Six personnes ont quitté le bureau londonien de Citadel Investment Group, le gestionnaire de hedge fund basé à Chicago, selon Financial News. Parmi eux, Alex Maddox, qui dirigeait le desk titrisation de Citadel en Europe, rejoint Deutsche Bank.
Schroders vient d’annoncer l’acquisition de 49 % du capital de la société de gestion britannique RWC Partners Limited, via l’une de ses filiales.Cette participation représente un «investissement financier» pour Schroders. Elle a été acquise principalement auprès d’actionnaires individuels. Le reste du capital est aux mains des salariés.Le communiqué précise que RWC, qui gère environ 10 millions de livres d’actifs bruts, restera une entité juridique autonome et continuera par être gérée par son équipe dirigeante actuelle. En tout, les encours sont gestion de la société dépassent les 2,5 milliards de dollars. A noter que récemment, RWC Partners a recruté deux anciens gérants de… Schroders, Ian Lance et Nick Purves. Elle a par ailleurs annoncé le lancement d’un fonds actions long/short au format Ucits III, le RWC Europe Absolute Alpha Fund, qui sera géré par Ajay Gambhir, un ancien de JPMorgan.
La Financial Services Authority ( FSA ) a infligé lundi une amende de 700.000 livres à Vantage Capital Markets LLP pour ne pas avoir empêché Daniel Hassell, un courtier, d’exercer, en dépit d’un titre de simple consultant, une influence importante dans l’entreprise pendant plus de quatre ans sans avoir obtenu au préalable l’approbation de la FSA.La majorité de l’activité de courtage était précédemment détenue par Hassell et a généré près de la moitié du chiffre d’affaires de Vantage. Hassell a perçu environ un tiers des profits de l’entreprise.
Henderson Group a annoncé avoir mis fin aux négociations concernant une éventuelle acquisition de certaines activités de RidgeWorth Capital Management, la société de gestion américaine détenue par SunTrust Banks. En effet, les deux parties n’ont pas réussi à se mettre d’accord sur les conditions.
La société de gestion britannique Henderson Global Investors (90 milliards de dollars d’encours) vient de recruter Nancy McNally en tant que directeur des relations avec les consultants en Amérique du Nord. Elle a rejoint la société le 1er juin et sera subordonnée à Nick Adams, responsable des relations avec les consultants à l'échelle mondiale. Elle travaillera aux côtés de Mark Toomey, directeur de la gestion d’actifs institutionnelle, et de Michael Nagy, directeur associé des relations avec les consultants en Amérique du Nord. Nancy McNally était précédemment chez Gartmore. Elle a aussi travaillé chez Fidelity Investments et Robeco Investment Management.
Mardi, British Airways (BA) a fait sauter le dernier verrou qui bloquait la fusion avec Iberia, rapporte Cinco Días : la compagnie aérienne britannique a conclu avec les administrateurs de ses deux fonds de pension, New Airways Pension Scheme (NAPS) et Airways Pension Scheme (APS), un accord selon lequel elle s’engage à fournir des contributions annuelles de l’ordre de 330 millions de livres (394 millions d’euros), somme à laquelle s’ajoutera une compensation de l’inflation estimée à 3 % annuels. Ces contributions vont jusqu’en 2026 pour le NAPS et en 2023 pour l’APS.Des contributions supplémentaires de BA pour combler le déficit (4 milliards d’euros) sont prévues pour les années où l’excédent de trésorerie dépasserait 1,8 milliard de livres. L’accord prévoit également une garantie de 250 millions de livres pour assurer le versement des retraites en cas d’insolvabilité.
