The global head of private equity at SAM and Robeco, Andrew Musters, has been appointed as a member of the executive board at SAM Sustainable Asset Management, an affiliate of Robeco. The appointment follows the complete integration of private equity activities into the area of clean tech at SAM, which resulted in a transfer of all personnel in the Rotterdam office to Zurich in July 2009 (see Newsmanagers of 4 June 2009). SAM says Musters has an excellent reputation among institutional clients for the development and launch of private equity funds of funds in the clean tech sector.
Agefi Switzerland reports that Barclays Wealth is cosying up to Swiss intermediaries. It has teamed up with Barclays Capital to offer an integrated solution aimed at trusts, family offices, and especially independent management firms. The British bank now offers custom structured products for its intermediary clients. The move is part of a larger desire on the part of the group to offer a service for every situation: “We will help businesses to create wealth, but we also want to offer them wealth management solutions, for example,” explains Clive Britton, director for Switzerland at Barclays Wealth Intermediaries in Geneva, who claims this may allow the bank to stand out from its competitors.
The American billionaire Robert Day, who is suspected of insider trading, has resigned and will be leaving his position on the board of directors of Société Générale, Reuters reports, confirming earlier reports in Les Echos. Day, who founded and then sold TCW, an asset management firm, to Société Générale, is named in a class action suit in the United States accusing him of insider trading related to the Kerviel scandal. He is also under investigation by the French financial authority, the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF).
The fund which manages the assets of the billionaire George Soros more than doubled its position on the SPDR Gold Trust, a physical gold ETF fund, in fourth quarter 2009. Bloomberg reports that Soros Fund Management acquired 3.728 million shares for USD421m. As of 31 December, the investment, the fund’s largest position, was valued at USd663m. The Chinese sovereign fund China Investment Fund has also acquired 1.45 million shares, for a total of USD155.6m. Assets in the SPDR Gold Trust have increased by 2.2% since the beginning of the year, following a 24% increase in 2009. As of yesterday, the fund’s holdings in gold totalled 1,109.42 metric tons. The institutional investor Paulson & Co held the largest position in the fund as of 31 December last year, with 31 million shares, representing an 8.65% stake in the fund.
The largest ETF provider in the world, iShares, has selected State Street as its cusdotian and fund administrator for a record USD370bn, or about EUR269bn, in assets, efinancialnews reports. The mandate was previously held by Bank of Ireland Securities Services. State Street will take over in June of this year.
Many investors are adopting a negative view of the future of the Euro, and have reduced their positions on CDS from Greece and Spain in favour of debt from the UK and Japan, or other countries not engulfed in the developments now grabbing headlines, the Wall Street Journal reports. Tigris (USD2bn), which is predicting a fall for the Euro, is betting on gold, estimating that it will gain if problems related to Greek and other government debt become more severe. Starting from the hypothesis that the United States will pull out of its financial difficulties more rapidly than Europe, BlackRock began shorting the Euro late last year, according to a source familiar with the matter. Among the other management firms which have recently bet against the Euro are Paulson & Co and Moore Capital Management, who declined to comment.
The major providers of hedge fund indices in January showed diverging trends, which is due to the differing components of their various indices. According to Credit Suisse/Tremont, hedge funds in January earned average returns of 0.17%, with peaks at 2.02% for FI arb and event-driven (1.42%), while emerging markets and long/short equity lost 0.76% and 1.50%. BarclayHedge, meanwhile, estimates that hedge funds overall lost 0.29%, with the top returns for equity short bias, with gains of 3.8%, followed by distressed securities (+2.64%), and as at Credit Suisse/Tremont, FI arb, which earned 1.89%. The emerging markets sub-index shows losses of 1.19%, while equity long bias is down 1.68%, and technologies are down 2.74%.
BNP Paribas has decided to open its Vol Edge fund to British investors. The fund, launched in 2007, is managed by the BNP Paribas affiliate Harewood Asset Management, Investment Week reports. The FCP fund offers coverage against volatility on equities markets, and protection against problems with correlation of other asset classes in falling markets. Harewood is targeting multi-management and high net worth private investors.
ETF Securities (ETFS) announced on Wednesday that on 11 February, total assets in its physical Palladium ETC fund (under the acronym PHPT) has set an all-time record of 1.1 million ounces. This is four times the previous record set in the commodities boom in July 2008.
Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam will go to trial Oct. 25 on criminal insider-trading charges. U.S. judge Richard J. Holwell said he would prefer the criminal trial be heard before a separate civil case brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission and scheduled for Aug. 2. But given the size and complexity of the case, he agreed that the criminal case should be heard in the autumn.
