Primonial et Suravenir ont annoncé s'être associés pour le lancement de Sérénipierre, un contrat d’assurance vie multisupports qui a la particularité de proposer un fonds en euros Sécurité Pierre Euro, essentiellement investi en immobilier (biens en direct et supports immobiliers collectifs OPCI et SCPI).Le contrat offre également une gamme d’unités de compte : Primonial Capimmo de Primonial REIM (SCI en immobilier d’entreprise), les fonds de fonds de Primonial Asset Management, ainsi qu’une cinquantaine de fonds en architecture ouverte (Carmignac, Fédéral Finance, Franklin Templeton IM, HSBC Global AM, JP Morgan AM, La Financière de l’Echiquier, Rothschild & Cie Gestion…).
Le secteur des hegde funds a subi une décollecte de plus de 15 milliards de dollars en janvier, la plus importante depuis janvier 2009 où les rachats avaient culminé à 17,7 milliards de dollars, rapporte TrimTabs dans son bulletin hebdomadaire.TrimTabs relève que même si les hedge funds ont dégagé une performance de 3,1% en janvier, ils ont malgré tout sous-performé le S&P 500 de 110 points de base.
Selon L’Agefi, l'équipe de direction de Natixis Capital Partners vient de boucler sous la forme d’un management buy-out la reprise de la société, qui opère désormais sous le nom de Captiva Capital Management. La société d’investissement immobilier s’attend à investir plus de 200 millions d’euros en 2012, précise le quotidien.
En 2001, Swiss Life France a résisté malgré un marché de l’assurance vie chahuté. «Notre collecte nette, qui avoisine 480 millions d’euros, est restée positive quasiment sur l’ensemble des mois de l’année, même si le second semestre s’est révélé plus faible que le premier», a indiqué à L’Agefi Eric Le Baron, directeur général de Swiss Life Assurance et Patrimoine. Soit un recul des souscriptions de 44% sur un an, contre une baisse de 85% pour le secteur, selon les données de la Fédération française des sociétés d’assurance. La part des produits en unités de compte est passée en un an «de 31% à 40,6%, soit le double du marché», a-t-il ajouté.
Le groupe Pro BTP qui se présente comme « le portail de protection sociale du BTP » et dont les actifs s'élèvent fin 2011 à 12,6 milliards d’euros vient de rejoindre le Club des Investisseurs amLeague. Il s’agit du cinquante et unième membre qui compte désormais trente-trois investisseurs institutionnels, dix multi-managers, quatre entreprises et quatre consultants en France (hors groupement de fonds de pension suisses).Par ailleurs, amLeague devrait annoncer à l’occasion de sa réunion plénière le 8 mars prochain l’arrivée dans la compétition d’une nouvelle société gestion. Celle-ci interviendrait d’ores et déjà dans le mandat Global Equities, l’univers d’investissement le plus récent proposé par amLeague.
D’après l’Agefi, les 19 Banques Populaires et les 17 Caisses d’Epargne devront investir au total 2 milliards d’euros en titres super subordonnés (TSS) au profit de BPCE afin que cette dernière puisse se conformer aux exigences de l’ACP. Les TSS, considérés comme du tier one mais pas comme du core tier one, porteront une rémunération avantageuse, autour de 11%. Ils auraient la faculté d'être convertis en actions ajoute l’Agefi. L’organe central se tourne donc à son tour vers ses banques régionales. Celles-ci verront peut-être dans les TSS un investissement plus rentable que leurs actions BPCE, qui ne versent pas de dividende. Pire, de sources concordantes, la valeur de ces actions BPCE va être dépréciée dans les comptes à fin 2011. A l'échelle des 17 Caisses d’Epargne, l’ardoise cumulée des dépréciations approche 1,1 milliard, avec pour certaines d’entre elles un résultat net quasiment réduit à zéro.
The Danish EU presidency has proposed a compromise which would allow national regulators to set the level of additional tier 1 equity required for systemic banks, Les Echos reports. Under the proposals, which are a part of the recommendations of the Financial Stability Board and the Basel Committee, national supervisors would be allowed to increase the base owners’ equity ratio, which has been set at a minimum of 7% under the new Basel III regulations. This compromise, achieved at the initiative of the Danish presidency, may also include an easing of short-term liquidity requirements for banks.
