La société de gestion Avana Invest spécialiste de la gestion à base d’ETF, qui a été créée par Götz J. Kirchhoff et Thomas W. Uhlmann (lire notre article du 9 février 2009), a annoncé mercredi le lancement de deux nouveaux produits qui suivent des stratégies passives sur les matières premières et sur les marchés émergents.Le AVANA IndexTrend Commodities and Cash R (ISIN DE000A0RGWR7) investit sur la base d’un modèle de suivi de tendance en ETC et ETF de matières premières dans les secteurs de l'énergie, des métaux précieux, des métaux industriels, des matières premières agricoles et du bétail sur pied. Dans le portefeuille initial, les matières premières énergétiques représentent environ 40 %, les métaux industriels 25 %, les métaux précieux 20 %, les matières premières agricoles 10 % et le bétail sur pied 5 %, indique Michael Vieker, gérant de portefeuille senior.Le AVANA IndexTrend Emerging Markets and Cash R (ISIN DE000A0RGWN6) investit dans des ETF d’actions des régions économiquement les plus fortes des pays émergents, en fonction du PIB de chaque région, mais aucune de ces régions ne peut dépasser 25 % du portefeuille.Initialement, les ETF d’actions chinoises sont pondérés à 25 %, ceux d’actions brésiliennes et russes pesant respectivement 15 % et 13 %.Dans les deux cas, le droit d’entrée peut atteindre jusqu'à 5 % et la commission de gestion se situe à 1,2 %. Avana facture aussi une commission de performance de 15 %.
Présentant ses résultats 2009, la banque privée allemande B. Metzler seel. Sohn & Co. KGaA a indiqué que l’encours de Metzler Asset Management atteignait fin décembre les 37 milliards d’euros, ce qui représente un gonflement de 23,3 % par rapport au niveau atteint douze mois auparavant. Les plus-values ont représenté 2 milliards d’euros.Friedrich von Metzler, l’un des deux associés-gérants, a précisé que l’accroissement des actifs sous gestion est principalement attribuable à un mandat du fonds de pension japonais Pension Fund Association, pour les actions européennes «growth», et à un mandat de Russell Investment pour les petites capitalisations européennes.Les stratégies quantitatives représentent un encours d’environ 6 milliards d’euros et le volume de la plate-forme metzler Fund Xchange a franchi fin décembre pour la première fois la barre des 10 milliards d’euros.
Cavenagh Capital a remporté un mandat auprès du néerlandais APG, qui gère les 270 milliards de dollars d’actifs du fonds de pension néerlandais ABP, selon Hedgeweek.APG va ainsi alimenter le nouveau hedge fund macro dédié à l’Asie et conforme au format OPCVM III, le Cavenagh Asia Fund, qui sera lancé le 1er juillet prochain. Cavenagh Capital, qui était basé à Singapour, va s’installer à Amsterdam à cette occasion.
First State Investments propose désormais une version onshore de son fonds «agribusiness» lancé le 20 avril dernier (NewsManagers du 21 avril). La version britannique a pris la forme d’un Oeic.
BNY Mellon Wealth Management a fait appel à Peter Moertl pour diriger sa division de Gestion de Fortune Internationale. L’intéressé partagera son temps entre l’Europe et les Etats-Unis et sera subordonné à Donald J. Heberle, responsable des activités de Family Office et de Gestion de Fortune Internationale du groupe.D’origine autrichienne, Peter Moertl dirigeait précédemment une société indépendante de conseil en gestion de fortune, Dr. Moertl Consult, qu’il a fondée en 2008 afin de conseiller des investisseurs privés basés en Suisse et à l’international dans l’achat de banques privées et de sociétés de gestion indépendantes. Auparavant, il a été directeur général d’une société de private equity zurichoise et a développé une plateforme d’acquisition et de consolidation au profit de sociétés de gestion indépendantes basées en Europe. Peter Moertl a également occupé des postes de responsabilité à l’international au sein de plusieurs entreprises, dont UBS, Deutsche Bank et JP Morgan. BNY Mellon Wealth Management gère près de 157 milliards de dollars d’actifs privés.