The Korean sovereign fund Korea Investment Corporation (KIC), which manages about USd30bn in assets, is planning to extend its investments into alternative management, Asian Investor reports. The Korean minister of Finance and Strategy, who has already contributed USD13bn to the fund, may this year make a further commitment of USD5bn. The new assets in the fund would be invested in alternative asset classes, including private equity, real estate, hedge funds, and commodities. The largest allocations would be for private equity. Exposure to alternative management could eventually be in the range of 15% to 20%.
Emerging Global Shares Trust (EGA) on Wednesday announced the launch of the China Infrastructure Index ETF (which is traded under the acronym CHXX on NYSE), which the asset management firm says is the first product of its type dedicated to the Chinese infrastructure sector. The portfolio is invested in the 30 largest publicly-traded firms in the country, and the fund aims to replicate the evolution of the INDXX China Infrastructure index. Fees total a net 0.85%. As of 1 February, the five most highly represented sub-sectors were real estate development management (22.73%), metals and mining companies (15.22%), construction and engineering (14.93%), electrical equipment (11.70%), and construction materials (9.37%). The fund is managed by Alps Advisors, and sub-advised by EGA. The portfolio manager is Richard Kang, CIO of EGA. This is the fifth ETF from EGA, following the Emerging Markets Metals & Mining (EMT), Emerging Markets Energy Fund EEO), Emerging Markets Financials (EFN) and Emerging Markets Titans Composite (EEG) funds. EGA is planning to launch at least five more emerging markets ETFs by the end of this year, of which two will be focused on infrastructure in Brazil and India, and three will invest in midcaps (Brazil, China, and India).
Axa Investment Managers Deutschland has announced that it will be extending for nine months the freeze on redemptions from its open-ended real estate fund Axa Immoselect (EUR2.84bn). Redemptions were initially suspended for three months, to 17 February 2010 (see Newsmanagers 20 November 2009). Achim Gräfen, manager of the fund and CEO of Axa Investment Managers Deutschland, says that the decision is due to a lack of adequate liquidity to meet redemption demands already received. The Immoselect fund has already been closed to redemptions from 28 October 2008 to 28 August 2009 (see Newsmanagers of 30 December 2008 and 28 August 2009).
Revenues from asset management at Axa were down nearly 25% last year to EUR3.07bn, largely due to a lower level of assets under management (-18%), and an unfavourable evolution of the product mix (which contained a lesser proportion of equities). Assets under management were up EUR29bn compared with 31 December 2008, at EUR845bn. Net inflows were EUR71bn lower, largely due to the institutional client segment, due to the more limited performance of AllianceBernstein investments in 2008, and of some management expertise at AXA IM in 2009. However, positive developments on the markets resulted in gains of EUR108bn due to financial recovery. Assets under management as of 31 December last year totalled EUR346bn, compared with EUR33`1bn one year earlier at AllianceBernstein and EUR499bn, compared with EUR485bn at Axa IM. Assets invested by AXA totalled EUR590bn, of which EUR403bn were general assets invested in a diversified portfolio composed largely of bonds (81%), real estate (5%), cash (5%) and publicly traded equities (4%). Net results for the part of the group in 2009 totalled EUR3.6bn, compared with EUR0.9bn in 2008, on revenues down 3% at EUR90.1bn.
DWS Investments will no longer offer its locally-registered funds in Austria. The last six funds on sale as of 31 December 2009 have either been transferred to other management firms, or liquidated. The open-ended fund management firm from Deutsche Bank has long had a significant concentration of its product range in the Luxembourg Sicav DWS Invest. French and Italian-registered funds, among others, have already been transferred to this Sicav. DWS is of the opinion that local management is ultimately too costly, and that centralisation of most of its management in Frankfurt is a less onerous and more practical alternative.
The US-based firm SEI has been selected by Fred Alger Management to provide outsourcing services for its managed accounts activities, Hedge Week reports.
Paulson & Co., the hedge fund management firm led by the billionaire John Paulson, in fourth quarter increased its stake in Citigroup, Bloomberg reports. At the same time, it sold shares in Bank of America Corp. In detail, Paulson bought 506.7 million shares in Citigroup in New York at the end of December, while his stake in Bank of America was reduced by 159.8 million shares to a total of 151 million shares. Paulson, who manages about USD32bn in assets in New York, began building up his stake in Citigroup in third quarter 2009. David Tepper, head of one of the best-performing hedge funds of last year, and the billionaire George Soros, are among the shareholders who increased their stakes in Citigroup in fourth quarter, Bloomberg reports.
