Les actifs sous gestion des fonds de placement suisses s’inscrivaient fin décembre 2011 à quelque 621 milliards de francs suisses, en progression d’un peu plus de 4 milliards de francs par rapport à novembre, selon les statistiques communiquées par la Swiss Funds Association.La collecte nette s’est élevée en décembre à 923,2 millions de francs suisses. La catégorie «Autres fonds», qui comprend notamment les fonds de matières premières, les fonds de hedge funds et les fonds de private equity, a drainé un peu plus de 1 milliard de francs suisses. Les fonds en actions ont enregistré une collecte nette de 244 millions de francs, les fonds obligataires et les fonds monétaires subissant en revanche des rachats pour des montants nets de respectivement 76,3 millions de francs et 81,4 millions de francs. Les fonds de diversification des actifs ont terminé le mois sur une décollecte nette de 174,2 millions de francs.
Le gérant d’actifs institutionnels spécialisé dans les emprunts convertibles, Fisch Asset Management, a annoncé le 24 janvier une collecte nette de 900 millions de francs pour l’année 2011. Du coup, les actifs sous gestion ont augmenté d’environ 20% à un niveau record de 5,2 milliards de francs, malgré la forte appréciation du franc vis-à-vis de l’euro et du dollar en particulier.La société, qui sert pour l’essentiel une clientèle institutionnelle dans l’espace germanophone, emploie désormais 49 personnes après le recrutement de plusieurs spécialistes des convertibles. Fisch AM indique également avoir amélioré son reporting à la clientèle.
La banque Valiant a perdu au courant des derniers mois plusieurs cadres à Berne dans le conseil en placement, rapporte L’Agefi suisse. Quatre directeurs et un conseiller à la clientèle de ce segment, intégré au département Private Banking, sont partis chez la concurrence. C’est le style de management du responsable du Private Banking et membre de la direction, Martin Gafner, qui serait en cause.
Désormais, Ignis Asset Management a fait enregistrer le Absolute Return Government Bond Fund (lire Newsmanagers du 2 mars 2011) au Luxembourg, en Allemagne, en Autriche, en France, en Suède, en Finlande et en Espagne.Ce fonds coordonné long/short de performance absolue, spécialiste des obligations d’Etat est un compartiment d’Ignis Fund Sicav.Caractéristiques : Code isin : LU0579398933Droit d’entrée :5 % Commission de gestion : 1 % Commission de surperformance : 10 % par rapport à l’Eonia.
Le réseau mondial d’UBS, qu’il s’agisse des lignes de métier gestion de fortune, banque suisse, gestion d’actifs mondiale et banque d’investissement, sera désormais approvisonné en données environnementales, sociales et de gouvernance (ESG) fournies par RepRisk qui seront également intégrées dans la base de données conformité du groupe bancaire, en particulier pour ce qui concerne les entreprises «controversées».Cela permettra d’améliorer la gestion du risque et le contrôle des nouveaux clients et investissements ainsi que la due diligence sur les transactions. En effet, l’UBS s’est engagée à ne pas fournir de services financiers et à ne pas recourir à des fournisseur dont les activités commerciales principales ou les recettes qui en sont tirées pourraient comporter des risques liés à des thématiques environnementales et sociales.
Depuis le 1er janvier, Marcel Schnyder, responsable des produits multi classes d’actifs, est devenu directeur des investissements (CIO) de LGT Capital Management. Il a rejoint la société en 2005.D’autre part, Rolf Kutos, head of investment management, conserve la responsabilité de l’initiative développement durable de LGT CM tout en ajoutant à ses attributions la mise sur pied d’une activité corporate investment et la coordination des projets stratégiques à l'échelon du groupe.
