p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to information obtained by Newsmanagers, HSBC is planning to launch six new ETF funds by the end of October, which would be listed in Paris.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } BBVA Asset Management has released three funds of funds with no leverage for sale in Spain, two of them absolute return products, BBVA Evolución V.5 (ES113555009) and V.10 (ES113988036), and one «global» product, Quality Valor (ES114122031). The last two of these are reprofiled versions of funds which were launched on 4 August 1998 and 30 March 1999, respectively, while the V.5 fund was created only on 21 January this year. The V5 and V10 funds, which invest primarily in ETFs, have performance objectives of 110 and 250 points higher than the Eonia, respectively, with average annual volatility of 2-2.5% to 5%, and 4-8% to 10%. The Quality Valor fund, which will be more actively managed (investing in active funds instead of ETFs) aims for the Eonia plys 150 basis points, with volatility of about 4%, but is qualified in the prospectus as having a “very high” risk profile, compared with “moderate” for the V10 and “moderate to low” for the V5. Management and performance commissions for the three funds are 1.25% and 15%, respectively. Currently, assets in the V5 fund total EUR7.05m, while the V10 has EUR42.36m, and the Quality Valor fund has EUR11.39m. All of them are available from BBVA Quality Funds.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In September 2009 and in March 2010, RREEF (Deutsche Bank) and Moor Park Capital Partners acquired the properties in which 948 branches of BBVA and Sabadell had been located, for EUR1.15bn and EUR403m respectively (see Newsmanagers of 18 September 2009 and 29 March 2010). Now, Cotizalia reports, the real estate fund management firms have begun to sell off the properties, not in one piece, but individually, in the case of RREEF, and through small real estate agencies in the case of Moor Park.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Union Bancaire Privée (UBP) announced on Monday, 18 October that it has appointed Yves Stein as head of its banking activities in Luxembourg. Previously, Stein served as head of the Private Banking profession worldwide at the Fortis group. This is not the first time that UBP has added to its personnel by taking on a former Fortis manager. On 8 April 2010, Eli Koen and Mathieu Nègre, who joined the firm as co-heads of equities markets for emerging Europe, both came from Fortis Investments. In addition, Richard Wohanka, CEO for asset management and alternative management at the Swiss group, came from the firm which was taken over by BNP Paribas. Several sources say that other management staff are likely to follow in the very near future.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Agefi Switzerland reports that Stefan Liniger will succeed David McLellan as CEO for global trust business at Rothschild Private Banking & Trust, and becomes a member of the group’s board. Over the past three years, Liniger had been head of the Wealth Planning department at Goldman Sachs in Zurich. He was head of development and project execution for for national and international clients, as well as of development for the business and intermediary client sectors. He will take up his new responsibilities at Rothschild on 3 January 2011, while McLellan will be appointed a non-executive director on the board of directors at Rothschild Private Trust Holding.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Zweiplus bank announced on 18 October in a statement that it has updated its multi-manager strategy. Clients now have a choice between six portfolio providers, the affiliate of Sarasin bank announced. In addition to the three current managers, Lombard Odier Asset Management, Rieter Fisher Partners and Solitaire Wealth Management, come Schroder Investment Management (Switzerland), Bank Sarasin & Cie, and Falcon Private Bank Ltd. “Multi-manager strategies offer highly flexible management, which allows the client to modify the strategy or portfolio initially selected at any time, without needing to change banking relationships.”
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Banque Sarasin has announced the launch of a new equities fund, entitled Sarasin Sustainable Equity – USA. The fund is aimed at private as well as institutional investors, and allows them to participate in potential growth at US businesses which contribute to economic and social sustainability, the bank explains in a statement released on 18 October. In the past few years, the US government has passed stimulus measures to support sectors involved in sustainable development, such as clean and renewable energies and public transport. The Sarasin Sustainable Equity – USA fund was launched to capture the economic potential resulting from these incitements. With the density of US regulations increasing and tax regulations expected to toughen in the US, the fund, domiciled in Luxembourg, offers an attractive alternative for investors who prefer to avoid direct investment in US equities.
The UK’s Financial Reporting Council will on Tuesday publish a list of 68 investment institutions who have submitted to the Stewardship Code, a set of seven principles designed to promote greater scrutiny of companies by their shareholders, according to the Financial Times. 48 asset managers are backing the new code, including BlackRock, Axa and Capital International. Calpers is also among the supporters.