The platform from Merrill Lynch has listed a UCITS-compliant version of the Currency Program from the US asset management firm QFS Asset and Risk Management. The product is the QFS Currency UCITS Fund, which invests with a quantitative process in bonds and currencies on the basis of fundamental data, with the objective of profiting from inefficiencies in conjunctural cycles.CharacteristicsName: QFS Currency UCIFS FundISIN code: LU0690450225Management commission: 2%Performance commission: 20% with high watermarkMinimal subscription: EUR1m
Between 8% and 14% of a Swiss bank’s value depends on banking confidentiality, Agefi Switzerland reports. These are the findings of a university study published in the March issue of Financial Markets and Portfolio Management, covering a limited sample of four establishments (UBS, Credit Suisse, Julius Baer and Vontobel). Another finding is that banking confidentiality is mostly not appreciated for taxation reasons, but rather in order to protect individual privacy. The authors, one bank director and two professors in Zurich, find that the value of a management bank may be measured in the absence of banking confidentiality, and the value of confidentiality may be added to this, weighted according to the likelihood that confidentiality will be preserved.
The local Chinese press reports that the Chinese government has in principle authorised foreign hedge funds to raise capital within continental China. The funds will be required to be registered in Shanghai, but will be required to invest outside China, Z-Ben Advisors reports.Asset management firms involved in this activity will be required to apply for a license, and a quota from the Chinese State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE).
Since 29 February, three equity ETFs from State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) have been available for trading on the XTF segment of the Xetra electronic trading platform from Deutsche Börse. The new funds bring the total number of index-based funds listed on XTF to 939.CharacteristicsName: SPDR S&P Euro Dividend Aristocrats ETFISIN code: IE00B5M1WJ87Benchmark index: S&P Euro High Yield Dividend Aristocrats IndexTER: 0.30%Name: SPDR S&P UK Dividend Aristocrats ETFISIN code: IE00B6S2Z822Benchmark index: S&P UK High Yield Dividend Aristocrats IndexTER: 0.30%Name: SPDR FTSE UK All Share ETFISIN code: IE00B7452L46Benchmark index: FTSE All-Share IndexTER: 0.30%
Proposals by the French socialist party to include life insurance on the income tax scales has provoked questions from insurers, Les Echos reports. Insurers are worried that the move would drive French clients away from long-term savings. “One might worry that inflows might not keep up with costs in the next two to three months. Clients are already in a very cautious attitude at the moment, and they are preferring more precautionary types of savings,” says Bernard Le Bras, executive director of Suravenir (Crédit Mutuel Arkea).
Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, has told a Congressional committee that the Volcker rule, part of the larger Dodd-Frank reforms, will probably not come into force at the beginning of July as planned, as a market consultation which ran until the end of February has received about 17,000 comments which will need to be analysed, the Financial Times reports. The Dodd-Frank law gives regulators an option to delay the application of the bill for up to two years.
The hedge fund sector underwent outflows of more than USD15bn in January, the largest since January 2009, when redemptions peaked at USD17.7bn, TrimTabs reports in its weekly bulletin.TrimTabs reports that although hedge funds earned 3.1% in January, they nonetheless underperformed the S&P 500 by 110 basis points.
According to estimates by VDOS, Spanish funds as of 24 February had assets of slightly over EUR136bn, due to positive performance effects of EUR971m, and net redemptions of EUR504m since the beginning of the month, Funds People reports.
On 24 February, the CNMV issued a license for a Spanish-registered hedge fund launched on 2 February by March Gestión de Fondos. The March Patrimonio Renta invests in sight deposits or bonds maturing in less than 1 year, issued by credit institutions in the EU or OECD countries, public and private money market instruments, so long as they are liquid, and in public and private bonds. Forex risks may not exceed 100% of exposure, and the management team is not allowed to invest in other funds. The maximal exposure of the fund to underlying assets may not exceed 200% of assets, and use of credit is limited to 10%.The March Patrimonio Renta, which is benchmarked against the Euribor 12 month plus 50 basis points, offers daily liquidity.CharacteristicsName: March Patrimonio Renta, FILISIN code: ES0160922003Management commission: 0.5%Depository banking commission: 0.05%
With the recruitment of Robert Kellermann, head of consultant relations at Pioneer Investments in Munich, Feri Trust is planning to create a new position for him as director of institutional clients for Germany. He will be in charge of cultivating relationships with existing clients and recruiting new clients.Jürgen Obermann, a board member at Feri Trust, points out that with the strategic reorientation of the Feri group, advisory activities have been separated from asset management, now a part of Feri Trust, which offers multi-asset class solutions as well as private equity, hedge funds, real estate and risk overlay management.With its parent company, MLP, the Feri group currently has over EUR20bn in assets under management or under advisory mandates.