Avec le DB Platinum Omega Fund*, la Deutsche Bank commercialise une version coordonnée du fonds long/short Omega Overseas Partners Fund qui investit avec un biais long en grandes et petites capitalisations américaines, mais qui peut également se positionner sur l’obligataire, les matières premières et les changes.Ce fonds est assorti d’une commission de gestion de 1,50 % et d’une commission de performance de 20 % avec high watermark.* code ISIN : LU0712203206
Le groupe de services financiers Old Mutual a annoncé qu’il allait réunir son activité gestion de fortune en Europe continentale (France, Italie) et son activité de banque de détail européenne Skandia (Allemagne, Autriche, Pologne et Suisse). Baptisé «Wealth Management Europe», le nouveau pôle sera dirigé par Hein Donders et intégré à Old Mutual Wealth Management. Jonas Jonsson, actuellement CEO de «Retail Europe», travaillera plusieurs mois aux cotés de Hein Donders pour assurer une transition parfaite vers le nouveau pôle. Il assumera ensuite de nouvelles fonctions au sein du groupe.
L’Allemand Andreas Wenk, qui était region head EMEA chez Pioneer Investments, rejoint Itaú UK Asset Management Ltd comme directeur de la distribution wholesale pour l’Europe, aux côtés de Griff Williams, qui conserve la responsabilité de la clientèle institutionnelle, rapporte Fonds Professionell.Basé à Londres, le nouvel arrivant sera subordonné à Rainer Schwarz, managing director et responsable d’Itaú Asset Management pour l’Europe et le Moyen-Orient.Itaú UK Asset Management est la filiale européenne de gestion d’actifs du brésilien Itaú Unibanco dont l’encours total se situe à 159 milliards de dollars.
BNY Mellon a annoncé avoir nommé Ian Stewart au poste de directeur de la gestion de la clientèle pour la région EMEA (Europe, Moyen-Orient et Afrique). Il replace Hani Kablawi, qui occupe désormais la fonction de head of EMEA Asset Servicing de BNY Mellon. En plus de ses nouvelles fonctions, Ian Stewart conserve les responsabilités de son ancien poste de responsable de la relation de clientèle pour la région Amérique du Nord.
Avec Pimco Deutschland GmbH, inscrite au registre du commerce le 7 décembre 2011, l’américain Pimco (groupe Allianz Global Investors), vient de se doter à Munich d’une filiale de droit allemand dont l’encours se situe aux alentours de 200 milliards d’euros et qui est dirigée par Craig Dawson et Andrew Bosomworth.La nouvelle société de gestion a reçu l’agrément de la BaFin pour la commercialisation de produits exclusivement destinés aux investisseurs professionnels.Fin novembre, l’irlandais Pimco Europe gérait pour sa part en Allemagne 42,74 milliards d’euros dans des fonds offerts au public.
Le 26 janvier, les quelque 90.000 porteurs de parts du fonds DEGI Europa (*) percevront un troisième versement dans le cadre de la liquidation de ce fonds immobilier offert au public décidée le 22 octobre 2010, a annoncé Aberdeen Asset Management Deutschland. La distribution sera cette fois de 3 euros par part, ce qui représente au total 78,6 millions d’euros ou 8,5 % de l’encours restant de 921,9 millions d’euros au 31 décembre.Le fonds avait déjà distribué 9,70 euros par part le 24 janvier 2011 puis sur 1,85 euro le 25 juillet 2011. La prochaine répartition doit avoir lieu en juillet 2012, et son montant sera fonction des liquidités générées par la cession des actifs. La liquidation définitive du fonds est programmée pour le 30 septembre 2013.(*) Code isin : DE0009807800
Le 20 janvier, la CNMV a enregistré un nouveau fonds obligataire à échéance 30 avril 2014 créé par InverCaixa le 10 janvier, le Foncaixa Objetivo Abril 2014, qui comporte deux classes de parts avec des objectifs de performance de 2,5 % annuels (classe Estandar) et de 2,75 % (classe Extra) entre 29 mars 2012 et l'échéance.Le portefeuille sera investi jusqu'à échéance dans des obligations d’Etat et des obligations garanties par des Etats de l’UE. Il pourra comporter au maximum 20 % d’obligations privées.InverCaixa a prévu huit fenêtres de liquidité intermédiaires durant lesquelles les investisseurs pourront souscrire ou se faire rembourser des parts sans acquitter une commission de 4 %.CaractéristiquesDénomination : Foncaixa Objectivo Abril 2014 EST et Foncaix Objectivo Abril 2014 EXTCodes Isin : ES0137777001 et ES0137777019Commission de gestion : 0,775 % (EST) et 0,55 % (EXT)Souscription minimale initiale : 600 euros.