Royal Bank of Canada and BlueBay Asset Management announced on Monday that their respective boards have reached an agreement on terms for a recommended acquisition of BlueBay by RBC. Under the terms of the acquisition, BlueBay shareholders will be entitled to receive 485 pence in cash for each BlueBay share. This represents a premium of 29 per cent to the last closing price of BlueBay shares, as at Friday, October 15, 2010. The acquisition values the issued share capital of BlueBay at approximately GBP963 million.The board of BlueBay has unanimously recommended that its shareholders vote in favour of the acquisition. It is anticipated that, subject to the satisfaction of all regulatory and other conditions, the acquisition will close by the end of December 2010. The transaction will be funded using RBC’s existing cash resources, and is not expected to have a material impact on RBC’s earnings per share in the near term. «This acquisition will further RBC’s strategy to leverage our position as a top 10 global wealth manager, and continue to expand our asset management solutions for the benefit of our clients around the world,» said George Lewis, group head, RBC Wealth Management. BlueBay is one of Europe’s largest independent managers of fixed income debt funds and products, with USUSD40 billion in assets under management (as at September 30, 2010) on behalf of institutional and high net worth investors in the UK, Europe, the U.S., the Middle East, Asia and Australasia. Based in London, BlueBay manages a combination of long-only and alternative investment strategies across the sub-asset classes of fixed income credit - primarily focused on European and emerging markets strategies - including: investment grade corporate debt, high yield corporate debt, emerging market debt, convertible bonds, distressed debt, and multi-strategy debt capabilities. BlueBay will retain its investment autonomy and related operational independence following the acquisition. The 220 employees of BlueBay will become valued members of RBC’s Global Asset Management business and collaborate with their new partners in RBC Wealth Management, RBC’s global segment for wealth and asset management solutions.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }a:link { } In the 27th issue of its publication Viewpoint (http://www.chelseafs.co.uk/documents/Viewpoint-Issue27.pdf), Chelsea Financial Services has published its “Premier League” list of 96 funds which are recognised for their good returns, and 102 funds in the “relegation zone” for poor performance in the three-year period to 31 August; these funds (which include 24 multi-management products) have a total of GBP14.5bn in assets, while 85 funds fall into a “drop zone” with GBP13.2bn in assets. The funds which earn a place in the “dirty dozen” include six large funds with poor returns. The SWIP Multimanager UK Equities is the worst, with over GBP1.1bn in assets, followed by the L&G Multimanager UK Alpha fund, managed by Barclays Wealth (GBP877m). There are three Standard Life Investments products (SLI) among the six (3rd, 5th and 6th), while another SWIP fund takes 4th place. Four funds, meanwhile, show negative deviations of over 30% compared with the average for their sector over 3 years: Elite-Henderson Rowe Dogs FTSE 100 (33.64%), Legg Mason US Equity (33.13%), MFM Techinvest Special Situations (32.51%) and EFA New Horizon High Income (30.55%). The list is rounded out by SVM Global Opportunties (26.04%), and City Financial Str Global Bond (26.01%).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The German real estate fund management firm Warburg-Henderson KAG für Immobilien has acquired the office building located at 61-79 Buchanan Street in Glasgow for EUR42m. The property will be added to the portfolio of the institutional real estate fund RZVK-Immo-Fonds, which is managed on behalf of the pensions funds for the Rhineland region (Rheinische Versorgungskassen). Warburg-Henderson has also announced the appointment at the beginning of July of Rena Knöpke as director of marketing, distribution and client services. She was previously part of the the CRM institutional clients team at M.M. Warburg, after spending six years at Henderson Global Investors (2001-2007).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } BlackRock will launch in Italy the BSF Funds of iShares range of funds invested in iShares ETFs. The range includes four portfolios with various risk and return characteristics: conservative, moderate, growth and dynamic. The funds invest in several geographical areas and asset classes.
Selon EuroPerformance, la décollecte au troisième trimestre (-7,2 milliards d’euros) s’inscrit en nette diminution par rapport au trimestre précédent. La pression vendeuse qui s’exerçait sur les fonds de trésorerie régulière a fortement baissé (-6,6 milliards d’euros), et certaines catégories de fonds ont continué de recevoir les flux d’une demande soutenue. La gestion collective française enregistre une légère progression de ses encours de +1% sur le trimestre, à 838,6 milliards d’euros.
L’autorité des marchés financiers a annoncé avoir mis à jour son guide sur l’élaboration des prospectus obligataires et les modalités pratiques d’obtention d’un visa. Un guide, paru initialement en septembre 2009, destiné à favoriser selon l’AMF le développement du marché primaire obligataire pour les émetteurs français.
L’opérateur boursier a indiqué qu’il avait débuté la compensation de swaps de taux d’intérêt, le plus gros marché de dérivés de gré à gré avec environ 400.000 milliards de dollars d’encours. Du côté des investisseurs, CME a réussi à attirer Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, PIMCO, BlackRock ou encore Citadel. Dix sociétés s’associent par ailleurs au projet, dont Goldman Sachs et JPMorgan.
La foncière cotée a convoqué pour le 24 novembre une assemblée générale extraordinaire, afin de voter l'émission d’obligations subordonnées remboursables en actions (OSRA) pour un montant de 40,9 millions d’euros. Les principaux actionnaires (Amber Capital, Neuflize Vie, MMA, Maaf, GMF, Predica) devraient souscrire. Foncière Paris France discute du rachat de l’activité immobilier d’entreprise de la SAGI, filiale de la SNI, elle-même détenue par la Caisse des dépôts.
La performance du Fonds de réserve pour les retraites (FRR) au troisième trimestre a atteint 4,5 %, portant à 2,7 % la performance depuis le début de l’année 2010. Au 30 septembre, le montant des actifs s’établissait à 35,7 milliards d’euros, contre respectivement 31,9 milliards il y a un an et 33,3 milliards fin 2009. Le portefeuille est constitué à 33,3% d’actions, 3,8% de matières premières, 3,5% d’immobilier, et à 59,4% d’actifs obligataires et monétaires, indique le FRR.
Royal Bank of Canada a annoncé le rachat du gestionnaire de fonds BlueBay Asset Management pour environ 963 millions de livres (1,1 milliard d’euros), le groupe canadien cherchant à s’imposer parmi les 10 premiers gestionnaires de fortune au monde. La première banque du Canada en termes de capitalisation boursière a proposé lundi 485 pence par titre, ce qui représente une prime de 29% par rapport au cours de clôture du titre vendredi à 375,70 pence.
Pour la première fois depuis juillet 2009, l’Euribor 3 mois a atteint lundi matin 1%, soit le niveau des taux directeurs en zone euro. La réduction de l’excès de liquidité dans le système bancaire, qui pousse aussi les taux au jour le jour à la hausse, explique cette forme de retour à la normale. Les futures sur Euribor parient sur une poursuite du mouvement d’ici à fin 2010.