Michael Travaglini, executive director du fonds de pension de l’Etat du Massachusetts (44 milliards de dollars), a présenté sa démission pour rejoindre en juillet prochain Grosvenor Capital Management en qualité de managing director, selon Reuters.Il sera responsable de la commercialisation des portefeuilles de Grosvenor auprès des fonds de pension. Grosvenor est un fonds de hedge funds que le fonds de pension du Massachusetts a été l’un des premiers à utiliser.
On Wednesday, AXA Investment Managers Deutschland GmbH announced that, following a nine-month extension of the freeze on redemptions from its open-ended real estate fund Axa Immoselect (see Newsmanagers of 18 February), it is suspending redemptions for an initial period of three months from its open-ended real estate fund reserved for institutional investors, Axa Immosolutions (ISIN: DE000A0J3GM1). The fund has about EUR400m in assets. The suspension comes as a result of liquidity problems, as the fund now has only a very limited cash reserve. Axa IM claims the redemption demands have been triggered by the publication by the German government of draft reforms to legislation governing real estate funds. As of 21 May, the liquidity rate for Axa Immosolutions was 9.1%, which represents EUR36.5m, while the external financing rate was 15.3%. If the announced redemptions were fulfilled, the liquidity rate would be negative by 2.5%.
Siegfried Cofalka, a board member at the German asset management firm SEB Asset Management, has told the Börsen-Zeitung that the firm will be launching the SEB Asia REI fund, an institutional real estate fund which will invest exclusively in Asia. Other funds to target the Asian continent will follow.
The asset management firm Avana Invest, a specialist in ETF-based management founded by Götz J. Kirchhoff and Thomas W. Uhlmann (see Newsmanagers of 9 February 2009), on Wednesday announced the launch of two new products which follow passive strategies on commodities and emerging markets. The AVANA IndexTrend Commodities and Cash R (ISIN DE000A0RGWR7) invests on the basis of a trend-following model in commodities ETC and ETF products in the energy, precious metals, industrial metals, soft commodities and livestock sectors. The AVANA IndexTrend Emerging Markets and Cash R (ISIN DE000A0RGWN6) invests in equities ETFs covering the strongest economies among emerging markets, on the basis of the GDP of each region, but no region may exceed 25% of the portfolio. In both cases, front-end fees may be up to 5%, and management commission is 1.2%. Avana will also charge a performance fee of 15%.
A study published on Wednesday by the Deutsche WertpapierService Bank AG (dwp-bank) of 3.5 million transactions carried out between August 2008 and April 2010 has reached the surprising conclusion that there is a negative correlation between the propensity of German investors to invest in equities (the 160 shares of the Dax, MDax, TecDax and Sdax indexes) when these markets are performing strongly was particularly marked, says Karl-Martin im Brahm, head of distribution at dwp-bank. In fact, at the height of the crisis in fall 2008, German retail investors were net buyers of equities (with purchases 130% to 160% higher than sales between October and December 2008). Since Spring 2009, they have largely taken the rising markets as an occasion to sell, particularly as the Dax reached the 6000 point level. These data also show that German retail investors were able to react rapidly to intercurring fluctuations in the market, which proves that many of them very closely follow developments on the German stock markets.
The German private bank B. Metzler seel. Sohn & Co. KgaA, presenting its 2009 results, has announced that assets at Metzler Asset Management as of the end of December totalled EUR37bn, which represents a 23% increase compared with their levels twelve months previously. Friedrich von Metzler, one of the two managing partners at the business, says that the increase in assets under management is largely due to a mandate from the Japanese Pension Fund Association, for European growth equities, and a mandate from Russell Investment for European small caps. Quantitative strategies represent assets of about EUR6bn, and volumes on the Metzler Fund Xchange platform as of the end of December for the first time topped EUR10bn.