Au 31 mai, les actifs sous gestion d’Invesco Ltd ressortaient à 430 milliards de dollars contre 456,7 milliards au 30 avril et 457,7 milliards au 31 mars. Sur ce total, les fonds d’actions représentaient 181,2 milliards de dollars et les fonds obligataires 79,1 milliards. Les fonds diversifiés affichaient un encours de 39,6 milliards, les fonds monétaires se situant à 69,2 milliards et les fonds alternatifs à 60,9 milliards. Au sein de ces catégories, les ETF et autres fonds passifs pesaient au total 51,2 milliards de dollars.Invesco précise que la contraction de 26,9 milliards de dollars entre fin avril et fin mai est imputable à hauteur de 6,1 milliards aux ETF et aux fonds passifs, qui ont subi des remboursement nets, et de 6 milliards environ à l’effet de change lié à la hausse du dollar.Ces chiffres sont à retenir dans la mesure où la reprise par Invesco des activités de fonds retail de Morgan Stanley a été effective seulement à partir du 1er juin.
NYSE Euronext has announced that it has admitted seven new French-registered ETF funds from Amundi to trading on Euronext Paris, all of which charge fees of 0.14%. The funds are the Amundi ETFs US Treasury 1-3, US Treasury 3-7, US Treasury 7-10, Short US Treasury 1-3 Daily, Short US Treasury 3-7 Daily, Short US Treasury 7-10 Daily and Ex AAA Government Bond EuroMTS. Euronext now includes 541 listings for 493 ETF products based on over 300 indexes. Since the beginning of the year, 44 ETFs have been added to the European market listings of NYSE Euronext.
Agefi reports that, according to the claims of Jean-Pierre Gauzès, the reporter for the AIFM legislation to the European Parliament, who addressed the British chamber of commerce on 22 June, negotiations with the Ecofin council over the alternative management directive will not be completed before 30 June. Commissioner Michel Barnier had pledged to get the bill passed before summer.
Federal prosecutors Tuesday in civil lawsuits alleged that two of his longtime «back office» employees -Annette Bongiorno and JoAnn «Jodi» Crupi- «knowingly perpetuated» the fraud, says the Wall Street Journal. The lawsuits seek to seize about USD5 million in assets from the two employees. They include homes and cars.
On June 18th, the CNMV registered the Luxembourg Sicav Aberdeen Global II. It has 26 sub-funds, most of them bond products. The British asset management firm (EUR161.8bn in assets) is planning to aim largely at institutional investors in Spain and Portugal.
On Tuesday, British Airways (BA) overcame the last obstacle to its merger with Iberia, Cinco Días reports: the British airline reached an agreement with the trustees of its two pension funds, New Airways Pension Scheme (NAPS) and Airways Pension Scheme (APS), by which it pledges to make annual contributions of about GBP330m (EUR394m), in addition to which an amount estimated at 3% per year will be added to account for inflation. These contributions will run until 2026 for NAPS and 2023 for APS. Additional contributions from BA to offset the funds’ deficit (EUR4bn) are planned for years in which cash surpluses exceed GBP1.8bn. The agreement also includes a guarantee of GBP250m to ensure that pensions are paid in case of insolvency.
ING Groep is weighing a sale of its real-estate funds, says the Wall Street Journal. The Dutch financial group said earlier this month it was «conducting an evaluation of the position of ING REIM within the banking business.» Morgan Stanley has been appointed to evaluate ING REIM and could advise the bank on a sale, according to people familiar with the matter. Analysts believe ING could fetch between EUR800 million and EUR1 billion through a direct sale of REIM, which has EUR66.4 billion in property assets under management. Potential investors are coming forward, including AXA Real Estate Investment Managers.
As of 31 May, assets under management at Invesco Ltd totalled USD430bn, compare dwith USD456.7bn as of 30 April, and USD457.7bn as of 31 March. Of this total, equities funds represented USD181.2bn, while bond funds represented USD79.1bn. Diversified funds had assets of USD39.6bn, while money market funds had USD69.2bn, and hedge funds had USD60.9bn. In these categories, ETFs and passive funds accounted for a total of USD51.2bn in assets. Invesco states that of a contraction of USD26.9bn between the end of April and the end of May, USD6.1bn was due to ETFs and passive funds, which have seen net redemptions, and about USD6bn are due to currency effects related to the rising US dollar. These figures are worth noting as the takeover by Invesco of the activities of Morgan Stanley came into effect only from 1 June.