Le groupe Standard Life Investments (SLI) a annoncé qu’il avait signé un accord de distribution avec le groupe bancaire suédois Länsförsäkringar.Le fonds de performance absolue GARS sera disponible sur le marché retail suédois par le biais de la plateforme de fonds de la banque.
Ignis Asset Management has registered the Absolute Return Government Bond Fund (see Newsmanagers of 2 March 2011) for sale in Luxembourg, Germany, Austria, France, Sweden, Finland, and Spain. The UCITS-compliant long/short absolute return fund, specialised in government bonds (LU0579398933), is a sub-fund of the Ignis Fund Sicav. It carries a front-end fee of 5%, management commission of 1%, and a commission of 10% on performance exceeding the Eonia.
With Pimco Deutschland GmbH, which was entered on the commercial register on 7 December 2011, the US firm Pimco (Allianz Global Investors group) has created a German-registered affiliate, based in Munich, with assets of about EUR200bn, led by Craig Dawson and Andrew Bosomworth.The new asset management firm has been licensed by BaFin to sell products aimed exclusively at professional investors.As of the end of November, the Irish-domiciled Pimco Europe managed EUR42.74bn in Germany in open-ended funds.
On 20 January, the CNMV issued a license for a new bond fund maturing on 30 April 2014, created by InverCaixa on 10 January, and entitled Foncaixa Objetivo Abril 2014. The fund has two share classes, with performance targets of 2.5% per year (Estandar share class) and 2.75% (Extra share class), between 29 March and maturity.The portfolio will be invested until maturity in government bonds and bonds guaranteed by EU governments. It may invest up to 20% of its assets in private bonds.InverCaixa has scheduled eight intermediate liquidity windows, at which times investors will be permitted to subscribe or redeem parts without paying a 4% commission.CharacteristicsName: Foncaixa Objectivo Abril 2014 EST and Foncaixa Objectivo Abril 2014 EXTISIN codes: ES0137777001 and ES0137777019Management commission: 0.775% (EST) and 0.55% (EXT)Minimal initial subscription: EUR600
Daniel Mudd, CEO of the hedge fund management firm Fortress Investment Group, resigned on Teusday from his position on the board and from the firm, slightly over one month after the SEC filed civil charges against him for securities fraud, the Wall Street Journal reports. Mudd has been accused of fraud during his time as CEO of Fannie Mae (a position from which he was ousted in September 2008), and of failing to accurately disclose risks that the government-backed mortgage lender bore on the sub-prime mortgage markets. Fortress (USD43.6bn in assets as of the end of September) says that Randal Nardone, one of the co-founders of the firm, will continue to serve as interim CEO, which he has done since Mudd began a leave of absence in December.
Allen Stanford told “lie after lie” to investors in order to be able to use their money to finance his lavish billionaire lifestyle, as part of a Ponzi-type fraud scheme, a US prosecutor claimed in the first day of Stanford’s trial on Tuesday, the Financial Times report. Robert Scardino, Stanford’s lawyer, replied that his client was a “Texas boy” who did not lie to investors. Stanford will plead not guilty to all charges.
The CEO of Raymond James, Paul Reilly, has confirmed that Richard K. Riess, executive vice president of asset management a the group, CEO of Eagle Asset Mangement and chairman of the board of trustees for the Eagle fund range, will be retiring on 31 December 2012. Riess, who has spent over 35 years at the firm, will continue to work on some projects alongside Reilly, a statement says. Raymond James has confirmed that it is currently seeking a replacement for Riess.