BNY Mellon Wealth Management has tapped Peter Moertl to head its International Wealth Management division. He will divide his time between Europe and the United States, and will report to Donald J. Heberle, head of Family Office and International Wealth Management activities at the group. The Austrian Moertl was previously director of an independent wealth management consulting firm, Dr. Moertl Consult, which was founded in 2008 to advise private investors based in Switzerland and abroad in the acquisition of private banks and independent management firms. BNY Mellon Wealth Management manages nearly USD157bn in private assets.
The US management firm Legg Mason has announced the launch of an accelerated share repurchase program, totalling USD300m. The move comes as part of an authorisation by the directors of Legg Mason of a share repurchase program for up to USD1bn.
After overseeing the entry of Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP) into the Spanish market, beginning in 2007, Carlos Costales has joined Swiss & Global (an asset management affiliate of Julius Baer), as head of sales for Spain. He was previously a partner at Atlas Capital, in which Julius Baer owns a 28.6% stake, Funds People reports. Meanwhile, Atlas Capital has announced the resignation of Juan Ramón Caridad, who is also leaving his position as head of Swiss & Global. Caridad was part of the former Morgan Stanley management team which founded Atlas Capital six years ago.
Bluerating reports that Russell Investments has launched three multi-management funds in Italy, which will allow clients to invest in the US market: the RIC US Small Cap Equity fund (small cap equities), RIC US Equity fund (large caps), and RIC US Bond fund (bonds).
Les Echos reports that the Finance committee of the French National Assembly on Tuesday evening approved a series of amendments to the banking and financial regulation bill. In the chapter on short-selling, an amendment which was unanimously approved now extends powers to the regulatory body AMF not only over completed transactions, but also over positions held by market actors. The identification of these positions will allow regulators to identify short positions and to suspend potential violators of bans. In order to further limit short-selling, legislators shortened the deadline for settlement of completed transactions by two days, to a maximum of one day after the transaction. They also extended the coercive powers of the market watchdog. The amendment multiplies the maximum fines the AMF has the power to hand out by a factor of ten, to EUR100m.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on 26 May proposed the creation of a single database for all market transactions in the United States. The standardised and automated system would amass data from various participants, allowing regulators to very rapidly reconstruct the flow of orders on the market. The absence of such a system was highlighted by regulators as a reason that it was difficult to determine the exact cause of the brutal drop on the New York Stock Exchange on 6 May.
Diamant Bleu Gestion and La Financière Responsable have teamed up to create a flexible diversified SRI fund, entitled Diamant Bleu Responsable. The two asset management firms will each contribute their expertise to the new product, which will be launched on Monday, 31 May: Diamant Bleu Gestion in flexible management, and LFR in socially responsible investment. Diamant Bleu Gestion, which is the manager of the fund, will provide asset allocation between various asset classes (money markets, bonds, and equities), global risk management, and management of the money market and bond allocations, while LFR will select SRI issuers from among all asset classes. It will also provide management of the equities allocation. Diamant Bleu Responsable, launched with EUR10m in seed capital contributed by two institutional investors, will be made available by its two “mother” companies to private clients, institutionals, and employee savings clients.
Due to the crisis and rationalisations of product ranges, the number of funds in Spain as of the end of 2009 was down to 2,593 from 2,943 one year earlier (-11.9%). There were 90 launches and 440 closures (of which 426 took place through merger or absorption), according to the annual CNMV report. As a result, average assets in funds increased by 11.6%, from EUR60m to EUR67m. Meanwhile, the number of foreign-registered funds on sale in Spain increased 3.4% to 582, but their assets rose 35% to EUR24.3bn, while total assets in funds fell a further 3%, to EUR170.55bn.
The global hedge fund industry has more than USD2,700bn of assets under management according to a survey of custodians and administrators calculated for a HFM Week Survey. This figure makes the industry far larger than most market participants have previously estimated, says the Financial Times. The estimate is a more accurate figure than those traditionally reported for the size of the hedge fund industry. It ignores any leverage in funds.