The quarterly publication of corporate results may have a negative impact on management and on the behaviour of shareholders, a report commissioned by the British government on risks related to investment for short-term profits has found, the news agency Reuters reports. The study, whose initial findings were unveiled on Wednesday, was launched after the acquisition of Cadbury by its US rival Kraft Foods last year. Some critics of the deal claimed at the time that it was driven by investors seeking quick profits. A clear majority of professionals surveyed for the study (insurers, shareholders’ associations, pension funds and individual investors) claimed atht the publication of quarterly results and intermediate reports on activities released by businesses were “useless or misleading.” The final conclusions of the study and its recommendations are expected in summer.
The Swiss wealth management specialist EFG International on 29 February announced at a presentation of its annual results that it is in negotiations with potential acquirers for all or part of its private banking activities in France, as part of an initiative to refocus its private banking activities. In France, the private management activities of EFG International which will be affected belong to EFG Gestion Privée, the former wealtth management arm of the asset management boutique Sycomore, acquired in 2008. EFG International is also present in France with EFG Asset Management, which has recently announced that it is releasing four sub-funds of its Irish Sicav New Capital in France (see Newsmanagers of 24 January 2012). EFG International is also active in France in the structured products segment. The group has reported a net loss for the 2011 fiscal year of CHF294.1m, due to restructuring costs (CHF46m) and amortisations (CHF223.8m), compared with losses of CHF721.8m in 2010. Assets under management that generate revenues as of the end of 2011 totalled CHF78.4bn, compared with CHF84.8bn as of the end of 2010. Net inflows to ongoing activities totalled CHF0.6bn. Taking into account discontinued activities, EFG has reported capital outflows totalling CHF1.2bn.
The Solvency II regulations will have a decisive influence on asset allocations by insurers, and BlackRock has tasked the Economist Intelligence Unit with undertaking a survey of 223 European insurance firms. The results are counterintuitive: 32% of respondents are planning to incresae their allocation to hedge funds, and 32% are also planning to increase their exposure to private equity, despite heavier regulatory ratios. This contradiction is due to the fact that insurers need revenues to keep up with their liabilities, and alternative products are more liable to provide these steady revenues.33% of insurers are also planning to increase their investments in corporate bonds. In terms of government bonds, about one quarter of companies are planning to increase their exposure, while another quarter are planning to reduce it.
From 1 March, Piet Molenaar, who had since January 2011 been CIO of the Stork pension fund, will be joining Allianz Global Investors (AGI), as head of fiduciary management for Benelux and Northern Europe. He will be in charge of developing complete solutions for pension and retirement funds, developing relationships with existing clients, and recruiting new clients. He will be based in Rotterdam, and will report to Andrew Hilka, head of pensions at AGI.Assets in fiduciary management at AGI total EUR13bn.
The iShares Dax has become the fund available in Germany with the largest asset volume, Financial Times Deutschland reports. The fund had inflows in 2011 of EUR8bn, at a time when all other funds on sale in the country were undergoing net outflows of nearly EUR25bn. Thanks to the most recent rally on the markets, the fund has reached assets of EUR12.3bn, dethroning the largest open-ended real estate fund, Dekafonds, which had EUR11.5bn in assets as of the end of 2011.
Union Bancaire Privée (UBP), a bank specialised in private banking, has unveiled plans to acquire Nexar Capital Group (Nexar), a French asset management firm dedicated to alternative management, founded by Arié Assayag (CEO), Eric Attias (CIO) and Bernard Kalfon (Head of Volatility Strategies). The transaction, whose terms have not been disclosed, and which is still subject to regulatory approval, will allow the UBP-Nexar ensemble to “benefit from an enlarged platform, global distribution capacities, and innovative alternative investment solutions,” a statement says.With offices in Geneva, New York, London, Paris, Jersey, Tokyo and Hong Kong, the combined alternative investment group will form a division of its own within the establishment, which will report directly to Guy de Picciotto, chairman of the executive board at the bank.UBP explains that the reason for the deal is that it is convinced of the determining role that funds of hedge funds will play in meeting the specific expectations of its clients, via portfolios that combine active management, risk control and interactive services for investors. The bank would like to be able to offer international investors asset management solutions and investment advising services.