In Paris, JP Morgan Asset Managment finished the year 2011 on a very positive note from the point of view of assets, with about USD6bn.As at many other asset management firms, retail assets suffered from outflows while institutional clients continued to make net subscriptions.The surprise came from corporate clients, who invested USD2.5bn in new money in money market funds. These may be less profitable products for the manager, but it opens the door to sales staff, who may take advantage of the opportunity to win over new clients.
Axa Investment Managers has appointed Beltina Ducat as head of distribution for the southern European region (France, Italy, Spain) and the Middle East. She succeeds Joseph Pinto, who has been recently appointed as head of the Markets and Investment Strategy department and to the board at the asset management firm. Ducat will be based in Paris, and will report to John Baillie, director for global distribution and a member of the board at AXA IM; she will also join the executive board at the firm. Since 2009, Ducat had been head of the Distribution via Banking Groups team at Axa IM; she joined the firm in 2006. She had previously been a consultant and strategist at Accenture (2001-2006).
Investors should give the priority to high-quality diversified investments which offer good returns, due to bleak growth outlooks for the global economy in 2012, Bill O’Neill, chief investment offiver at Merrill Lynch Wealth Management for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) claimed in a press conference on 24 January.“Emerging markets will play a preponderant role in global growth, which will total 3.6% this year. US growth will increase slightly to 2.1%, and the Chinese economy will have a smooth landing,” says O’Neill.“For selection of equities in 2012, we recommend positions on large caps with solid cash flow and rising dividends,” the strategist says. “We recommend prudence, but are not predicting a disaster this year. We still insist on the need to adopt a strategic framework to manage the ‘new normal,’ which is characterised by weaker growth and higher risks. In particular, investors need to anticipate periods of significant loss and volatility bubbles, and frequent changes in risk appetite and aversion.”“Our three favourite sectors are cyclical consumer goods, inelastic consumer goods, and tech.” These sectors are the most attractive in terms of the quality of corporate results and valuations, and are in phase with the macroeconomic environment. Merrill Lynch Wealth Management EMEA also favours the major themes of growth, including consumer spending in emerging markets and global infrastructure. “We are expecting Chinese monetary policy to loosen, and will then strengthen our exposure to emerging markets,” says O’Neill.Merrill Lynch Wealth Management EMEA also recommends underweight positions on Japanese and euro zone actors in 2012. Japanese growth will recover this year, but corporate results may prove disappointing. Euro zone equities are inexpensive and investor confidence is already at a low point, but O’Neill esimates that it is still too soon to invest in the region, due to the high level of risk.For bond markets, investors should prefer corporate bonds to government issues, particularly investment grade and high yield securities, particularly from US businesses. Valuations for high yield bonds have already integrated an acceptable default threshold. Investors should steer particularly clear of banking sector shares and debt from peripheral European countries. “Credit spreads are attractive, as they reflect a significant incrase in defaults, which we estimate will be unlikely to materialise. Government bonds from ‘core’ countries remain unattractive from any perspective, except if there is a prolonged global recession,” says O’Neill.
BNY Mellon has announced the appointment of Ian Stewart as head of Europe, Middle East & Africa (EMEA) Client Management, a role previously held by Hani Kablawi, who has been appointed head of EMEA Asset Servicing for BNY Mellon. Reporting to Jim Palermo, vice chairman and CEO of Global Client Management, Stewart continues in his role as head of North America Client Management.
Normative exclusion, which consists in banning investments in businesses which violate international, social or environmental conventions, may help to make socially responsible investment more credible, a new study by Novethic which surveyed 30 French and northern European investors has found. “the practice makes it possible to exclude the most visible black sheep in portfolios,” explains Anne-Catherine Husson-Traore, CEO of Novethic. However, due to its limited impact on businesses, exclusion may be considered only a step in the direction of SRI in the strict sense. It is thus best suited to be associated with other practices (best-in-class, engagement), the authors of the study claim. Respondents in the Novethic study have eliminated an average of only 13 businesses from investment universes of 500 to 3,000 shares. Only severe and repeated violations without the introduction of corrective measures may lead to exclusion. In addition, the composition of lists varies from one investor to another. As a result, nearly three quarters of businesses are excluded by only one player participating in the study. The other limit of the practice is index-based management. Most businesses which are subject to normative exclusion are listed on most global indices, while an increasing proportion of institutional assets are allocated to passive management.
