance en qualité d’associé au Moyen-Orient après avoir travaillé chez Osborne & Partners et Robeco Middle East. Brian Cyr rejoint le bureau de bfinance à Montréal en qualité de directeur de clientèle auprès des investisseurs canadiens, après douze années passées dans la gestion d’actifs, sur des missions de sélections de gérants ou encore la gestion de mandats institutionnels chez Pyramis Global Advisors (filiale de Fidelity Investments), Standard Life PLC et Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec.En Allemagne, Michael Wolfram rejoindra prochainement le bureau de bfinance à Munich en qualité de chargé de clientèle institutionnelle. Il travaille depuis décembre dernier au sein de l’équipe de recherche de bfinance à Londres.Par ailleurs, Chris Jones, précédemment directeur des investissements de Key Asset Management, a rejoint bfinance en tant que responsable des investissements alternatifs, une fonction nouvellement créée.
Le moniteur des caisses de pension Swisscanto montre pour le premier trimestre 2012 une «bonne amélioration» de la situation de financement des institutions de prévoyance suisses en raison d’une évolution positive des marchés des actions. Au total, la couverture moyenne pondérée en fonction des actifs gérés de l’ensemble des institutions de prévoyance évaluées a augmenté au premier trimestre en passant de 97% à 98,8%. De ce fait, la situation de financement des caisses de pension suisses s’est rapprochée du niveau du début de 2011.Les institutions de prévoyance évaluées ont réalisé un rendement moyen pondéré en fonction de la fortune de 2,4% depuis le début 2012. Ainsi, la part des caisses en situation de sous-couverture a diminué. La part estimée des caisses de droit privé en situation de sous-couverture est avec 17 % (trimestre précédent : 26%) nettement plus basse qu'à la fin 2011.
Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (Swip) a demandé à cinq membres de son équipe de vente qui en compte 14 de représenter leur candidature suite à la décision de la société de redistribuer les rôles, rapporte FundWeb. Il n’est pas question de réduire la taille de l'équipe, précise-t-on chez Swip.Pour l’essentiel, Swip souhaite passer d’une approche clients plutôt en silo à une approche globale.
For 2011, State Street Corporation has announced per-share profits of USD3.79, compared with USD3.09 and ROE of 10%, compared with 9.5%.Assets under management and administration increased to USD21.807trn as of the end of December, compared with USD21.527trn twelve months earlier, while assets under management declined to USD1.866trn from USD2.010trn.
Assets under management at the Société Privée de Gestion de Patrimoine as of the end of March 2012 totalled over EUR820m, compared with about EUR8090m as of the end of December 2011. Developments in first quarter were characterised by a positive market effect and an increase in inflows, though these were in modest proportions.Assets as of the end of March totalled EUR500m in collective management and EUR320m in mandated private management. Equity management represented 45% of assets, while bond management represented 40%, and flexible management and the IPO Sicav 15%.Skylar Origin is the new IPO Sicav, which is dedicated to investment in businesses which are undertaking an initial public offering. SPGP has recently taken over management of the vehicle. The new fund will be managed by two former Lazard managers, Cédric Chaboud, head of strategy and investments, and Jérémy Boublil, in charge of trading and risk management, who have joined the team at SPGP, and who had launched the fund at Lazard in spring 2010. The Sicav has been transferred to SPGP in a UCITS IV format, which last year received a license from the AMF.Chaboud hopes that the exposure his new position gives him will allow the fund, whose assets currently total about EUR10m, to increase in the next few months to EUR30m, or even EUR50m.In addition, the European IPO market is expected to take off again once the debt crisis eases. Two major operations have animated the market in the past couple of weeks, at the cable television operator Ziggo and DKSH, an Asian outsourcing firm listed in Switzerland.The two IPO deals, totalling several million euros each, have attracted interest 5 to 10 times higher than supply. This interest may be a prelude to a sustainable return to an active IPO market in Europe.
The strategic investment fund (FSI) on 18 April announced that it has signed an agreement protocol which defines general principles for the creation of a Fund for the Modernisation of Railway Businesses (FMEF), an investment fund dedicated to actors in the French rail industry. With EUR40m in capital supplied by Alstom, SNCF, Bombardier, and RATP, as well as the FSI, the FMEF will aim to invest in minority stakes in high-performance businesses with significant activities in the French rail sector, which will be likely to be competitive in this industry, with potential for growth and development in France and abroad.