The French national pension fund, the Fonds de réserve pour les retraites (FRR), announced on 22 June that it has cancelled a management mandate assigned to Allianz Global Investors France, for which the financial management had been further outsourced to the firm’s sister firm, Nicholas Applegate Capital Management, also an affiliate of the Allianz Global Investors group. The FRR says in a statement that the mandate was cancelled “due to sustained relatively unsatisfactory returns.” The mandate was for the management of a US small cap equities portfolio totalling EUR172m as of 28 May of this year.
BNY Mellon Asset Management has announced that the application for a Discretionary Investment Management (DIM) license by BNY Mellon AM Korea Limited was successfully approved by Korea’s Financial Services Commission (FSC) on 16 June 2010. BNY Mellon established an asset management representative office in Seoul in 2006. The DIM license allows BNY Mellon AM Korea Limited to contract for discretionary investment management services with local financial institutions and professional investors.
In a statement, RHJ International SA has announced that it is continuing its development efforts, and that it has reached an agreement with KBC Asset Management SA to acquire KBC Asset Management Limited (Dublin). The transaction price has been set at EUR23.7m in cash. KBC AM will also receive 50% of a potential capital reduction at KBCAM Dublin, up to a maximum of EUR3.5m. KBCAM Dublin manages about EUR4bn for institutional clients, and offers investment products including environmental equities, value equities, and multi-asset strategy funds. KBC AM, based in Dublin, has a strong client base in Ireland, Asia, and North America.
Credit Suisse and Dow Jones Indexes have signed an agreement which covers the calculation, licensing, branding and marketing of the hedge fund indexes formerly known as the Credit Suisse/Tremont Hedge Fund Indexes. The joint venture between Credit Suisse and Tremont Capital Management, Inc. has been dissolved. Under this agreement, the indexes will be branded Dow Jones Credit Suisse Hedge Fund Indexes, and Dow Jones Indexes will calculate, distribute and market the indexes, while Credit Suisse affiliates will continue to manage the financial products linked to them. Credit Suisse and Dow Jones Indexes intend to keep the methodologies and rules for each of the existing indexes consistent with past practices. The Dow Jones Credit Suisse Hedge Fund Indexes are a family of hedge fund indexes which include broad market and investable indexes, all designed to track hedge fund performance. The indexes are constructed from a database of more than 5,000 hedge funds. The index family presently consists of 17 indexes. Dow Jones Indexes will discontinue its existing hedge fund indexes as of June 30.
Credit Suisse and Dow Jones Indexes have teamed up to provide the alternative management indexes previously known by the name Credit Suisse/Tremont Hedge Fund Indexes. By the agreement, the indexes will be renamed as Dow Jones Credit Suisse Hedge Fund Indexes. Credit Suisse has also dissolved its joint venture with Tremont Capital Management. Dow Jones Indexes will now calculate, distribute and market the indexes, while affiliates of Credit Suisse will continue to manage the financial products associated with them. The two parters are planning to retain the existing methdologies and rules for each index. Dow Jones Indexes, for its part, will discontinue its own hedge fund indexes from 30 June. The Dow Jones Credit Suisse Hedge Fund indexes are a family of 17 hedge fund indices which seek to replicate the performance of hedge funds. They are based on data from more than 5,000 funds.
Despite a global eocnomic context which remains uncertain, the number of millionaires and the volume of their wealth are both rising, according to the 14th edition of the World Wealth Report, published on 22 June by Merrill Lynch Global Wealth Management and Capgemini. This population once again represented 10 million people in 2009; their wealth increased 18.95 to a total of USD39trn. The most wealthy of them saw a 21.5% increase in their wealth in 2009. These figures show that the return to better economic conditions has made it possible to offset losses in 2008, and to return to 2007 levels. “The past few years were particularly marked for high net worth investors. While in 2008, the wealth of millionaires fell unprecedentedly, one year later, we are already seeing signs that it is recovering, and that in some regions, it has fully returned to the levels of wealth seen in 2007,” explains Gilles Dard, president for private management activities in France and continental Europe at Merrill Lynch. “Emerging markets continued to drive this recovery, particularly India, China, and Brazil,” says Laurence Chrétien, in charge of the World Wealth Report for France at Capgemini Consulting. “The Asia-Pacific region was the only region where macroeconomic indicators and drivers of wealth creation developed significantly in 2009.” While the increase in the number of millionaires and their wealth was generally more marked in emerging countries, most high net worth individuals continue to be concentrated in the United States, Japan and Germany, which alone account for 53.5% of this population as of 2009 (54% in 2008). In France, the number of millionaires has increased 10.8% to a total of 383,000. North America still has the largest number of millionaires, at 3.1 million, which corresponds to 31% of the world’s millionaires.