On 28 February, Julius Baer Group had bought back 10.24 million of its own shares, at an average price of CHF34.39, which represents a total of about CHF352m. This concludes the equity buyback program launched on 23 May 2011.The board of directors will propose at the ordinary general shareholders’ meeting to be held on 11 April to cancel the repurchased shares via a capital reduction.
Newton, an affiliate of BNY Mellon Asset Management, has announced that it has added to its team dedicated to private clients, with the recruitment of Clare Huijnen as investment manager. She joins the firm from HSBC Private Bank, where she had been a member of the investment board.
Simon Clinch will be joining Invesco Perpetual as a US equity fund manager next month. He will report to Simon Laing, IPE.com reports. He was previously at J Rothschild Capital Management. Invesco has also announced the recruitment of Rob Barrett as head of institutional sales, based in London. Barrett previously worked at HSBC Global Asset Management, JP Morgan and UBS.
The founder of Neptune, Robin Geffen, has raised questions about plans to move the headquarters of Prudential from London to Hong Kong. According to rumours that Prudential is not denying, the head of Prudential, Tidjane Thiam, is planning to leave London in order to avoid the inconveniences of Solvency II regulations. Geffen claims in a column in the Scotsman newspaper that such a move could legitimately make investors ask questions about the solvency of the group, and particularly about the future of its asset management unit, M&G.“That’s one way for the group to avoid European solvency ratios. Investors would be right to be concerned,” Geffen claims. Neptune holds a stake of less than 3% in the British insurer.
The British asset management firm Martin Currie has merged the North American Alpha fund (GBP28m in assets) and Martin Currie Global (GBP44m) into other funds, in order to modernise its fund range. The North American Alpha fund, a strategy which is not well-adapted to the current market environment, will be merged into the Martin Currie North American Fund, whose assets under management total GBP418m, while the Martin Currie Global fund has been merged with the Global Equity Income fund, which has GBP18m in assets, and offers significant potential for growth, Martin Currie says. Assets under management at Martin Currie totalled GBP5.5bn as of the end of 2011, and peaked at about GBP10bn.
The share price performance of locally-listed EM affiliates of multinationals is vastly better than that of both emerging and developed markets broadly as well as their own local markets, according to a study carried out by Yale University’s Martijn Cremers and commissioned by Aberdeen Asset Management. There are 92 such companies across the emerging world, including Unilever PLC, for example, that has listed affiliates in India, Indonesia and Pakistan in which it has stakes of 37%, 85% and 75% respectively. Over the thirteen years from June 1998 to June 2011, a period chosen for its balance between sample size and history length, the listed affiliates returned 2,229%. This compared with total returns of parents, local markets and parents’ markets of 407%, 1,157% and 147% respectively. This pattern of outperformance was consistent across each region too. Affiliates in LatAm, EMEA and Asia outperformed their local indices by 41%, 134% and 50% respectively. “The two main reasons for this outperformance are improved corporate governance and a stabilizing role of the parent companies. Both seem critical specifically in financial crises. These give affiliates a clear comparative advantage over their local competitors that should endure in the foreseeable future,” explains Martijn Cremers, associate professor of finance at Yale School of Management. These findings contradict the so-called perceived wisdom of those who have argued the most effective way for investors to obtain exposure to emerging markets is through developed market companies.
As of the end of December, the number of hedge funds worldwide topped 9,800, with launches of new funds still outnumbering closures in 2011 for the second consecutive year, according to the Hedge Funds 2012 report from TheCity UK.As of the end of 2011, total assets in hedge funds came to USD1.902trn, 3% less than one year previously, as net subscriptions of USD70bn were more than offset by a negative performance effect of 4.6%.According to TheCity UK, New York continued to be the largest centre for hedge fund management, with 42% of the global total, compared with more than 50% a decade earlier. The market share in London, at 18%, was slightly lower than at the end of 2010, but doubled in the space of 10 years. In addition, London accounts for 85% of assets managed by hedge funds in Europe, due to its local expertise, the proximity of clients and markets, and the fact that the UK is also a leading centre for hedge fund services such as administration, prime brokerage and custody.