Russell Investments has recruited Tom Goodwin to the new position of senior research director at Russell Indexes. Goodwin will be based in New York, and will aim to make Russell indices better known to clients, and to help them to use them as part of an asset allocation strategy. Before joining Russell, Goodwin, who has been an economist for 15 years, worked as chief economist for King County. Earlier in his career, he spent 13 years in several positions at Russell, including senior research analyst.
Assets under custody/administration at BNY Mellon have set a record at USD26.6trn as of 31 March 2012, a 4% increase compared with fourth quarter 2011. New mandates and market effects are to thank for this increase. Assets under management, for their part, were up 6% in March to a record USD1.3trn. Inflows of long-term assets in first quarter totalled USD7bn, but at the same time, redemptions of short-term assets totalled USD9bn. Commissions related to custody and administration services totalled USD1.6bn, down 4% year on year. Performance and management commissions totalled USD745m, down 2% compared with fourth quarter 2011. Net profits for the group in first quarter 2012 totalled USD619m, or USD0.52 per share, compared with USD625m, or USD0.50 per share in first quarter 2011, and USD505m (USD0.42 per share) in fourth quarter 2011.
In January-March, BlackRock Inc has posted net profits down USD7bn compared with first quarter 2011, to USD575m, which nonetheless represents an increase of USD17bn compared with October-December. However, net income attributable to BlackRock Inc. came out to USD572m, up 3% compared with the corresponding period of last year (USD555m) and 1% compared with USD568m in fourth quarter 2011.As of 31 March, assets totalled USD3.684trn, compared with USD3.5127trn as of the end of December, and USD3.6474trn twelve months earlier. Net subscriptions of USD26bn were more than offset by USD36bn in previously-announced redemption of an institutional index-based bond mandate, while the acquisition of Claymore Investments brought in USD8bn. Positive forex and market effects contributed USD201bn and USD8bn, respectively, to boost assets under management. BlackRock states that its ETF unit, iShares, has posted all-time record net inflows in first quarter, with USD18.2bn, which represents organic annualized growth of 12%.Long-term assets totalled USD3,345trn as of the end of March, compared with USD3,318trn as of the end of December, and USD3,245trn twelve months previously. Long-term assets under management as of 31 March were 53% invested in equities, 37% in bonds, 7% in multi-asset clases and 3% in alternative assets. By client category, 68% came from institutional clients, 20% from iShares, and 12% from retail and high net worth clients.
The group headed up by the Hamburg-based private bank M.M. Warbirg in 2011 earned pre-tax profits of EUR43.6m, compared with EUR55.2m in 2010, a result which Christian Olearius, chairman of the managing partners, calls “satisfactory” due to the slowdown in the investment banking and credit industries.The results at Warburg are due to good performance of owners’ equity operations, corporate finance deals, and particularly the wealth and asset management units. This is the case for the Luxembourg affiliates MM Warburg & Co Luxembourg and Warburg Invest Luxembourg, which are focused on depository banking and fund administration operations: assets under administration at these businesses has increased by EUR6.1bn to EUR16.3bn as of the end of December. Overall, assets under management at the Warburg group last year increased by EUR2bn, to EUR38.1bn.
Switzerland is planning to apply the latest recommendations of the financial action group (GAFI) on the international war on financing for crime, Agefi Switzerland reports. The Federal Council yesterday created an interdepartmental working group to develop and present proposals. The body, led by the Federal finance department, will lay out proposals to be open for consultation by the beginning of 2013.
BlackRock has announced that it may have to reduce its trading volumes with banks that will be downgraded by Moody’s, the Financial Times reports. Some clients set minimal credit ratings for counterparties to some transactions. A downgrade could thus provoke a transfer to other partners, says Larry Fink, CEO of the asset management firm, whose statements were first reported by the New York Times.
