The enactment of the MiFID directive will make market surveillance a competitive advantage, though this activity has traditionally been regarded as a source of cost. According to a study undertaken by the consulting firm Tabb Group, spending by brokers and trading plartforms in Europe will increase 13% between 2009 and 2012, to a total of EUR185m by 2012. “Evolving needs in terms of market surveillance looks more like a revolution than an evolution,” says Miranda Mizen, principal at TABB and co-author of the study, along with analyst Will Rhode. Mizen says that a single share, which was previously traded on three markets, will now be eligible to be traded on 15 trading floors.
The US-based provider of investment services to high net worth clients Nuveen Investments has announced that it has decided to extend its range to non-American investors. Nuveen will offer two new funds, Nuveen Tradewinds Emerging Markets and Nuveen Tradewinds Global Resources, within a UCITS structure. The two new strategies will come as an addition to the range of products currently available in the Nuveen Global Investors Fund. Nuveen Investments has also launched a new website ( http://www.nuveenglobal.com/ ).
Since 12 February, Edmond de Rothschild Asset Mangement (EDRAM) has been intensely active setting up shop in Spain. The French management firm has already registered nine of its funds with the CNMV, Funds People reports. They are the Saint-Honoré Signatures, Global Convertibles and Vie-Santé, and then last Friday, the Asie Rendement, Commosphère Word, Ecosphère Europe and the LCF funds Croissance Globale, Monde Flexible and Patrimoine Flexible. EDRAM’s policy will clearly be to register all of its products, including about 35 funds, in Spain.
DWS Investments (Spain) on 26 February registered the Spanish hedge fund Arcano Credit Fund as an FIL product with the CNMV. The product has monthly liquidity, and will invest in two sub-funds of hte Luxembourg affiliate of Arcano, the Arcano Onshore Opportunities and Arcano Offshore Opportunities, funds which invest in loans to businesses to fund leveraged buyout (LBO) operations. Assets in the DWS fund will be 70% invested in the Arcano Onshore product, which focuses on the United Kingdom, Northern Ireland and Italy, and 30% in the Arcano Offshore, which is focused on western Europe outside Italy. Credit which is included in the portfolio will have an average of four years to maturity. DWS is planning a lock-up period of 33 months, a three-month advance notice policy for redemptions, and a minimal subscription of EUR150,000.
The private equity investor Warburg Pincus has announced that it will invest USD230m in a stake of about 23% in Primerica Inc, a life insurance and mutual fund distribution affiliate of Citigroup, the Wall Street Journal reports. Warburg Pincus has also obtained an option to invest a further USD100m at the price of the IPO. Citigroup is planning to retain a 50% stake in Primerica.
Many of the world’s biggest hedge funds have become increasingly concerned about fierce criticism by European politicians that their country bets have heightened the crisis of confidence in some markets, says the Financial Times. Brevan Howard – Europe’s largest hedge fund – said that it currently had no net short position against Greek debt. Paulson & Co has also closed out its positions against Greece.However, an estimated USD12.1bn of short positions are outstanding against the euro, according to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Funds People reports that Merrill Lynch Wealth Management is about to register a fund management firm in Spain. The objective will be to make the management entity responsible for management of mandates obtained by the private banking division, an activity which is currently provided by the group’s banking subsidiary. The move is part of a strategic initiative at Merrill Lynch Wealth Management begun in 2007. The firm is seeking to increase its presence in Spain by offering an all-in-one service which combines management and consulting, adaptation to the profile of the client and their inheritance planning needs.
Between the end of 2008 and the end of February 2010, foreign asset management firms have increased their share of the Spanish market by 2.3%, to 15.8%, according to the Inverco association. Assets at these firms now total EUR30bn, down from about EUR50bn at the end of 2007, but in 2009 these firms saw net subscriptions of EUR2.54bn, while Spanish management firms suffered net redemptions of EUR11.64bn. JPM remains by far the largest foreign asset management firm in Spain, with EUR4.81bn, in assets, even after the merger of CAAM and SGAM, which puts Amundi in second place, with EUR3.28bn. BNP Paribas and Schroders are neck-and-neck with EUR2.77bn each, while Pioneer (UniCredit) has EUR1.51bn.