FIL Investment Management has announced that the equities fund Fidelity Deutschland Select (DE000A0D8C60), which was launched on 1 March 2005, and which is managed by Alexandra Hartmann, will be liquidated on 30 June 2010. As of 30 April, the fund had only EUR25m in assets. As of 21 June 2010, the fund had earned 8.83% since the beginning of the year, and 31.53% since its launch, but had lost 30.13% over three years.
As announced more than two months ago (see Newsmanagers of 7 April), Nomura Asset Management Deutschland has renamed the funds of its Maintrust range, replacing the MAT prefix with Nomura, from 23 June. In addition, the new names are intended to provide more transparency as of the objectives of the funds. The ISIN Codes will remain unchanged. Former name New name MAT Asia Pacific Fonds Nomura Asia Pacific FondsMAT Japan Aktien Nomura Japan Equity FondsMAT Fundamental Japan Nomura Fundamental Japan FondsMAT Fundamental Europa Nomura Fundamental Europe FondsMAT Asian Bonds Nomura Asian Bonds Fonds MAT Euro Plus Nomura Euro Convertible FondsMAT Real Return Nomura Real Return FondsMAT Real Protect Nomura Real Protect FondsMAT Medio Rent Nomura Medio Rent Fonds MAT APO LIQUID Nomura APO LIQUID Fonds Nomura AM Deutschland is also planning to import open-ended Luxembourg and Irish funds to Germany.
Feri EuroRating Services has found in a study of 60 insurers covering 90% of the unit-linked insurance policy market that of the 2,994 funds on offer, only about one quarter of them are rated A or B (the highest ratings), or in other words, that only one quarter of products have a sustainably higher-than-average performance with relatively low risk. Feri EuroRating adds that insurers tend to rely on flagship funds in the sector, which often have performance issues. The most used fund, offered by 37 out of 60 insurers, is the European Growth fund from Fidelity Funds, followed by the Templeton Growth (Euro), offered by 35 providers, DWS Vermögensbilgundsfonds I (24), and the BGF World Mining Fund from BlackRock (22). However, the Templeton Growth is rated D (the only one of the top 15 funds). But the DWS Akkumula, Carmignac Patrimoine and Investissement funds and the South East Asia Fund from Fidelity are all rated A. Meanwhile, many insurers tend to use their own funds in policies, while as a general rule the quality of in-house funds is lower than that of third-party products: the percentage of funds rated A or B among in-house funds is only 16%, while it comes to 29% for third-party funds.
According to statistics from the German BVI association of management firms, the portfolios of open-ended real estate funds included 1,495 properties or properties under construction, of which 60% are valued at under EUR50m, while only 71 properties are valued at over EUR200m. Germany represents the highest proportion, with 28.3% of total assets as of the end of March, compared with 28.5% at the end of January. The percentage of properties located in France has also fallen to 18.9% from 19.3% at the end of 2009 (see Newsmanagers of 22 March). 35.1% of properties owned by funds are less than 5 years old, and 29.8% are 5 to 10 years old. The BVI also states that office properties represent 64.8% of the total, while commercial and restaurant properties account for 20%. the remainder consists of industrial properties (4.4%) and hotels (3.9%). Concerning the volume of transactions, real estate acquisitions in the twelve months to the end of March totalled 67, of which 23 were in Germany and 44 abroad. Venal properties represented EUR5.82bn. 97 properties were sold, of which 64 were in Germany and 33 abroad, with a venal total value of EUR2.77bn.