The German Andreas Wenk, who until recently was region head EMEA at Pioneer Investments, is joining Itaú UK Asset Management Ltd as director of wholesale distribution for Europe, alongside Griff Williams, who will retain his position as head of institutional clients, Fonds Professionell reports.Wenk will be based in London, and will report to Rainer Schwarz, managing director and head of Itaú Asset Management for Europe and the Middle East.Itaú UK Asset Management is the European asset management affiliate of the Brazilian firm Itaú Unibanco, whose assets total USD159bn.
Old Mutual today announces that it will be combining its Wealth Management Continental Europe business (France and Italy) with the Skandia Retail Europe business unit (Germany, Austria, Poland and Switzerland). Hein Donders has been appointed CEO of the new business unit called «Wealth Management Europe», which will sit within Old Mutual Wealth Management, with immediate effect. Jonas Jonsson, currently CEO of Retail Europe, will work with Hein for several months to establish the new business unit, before assuming a new strategic role within Old Mutual.
The 27 member countries of the European Union have reached agreement on the supervision and regulation of clearing houses, Les Echos reports. It will be impossible to bar a clearing house, as London had sought, unless a college of national supervisors unanimously votes to do so. However, finance ministers have agreed to add an appeal procedure: if a two-thirds majority of countries vote against the creation of a clearing house, it may ask the European Securities Markets Authority (ESMA) to settle the case. This compromise will now be put to a vote of the European Parliament at the end of January, on a final legislative text.
The 875 hedge funds identified by the German firm Absolute Research in 2011 posted an average loss of 4.5%, while the Dax and EuroStoxx 50 indices lost 13% and 15%, respectively. They also lost less than offshore hedge funds.As of the end of December, UCITS-compliant hedge funds had assets of about EUR118bn, which represents an increase of 25% year on year. The largest strategies were fixed-income (EUR40bn), equities and multi-asset classes, with about EUR30bn each.Overall, about 30% of UCITS-compliant hedge funds earned gains last year; the best-performing product in this universe, the Credit Suisse Custom Markets Global Carry Selector, is a volatility fund which earned returns of 40.82%. The best in the equity class was the long/short fund C-Quadrat IQ European Equity ETF, with 19.12%.At the other end of the spectrum, only 10% of these funds underperformed the Dax or Euro Stoxx 50 indices, with the worst result going to the Huserinvest New Horizon (L/S Equity), with losses of 53%.
Investment professionals estimate that a joint euro-bond issue could ease the euro zone crisis, so long as the issue is accompanied by a series of structural reforms, fiscal integration, and a solid joint governance framework.According to a survey by CFA of its European members, including in Switzerland, the majority of respondents estimate that a joint euro-bond issue from euro zone member countries would make it possible to reduce the size of the sovereign debt crisis (55%), strengthen financial stability in the euro zone (52%), and facilitate the transmission of monetary policy in the euro zone (56%).As to the structure of the euro-bond issue, 64% of CFA Institute members claim that a joint and solidaristic guarantee from participating governments would be the most effective. 64% of members are in favour of the euro-bond issue being only a partial substitute for national bond issues: part of the financing needs for governments would thus be covered by these euro-bonds, while the remainder would be provided by national government bonds.The survey finds, however, that a moral hazard in certain member countries that may lack budgetary discipline, with limited involvement in the cost of financing, is an enormous source of concern to members of the CFA Institute.As a result, some elements appear to be essential preconditions for a euro-bond issue, including strengthened economic, financial and political integration of member states (which is considered essential by 86% of CFA Institute members), increased and intrusive surveillance of, and the elaboration and introduction of national fiscal policies (essential according to 88% of members), and lastly, limited access to euro-bonds for member states that do not comply with the governance framework of the euro zone (which is favoured by 90% of respondents).