Aladdin Credit Partners, a joint venture born of the partnership of co-founders Luke Gosselin and Victor Russo, and Aladdin Capital Holdings, on 1 March announced the closure of its two opportunity-driven funds, Aladdin Credit Partners and Aladdin Credit Offshore Fund, with USD573m in assets.
Amundi announced on 2 March that the French-registered CAAM mutual fund range and the Luxembourg-registered Sicav CAAM Funds will be renamed as Amundi nd Amundi Funds, respectively. For French-registered OPCVM mutual funds whose names begin with CAAM, only products which are aimed at all Amundi clients will adopt the Amundi prefix instead of CAAM. Other French-registered mutual funds bearing the CAAM name specially designed for the Crédit Agricole network will also be changing names, and will now be known simply as CA. The name changes took effect on 2 March 2010, and are already reflected on the websites amundi.com and amundi-funds.com, as well as in the legal and sales documentation (prospectus, reporting, product summary, etc), where the group’s visual identity is also deployed. The management process for the funds will remain unchanged, as will their ISIN codes, says Amundi.
Natixis Global Associates has announced the forthcoming launch, in partnership with Absolute Asia Asset Management, of a multi-cap equities fund. The new vehicle, Absolute Asia Dynamic Equity Fund, will invest in Asian markets outside Japan through a US mutual fund. The product will be the first fund distributed in the United States by the management team which has been based in Singapore for ten years. The fund will invest at least 80% of its assets in 30 to 40 businesses which are based in or operate in Asia. The minimal initial investment in the product has been set at USD2,500 for A and C share classes, and USD100,000 for Y shares.
The Geneva-based management firm Bedrock Group has launched a fund of hedge funds, Bedrock Brazil, which will be wholly dedicated to Brazil, Hedge Week reports. The vehicle is a multi-strategy fund of hedge funds (macro, equity long/short bias, equity long only and multi strategy), which will offer investors low-cost access to the major Brazilian funds, which are largely closed to new investors. The fund will be advised by Bedrock Advisors, in partnership with the Brazilian firm JGP.
The Catella MAX fund, launched by Catella Real Estate AG KAG (an affiliate of the Swedish Catella group), will be the first German-registered open-ended real estate fund to be focused exclusively on a single city or region. The city will be Munich and its adjacent Landkreise or districts. The product will have a highly diversified sectoral portfolio, which will include a high proportion of residential properties, and will be aimed at retail as well as smaller institutional investors.
Société Générale Private Banking Hambros (SGPB Hambros) on 2 March announced the recruitment of two senior private bankers, Rebecca Constable and Andrew Wimble, who will be based in the new Newbury regional office, and will provide wealth management services to high net worth clients. QAGPB Hambros will continue its policy of regional development in the United Kingdom, following the opening last year of offices in Manchester and Yorkshire. Constable and Wimble were previously at Kleinwort Benson.
Brevan Howard Asset Management LLP is continuing to recruit from Morgan Stanley. According to Bloomberg, the mortgage trader Ahsim Khan is expected to join the London-based hedge fund giant next month. Since September of last year, Brevan Howard has recruited at least four people from the US bank.
Roberto Lampl, senior investment manager at ING Investment Management, has been recruited by Baring Asset Mangement as head of Latin America equity (a newly-created position) from 1 March. He will be based in London, and will report to Tim Scholefield, head of equities. Currently (as of 31 January), Barings has assets of GBP11.6bn on emerging markets, of which GBP1.1bn are in Latin American equities. With his team, Lampl with be in charge of managing Latin American allocations for all segregated and pooled products from the British group, including the Baring Latin America Fund (USD836m).