European management firms will need to step up their preparations ahead of the introduction of the Key Introduction Document (KID), the investor information document imposed by the UCITS IV directive, according to a study by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and the European management association (Efama). The study, entitled “UCITS IV: Time for Change,” says that many major European asset management firms have not yet understood the importance of KIDs and are inadequately prepared to confront the impact of them. The study finds that 58% of respondents have not yet understood the repercussions in terms of cost which the modifications which will be needed to bring their control systems into compliance will involve. “Currently, asset management firms are not yet aware of the effects of the introduction of the KID. This will change the way in which funds are perceived, and many management firms may, due to its introduction, find themselves with incomplete product ranges,” says Thierry Blondeau, a partner at PwC Luxembourg and UCITS IV Project Leader for Europe at PwC. “Those who are not yet prepared for the consequences in terms of costs and preparations which will be made necessary by the changes are in danger of having an ugly surprise when July comes, as the European Commission will likely pass application measures. Managers will need to start adapting their ways of working without delay if they don’t want to be caught on the wrong foot.”
The governments of France, the UK and Germany are proposing to impose a tax on banks, based on their balance sheets, the French government announced in a statement released on 22 June. The French finance minister says that the future British banking tax is included in the budget presented yesterday, and that France will reveal details of its banking tax in its next draft finance law. Germany, for its part, has been announcing since the end of March that a banking taxation framework will be imposed, and will introduce draft legislation to the council of ministers this summer. “All three taxes will aim to ensure that banking establishments will contribute in line with the risks to which they expose the financial system and the economy in general, and will encourage them to make the necessary adjustments to their balance sheets to reduce these risks,” the statement from the French government says. The precise details of each tax may vary depending on the context and tax framework in each country, but the level of taxation will take into account the need to guarantee equitable conditions. The French, British and German governments have agreed to follow an ambitious program of reforms to the financial sector defined by the G-20, which will include all aspects of the industry, and look forward to more discussion of the proposals with their international partners at the G20 summit in Toronto on 24 June, the statement adds.
Asset management may see average growth of 6.2% in assets in the period from 2009-2012, Dexia Asset Management estimates in a report submitted to Funds People, but which the management firm will not release in France until autumn. All the catalysts are in place, with strong potential for emerging markets, rising influence of sovereign funds, a need to increase retirement savings in Europe, and an increase in savings in Asia. The sector theoretically has fairly large potential for growth at the top, as the five largest global actors (Barclays Global Investors, State Street Global Investors, BlackRock, Allianz Global Investors avec Pimco and JPMorgan Asset Management) add up to a market share of only 9%, compared with 21% for the five largest auto makers, or 30% for the five largest pharmaceutical companies. On average, the market share for the five largest actors in a sector (banks, lon-life insurance, food & beverage, vehicles, asset management, pharmaceuticals) is 22%.
BBVA Asset Management has opened its third-party fund affiliate, Quality Funds, to clients from outside the group. Myrian Luque, director of Quality Funds, announced on Tuesday that open-architecture services are now available to other Spanish firms, but that it has not yet received a response, Cinco Días reports. Quality Funds manages funds of funds with assets that have increased by 70.45% since the beginning of the year to EUR825m. It also advises funds from other management firms with assets of EUR16bn. Currently, Quality has agreements with 38 external management firms, and aims to increase this number to 55. When asked about the removal of Carmignac funds from its offerings a couple of months ago, Luque explained that the move came as part of a general revision of funds, and that Carmignac did not adapt to meet the preliminary criteria of Quality Funds.
Henderson Global Investors, the UK based asset manager with over USD90 billion assets under management, has appointed Nancy McNally as director of consultant relations, North America. Reporting to Nick Adams, head of global consultant relations, Nancy joined on 1st June 2010. She will be working alongside Mark Toomey, director of institutional asset management, and Michael Nagy, associate director of consultant relations, North America. Nancy has 10 years’ experience in asset management at Fidelity Investments, Robeco Investment Management, Clay Finlay and, most recently, Gartmore.
Six people have left the London office of Citadel Investment Group, the Chicago-based hedge fund manager, according to Financial News. Alex Maddox, who headed up Citadel’s European securitsation desk, has joined Deutsche Bank.