The Swisscanto pension fund monitor reveals that in first quarter 2012 there was a “considerable improvement” in the financing situation for Swiss retirement planning institutions, due to the positive evolution of equity markets. Overall, average weighted coverage as a function of assets under management by all retirement planning institutions evaluated increased in first quarter from 97% to 98.8%. Due to this development, the financing situation for Swiss retirement planning institutions has approached its early 2011 levels. The retirement planning institutions evaluated have earned average returns, weighted according to asset volumes, of 2.4% since the beginning of 2012. The proportion of retirement institutions with insufficient coverage has declined. The estimated proportion of private pension institutions with inadequate coverage is considerably lower, at 17%, than at the end of 2011, when it was 26%.
Unigestion is maintaining a good pace of fundraising in private equity, despite a difficult environment in the sector. The Swiss asset management firm, which has EUR10bn in assets (one quarter of them in France) has launched a vehicle dedicated to European midcaps, Agefi reports. The fund, a Luxembourg-registered Sicav, “will be made available on the French market in the form of an FCPR vehicle not investing primarily in France, so as to offer diversification. We hope to raise over EUR250m by third quarter 2012, one fifth of which will come from the French portion,” says Christian Dujardin, head of development for private equity activities at Unigestion. A themed fund focused on sustainable development held a first closing in June. Meanwhile, “a new vehicle will be launched in early 2013,” says Dujardin.
LBBW Asset Management, an affiliate of the German Landesbank Baden-Württemberg (LBBW) has announced that on 11 April it launched a non-food commodities fund entitled LBBW Rohstoffe 3 Ex-Food, inspired by the LBBW Ex-Food-Rohstoff-Index ER index, currently composed of 18 commodities. It invests in futures contracts on ten commodities in the precious metals, base metals and energy sectors, as well as timber and cotton. Cash is placed in highly-rated bonds with a short maturity.The fund is available in R (retail) and I (institutional) share classes.CharacteristicsName: LBBW Rohstoffe 3 Ex FoodISIN codes:DE000A1H7292 (R share class)DE000A1H7284 (I share class)Front-end fee: 5% (R share class)Management commission:1.50% (R share class)0.80% (I share class)Minimal subscription: EUR75,000 (I share class)
On 13 April, the CNMV registered the BBVA Crecimiento Bolsa BP fund from BBVA Asset Management, a fund guaranteed at maturity, on 9 December 2015, with a redemption of 95% of the net asset value as of 8 June 2012. The fund carries the potential for additional gains depending on the evolution of the Ibex 35 index. If losses are limited to 5%, or 1.453% per year, gains for the fund will have a ceiling of 75% of a 25% rise in the index, or 5.026% per year. From 9 June, the fund will invest in bonds issued by EU governments or Spanish autonomous communities rated at least A-, with a maximum of 20% corporate bonds, covered bonds, or securitisations.CharacteristicsName: BBVA Crecimiento Bolsa BP, FIISIN code: ES0113466009Front-end fee: 5%Management commission: 1.97%Early withdrawal penalty: 5%
In first quarter, only two hedge fund strategies out of 13 monitored by EDHEC-Risk show losses: CTA Global (-0.6%), and short selling, which shows losses of 12.5%, but lost only 0.93% in March.The best performance in the first three months of the year were for emerging markets (6.4%), distressed securities (6.3%) and long/short equity (6.2%).Since January 2001, the best results have been for distressed securities and emerging markets, with annual returns of 10.5% each.
The emerging market investment specialist FMG is launching a fund dedicated to Mongolia, FundWeb reports. FMG reports that the Mongolian economy will this year post record total growth of 23% to 26%. The FMG Mongolia Fund, in which minimum investment is set at USD10,000, is targeting the 25 most liquid companies on the Mongolian stock market. The three largest exposures of the fund are to the mining industry, for 42%, consumer goods for 39%, and construction, for 10%. The fund also includes allocations of 5% to real estate and 4% to the financial sector.
On 18 April, AllianceBernstein announced the first closing for its first private equity real estate fund, the AllianceBernstein U.S. Real Estate Partners fund, with investment commitments of USD680m. These engagements come from several major institutional investors, such as the Singapore sovereign fund Temasek, the Alberta Teachers’ Retirement Fund, and other US, Hong Kong and Japanese institutionals, joined by “many” retail clients and employees of AllianceBernstein. Counting the co-investment capital provided by some strategic investors, the fund may have as much as USD900m in capital. So far, the fund has invested USD200m in six operations. It is aiming for investments per holding of USD20m to USD100m.