The earliest initial estimates had already suggested that 2009 would be a very strong year for the management firm M&G. Inflows last year are estimated to have totalled EUR15bn, a 296% increase year on year. For retail activities, net sales totalled EUR8.3bn, a new record, and 259% higher than the previous year. Activities were particularly dynamic on the British market, with net inflows of EUR6.7bn. Bond funds accounted for the lion’s share of inflows throughout the year. For institutional products, net sales totalled EUR6.7bn, a 354% increase year on year, including a fixed income mandate totalling EUR4.4bn. Gross sales also set a new record, at EUR27.7bn, of which EUR15.1bn were for retail products. M&G points out in a statement that the exceptional performance observed last year will not be reproducible in 2010. Inflows are expected to return to their previous usual levels. For 2009 overall, assets under management are up 23% to EUR193bn, thanks to exceptional inflows but also to positive market effects. Assets for external clients totalled EUR77.8bn as of the end of 2009, 40% of total assets. Operating profits totalled EUR197m, 22% down year on year. But excluding exceptional elements, underlying profits are up 14% to EUR202m.
As a complement to its climate change fund (SISF Global Cimate Change Equity) and a fund focused on increasing demand for energy in emerging countries (SISF Global Energy), Schroders is planning to launch the Global Wealth Dynamics fund, which will focus on demographic change, in the next few months, Funds People reports. Gavin Marriot, international equities manager, will concentrate on businesses which respond to the needs of developing countries, such as the Mexican firm Homex, or which are in a position to profit from the new demographic configurations taking shape there. In the area of health, the manager prefers technologies which aim to identify and prevent illness, which will boost the growth of emerging countries, to investments in businesses in developed countries.
Sigbjørn Johnsen, Norwegian finance minister, has announced that the Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG), formerly known as the Oil Fund, has signed up to two new directives for responsible investment. The ethical standards defined in 2004 are now replaced by two sets of directives, one of which is based on exclusionary criteria and the observation of businesses, while the other involves responsible management and the exercise of shareholder rights by Norges Bank. The minister points out that in some cases, it may be more useful to put a firm under surveillance rather than to exclude it, particularly if there is still uncertainty about how the situation will evolve. The GPFG will closely monitor businesses which are placed on the watch list to ensure that they take measures to remedy the situation before a final decision on exclusion is taken. The finance minister has also signed the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (UN PRI).
La banque privée britannique RBS Coutts, qui a perdu l’an dernier quelque 70 collaborateurs à Singapour, reconstitue ses forces dans la région avec le déménagement à Hong Kong de Nick Cringle, co-chief investment officer de l’entité londonienne, dans les prochaines semaines.Selon Asian Investor, RBS Coutts a également nommé Manfred Liechti en tant que responsable de l’Asie du Sud-Est.
L’ancien gérant de hedge fund Paul Absalom vient de rejoindre Standard Chartered, selon Asian Investor, pour occuper le poste nouvellement créé de responsable de la distribution à Singapour. Il sera directerment rattaché à Adrian Walkling, responsable international de la distribution auprès des institutions financières.Dans ses nouvelles fonctions, Paul Absalom sera responsable des grands comptes dans la zone asiatique et de la clientèle servie à partir de Singapour.Paul Absalom a travaillé auparavant pour HSBC à Hong Kong en tant que responsable des ventes auprès des hedge funds et des Banques centrales.
Le résultat imposable des activités de private banking du groupe HSBC s’est inscrit en baisse de 21% l’an dernier à 1,1 milliard de dollars. «Confrontés à une période de très grande incertitude, les clients de la banque privée ont réduit leur appétit pour le risque en termes d’investissements ainsi que leur demande de crédits, ce qui a entraîné une baisse de nos revenus», explique HSBC dans un communiqué.La collecte nette globale s’est repliée l’an dernier mais le groupe, qui a renforcé sa présence dans les zones émergentes, souligne que la collecte nette des pays émergents et intra-groupe a totalisé 6,6 milliards de dollars.Les actifs sous gestion se sont accrus de 6% à 460 milliards de dollars.Le résultat imposable du groupe HSBC s’est pour sa part replié de près de 24% à 7,1 milliards de dollars.
Depuis septembre 2009, Albert Biebuyck est en litige avec Petercam, rappelle L’Echo. Le fondateur d’Investor Protection Europe estime que la société de gestion n’a pas respecté toutes les règles en matière de gestion de portefeuille du fonds Moneta Euro Liquidity. Selon lui, les problèmes de ce dernier sont à l’origine des performances désastreuses des fonds Universalis, Quality et Higher Yield en 2008. Faute de trouver un accord à l’amiable avec la société, Albert Biebuyck s’est tourné vers le Comité de Surveillance des Services Financiers (CSSF), le régulateur luxembourgeois.