The European Commission on 26 May suggested in a statement that the European Union could create a European network of funds to protect against bankruptcies at banks, to prevent taxpayers from having to bear the cost of these bankruptcies, and to prevent them from disrupting the economy as a whole. After submitting its ideas to the next meeting of the European Council, the Commission will present them at the G20, which will be meeting in Toronto on 26 and 27 June 2010. The funds would be integrated into a wider range of measures intended to prevent future financial crises and to strengthen the financial system. The Commission argues that one way to achieve this would be to require member states to constitute funds according to joint guidelines, which banks would be required to contribute to. “The funds would not be intended to bail out or save the banks, but only to guarantee a methodical managemetn of bankruptcies without destabilising the financial system,” the Commission’s statement says.
KBL has changed the managers of three of its funds, Citywire reports. Bernard Pons has left the firm, leaving the KBL Key-Eastern Europe fund to Gabriel Catherin, and the KBL Key-Natural Resources Equities fund to Eric Hemmer. Catherin will also take over the KBL Key-Major Emerging Markets fund, previously managed by Christophe Bogaert.
The global investor confidence index calculated by State Street has fallen 11.2 points to 88.2, compared with a corrected level of 99.4 for April. A fall in investor confidence in North America is largely to blame for this decline, as the regional index fell by 5 points to a total of 98.3, compared with a corrected level of 103.3 the previous month. Among European investors, confidence is also down by 3.5 points, from 95.7 to 92.2. Asia, however, has maintained its confidence levels, as the regional confidence index has gained 6.8 points, to 101. “We have observed this month that institutional investors are continuing to considerably reduce their allocations to high-risk assets, in a trend which had already begun last month,” says Ken Froot, one of the two creators of the index. “As they did at the beginning of the subprime credit crisis in 2007, institutions have taken advance steps by reducing their risk from March levels, even though markets continued to rise. The sustained disengagement which we have observed this month is a sign of considerable uncertainty over the deficit levels in the Euro zone, and the repercussions that these might have worldwide.”
Axa Private Equity has announced that discussions with KBC over a possible takeover of its private equity portfolio have come to an end, La Tribune reports.
First State Investments is now offering an onshore version of its agribusiness fund, launched on 20 April this year (see Newsmanagers of 21 April). The British version comes in the form of an OEIC vehicle.
Certains s’inquiètent du risque de faillite de la BCE, depuis qu’elle s’est auto-déclarée «acheteur en dernier ressort» des titres de dettes publiques et privées de la zone euro que le marché refuse. Ils peuvent se rassurer. Quelle que soit la qualité de l’actif sous-jacent et même avec un «junk bond» grec, l’Eurosystème ne réalisera aucune perte sur ses opérations de repo tant que les contreparties (les banques) ne sont pas elles-mêmes en cessation de paiement.
Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) poursuit son programme de cession d’actifs, note l’Agefi qui précise que, de sources concordantes, l'établissement financier britannique aurait engagé des discussions exclusives avec le fonds de pension néerlandais Alpinvest Partners pour lui vendre un portefeuille européen de parts de fonds de capital investissement. Le montant de cette cession serait de l’ordre de 400 millions d’euros, ajoute le quotidien.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch vient de recruter un ancient banquier de Credit Suisse, Lim Eng Guan, pour diriger ses activités de gestion de fortune en Asie du Sud-Est, selon différentes sources. Il devrait rejoindre BofA Merrill Lynch en qualité de managing director et responsable de l’activité global wealth and investment management pour la région.Il remplace Kong Eng Huat, qui a récemment quitté ses fonctions. Lim Eng Guan, qui avait rejoint Credit Suisse en 2008 après une quinzaine d’années passées chez Citi, était managing director et market leader des activités de private banking à Singapour.
Selon Les Echos, la baisse des cours des «asset managers» cotés depuis l’aggravation de la crise pourrait précipiter certains rachats. En effet, les gérants cotés en Bourse sont davantage pénalisés que les autres secteurs en cas de baisse des marchés, car leurs sources de revenus, les commissions assises sur les encours, baissent mécaniquement quand les places reculent. De quoi susciter l’intérêt d’acquéreurs potentiels «en embuscade». A l’instar de Schroders ou de Henderson Group.