The Californian pension fund CalPERS has announced that it has put in place a new policy that limits the value of gifts that members of the board of trustees can accept from entities seeking or which already have business relationships with the pension fund. The value of these gifts is limited to USD50 per calendar year.
On 10 May, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) will pronounce a verdict on the difference in tax status for foreign OPCVM mutual funds and French-registered funds in France, Les Echos reports. The latter category of funds will not be taxed on dividends paid by French businesses, unlike the former. For over six years, foreign firms have been denouncing this imbalance. The French tax authorities have already received more than 10,000 reimbursement applications for this withholding tax, for total rebates of about EUR4.2bn, including interest, equivalent to 0.2% of French gross domestic product in 2010.
The French association of securities professionals (AFTI), supported by the national association of equity companies (ANSA), on 18 April announced the creation of a concerted action structure to bring together representatives of the financial industry, shareholders and share issuing businesses interested in setting up and developing electronic voting and the Votaccess electronic platform, which has been operational since November 2011, and who would like to have some influence to ensure harmonious and controlled growth in the service of the general wealth. The body, entitled the Votaccess scientific council, which met for the first time on 17 April, will be open to professional associations concerned that may be interested in participating in its efforts, to representatives of share-issuing businesses, banks, shareholder representatives, and academics. The body is responsible for monitoring the institution of electronic voting, managing a statistical tool, sharing experiential feedback, considering ways to promote electronic voting throughout Europe, and formulating proposals to improve Votaccess.
The private equity firms Charterhouse and JC Flowers are front-runners to take over the activities of Groupama in the United Kingdom. The reports on the website Insurance Times have been confirmed to Agefi by a source familiar with the matter. Meanwhile, the CEO of Eiffage, Pierre Berger, on Wednesday announced at a general shareholders’ meeting that Groupama, its fourth-largest shareholder, is interested in selling its stake if the share price rises.
Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP) has asked five members of its 14-member sales team to reapply for their positions, following a decision by the firm to redistribute roles, FundWeb reports. The size of the team will not be reduced, SWIP adds. In general, SWIP is hoping to move from a more silo-type client approach to a more holistic approach.
Pimco will open an office in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in September 2012. The new office will be Pimco’s first location in Latin America and will be led by Alec Kersman, a senior vice president and head of Pimco’s Latin America and Caribbean business. He joined Pimco in 2005. Pimco will operate in Brazil as Pimco Latin America Administradora de Carteiras Ltda., and will be regulated by the Comissao Nacional de Valores (CVM).
M&G Investments has opened an office in Singapore, composed of five people, including Andrew Hendry, who has been appointed to the newly-created position of managing director, Asia. He is tasked with building a team in Singapore and Hong Kong who will service the growing number of M&G distribution partners in the region. Hendry joined the British asset management firm last year, after working at Capital International, where he was responsible for global distribution relationships.
The British private bank Coutts has announced the departure of its head for South-East Asia, Manfred Liechti, following a restructuring, Asian Investor reports. Liechti joined Coutts in 2010, and was in charge of Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand. Meanwhile, Coutts has appointed his successor, Ranjit Khanna, as head for South-East Asia. Khanna had previously been head of products and services for Asia.
Schroders has announced the launch of Schroder ISF Global Multi-Asset Income. This fund will aim to provide sustainable quality income by dynamically investing in attractive income opportunities across a range of asset classes, regions and sectors. Aymeric Forest, senior Multi-Asset fund manager, will manage the fund with the objective to pay a 5% per annum distribution in equal quarterly or monthly instalments, with an expected 7% total return per annum over a full market cycle. “We are currently seeing interesting opportunities within equities in healthcare in the UK and Japan, consumer staples in the US and Asia, and telecoms in China and South Africa. We are also finding attractive yields in some US municipal bonds and high yield debt and in local currency emerging markets with a loose monetary policy. We are cautiously positioned within our exposure to financials and prefer bonds issued by US and UK insurers to those issued by banks,” he comments.