Le processus de concentration des gammes de fonds sur le marché espagnol se poursuit. Le record établi voici trois mois par Ahorro Corporación avec 12 fonds fusionnés en une seule fois (lire notre dépêche du 25 novembre) a été battu par Invercaixa qui a intégré 18 fonds diversifiés à majorité d’actions dans le Foncaixa 90 Cesta Mixta 75RV tandis que dix fonds diversifiés à majorité obligataires dans le Foncaixa 88 Cesta Mixta 25 RV, selon un avis notifié à la CNMV.Parallèlement, le Banesto (groupe Santander) a fusionné ses fonds obligataire court terme et Especial Renta Fija, pandant que Barclays fusionnait son fonds trésorerie avec celui spécialiste de l’obligataire court terme et le Barclays Gobiernos Europa Liquidez. Enfin, Credit Suisse a fusionné ses fonds Summa et Sigma.
Selon les statistiques de l’association Inverco des sociétés de gestion, l’encours des fonds de valeurs mobilières espagnols a diminué en février de 1,1 % à 159,98 milliards d’euros (le niveau le plus bas depuis juin 1997), suite à des sorties nettes de presque 1,8 milliards d’euros, les plus fortes depuis juin 2009, qui sont venues s’ajouter à celles de 485 millions constatées pour janvier.D’après Ahorro Corporación, les fonds les plus conservateurs, les monétaires et les obligataires court terme, ont subi des remboursements nets de respectivement 600 millions et 1,6 milliard d’euros.Les plus fortes sorties nettes ont été accusées par BBVA Asset Management (596 millions d’euros), Santander Asset Management (287 millions) et InverCaixa (177 millions).
Actuellement, les remboursements sont gelés pour six fonds immobiliers offerts au public représentant 9,2 milliards d’euros d’encours, constate le Handelsblatt. Ce sont des produits d’Aberdeen (DEGI), Axa IM, Morgan Stanley, TMW et KanAm. Et ces gestionnaires se montrent très avares de renseignements quant à l’avenir, alors que seuls les fonds dont les remboursements sont suspendus ont le droit de revendre des actifs à des prix inférieurs à ceux fixés par les experts indépendants.
Hartmut Leser, membre du directoire et responsable de la distribution d’Aberdeen Asset Management Deutschland AG (Aberdeen Deutschland), a été promu directeur pour l’Allemagne d’Aberdeen ainsi que président du directoire d’Aberdeen Deutschland. Dans ce dernier poste, il remplace Patrick Walker, qui dirige l’activité European Business Development d’Aberdeen Asset Management et qui va désormais pouvoir retourner à Londres, maintenant que l’intégration de Degi est parachevée.Michael Determann secondera Hartmut Leser en tant que président du comité exécutif d’Aberdeen Immobilien KAG (ex DEGI). Ce comité exécutif se composera donc d’Hartmut Leser et de Fabian Klingler, ainsi que de Roger Welz. Fabian Klingler sera responsable de la gestion de fonds et de la gestion d’actifs.D’autre part, Nico Tates, qui dirige la gestion des fonds immobiliers pour l’Europe continentale, devient membre du conseil de surveillance d’Aberdeen KAG et assumera les fonctions d’international transaction manager tout en assurant la coordination de la gestion de fonds immobiliers entre Francfort et les autres sites du groupe Aberdeen.Ces nominations ont été annoncées en même temps que la démission «pour convenance personnelle» de Bärbel Schomberg, présidente du comité exécutif d’Aberdeen Immobilien KAG. Elle était par ailleurs head of Continental Europe d’Aberdeen Property Investors. C’est également pour convenance personnelle que Malcolm démissionne de son poste d’international transaction manager.Ces deux départs interviennent moins d’un mois après l’annonce que le portefeuille du fonds immobilier DEGI Global Business a été déprécié de 21,6 % (lire notre dépêche du 9 février et notre article du 11 février). Sans oublier que les remboursements des fonds DEGI Europa et DEGI International sont toujours suspendus...