The asset management arm of Société Générale saw net outflows of EUR18.3bn in 2009 (of which EUR11.4bn in Q4 ’09), “due to the combined effects of falling financial markets and workforce reorganizations at the end of the year,” the bank said in a statement on Thursday morning presenting its annual results. After market effects are taken into account (+EUR25.2bn, of which +EUR5.9bn were in Q4 ’09), along with currency effects (-EUR2.3bn, with +EUR1.3bn in Q4 ’09), and the impact of sales (-EUR5.9bn, including SGAM UK, for –EUR4.7bn), assets under management in the professional area remained stable compared with the end of 2008, at EUR268.8bn as of the end of 2009. These assets included EUR170bn transferred to Amundi, the joint venture founded with Crédit Agricole, in which Société Générale controls 25%; EUR13bn transferred to Lyxor Asset Management in first quarter 2010, and EUR70bn managed by TCW, the US asset management affiliate of the bank. For the year, earnings for the professional area totalled EUR765m, a strong increase (+84.9%, +80.0% in ongoing figures) compared with 2008 revenues, which included large write-downs and losses related to the crisis. Gross operating profits returned above the break-even point (+EUR4m) after losses in 2008 (-EUR367m). Net profits for the part of the group totalled EUR1m.
Chris Kinder, who managed long-only and long/short products at RWC Partners for the past seven years, is joining the UK Equity High Alpha team at Threadneedle as a fund manager. He will work in close collaboration with Mark Westwood on the UK Crescendo fund, as well as on the long-only high alpha range.
The two Dutch pension funds, Bedrijfstakpensioenfonds voor de Suikerverwerkende Industrie and Stichting Bedrijfspensioenfonds voor de Suikerwerk- & Chocoladeverwerkende Industrie (Bpf Koek & Snoep) have announced that they have awarded BNY Mellon Asset Servicing a custody mandate on assets of EUR1bn. BNY Mellon will also provide other services, including accounting, performance measurement, and reporting.
Carmen Ortiz, who has been appointed director of investor and shareholder relations and Banco Popular, is leaving his position as CEO of Popular Gestión (EUR6.7bn in assets, 64 funds). He will be replaced by Miguel Colombás, who was previously deputy CEO and CIO of the asset management firm.
According to documents obtained by the CNMV, hedge funds did not short shares in Santander and BBVA during the recent market tensions, despite the increased risk associated with Spanish government debt, Cinco Días reports. Short positions on these banks either held stable or were reduced: for example, they represent only 2.69% of capital in Banco Popular, compared with 7.29% at the height of the crisis in March 2009. Securities lending does not appear to reveal high levels of speculation either. For Santander, shares lent decreased between 5 January and 17 February to 767 million shares (9% of capital), from 1.8 billion. For BBVA, the volume of securities lent in the same period remained at a level equivalent to about 17% of capital.
The Spanish alternative management firm Intelectia Capital is to launch Intelectia Blue, a sub-fund of the Luxembourg Sicav Newcits from Adepa AM, which will be specialised in cat-bonds and will aim for performance of 15-20% with volatility of 5-8%, Citywire reports. The fund complies with the UCITS III directive and may also go short.
Agefi Switzerland reports that increased regulatory pressure in the areas of compliance and management pay scales will transform the terrain in asset management in the next five years. A survey undertaken by Ernst & Young in late 2009 in Switzerland and Liechtenstein reveals that specialists in the sector are opting for specialization in a part of the value chain or on niche products to continue their growth in the future. At the same time, the increased necessity of critical size will result in an increased number of partnerships and mergers between producers and distributors, the auditing agency predicts. The development of presence in Asia, the Middle East and Latin America will be virtually inevitable, while hedge funds, private equity and money markets will see lower inflows for their funds in the next five years, as assets move towards equities, commodities and real estate.
Désormais, DWS Investments ne commercialise plus en Autriche de fonds de droit local. Les six derniers qui subsistaient au 31 décembre 2009 ont été soit transférés à d’autres gérants, soit liquidés.Le gestionnaire de fonds offerts au public de la Deutsche Bank a déjà entamé depuis assez longtemps une concentration de son offre de produits sur la sicav luxembourgeoise DWS Invest. Les fonds de droit français et italien, notamment, y avaient déjà été transférés.DWS juge que la gestion en local coûte finalement trop cher et que la centralisation à Francfort de l’essentiel de la gestion est une formule à la fois moins onéreuse et plus efficace.
Le fonds souverain coréen, Korea Investment Corporation (KIC), qui gère quelque 30 milliards de dollars, envisage d’accroître ses investissements dans la gestion alternative, selon Asian Investor.Le ministère des finances et de la stratégie, qui a déjà contribué au fonds pour un montant de 13 milliards de dollars, pourrait ajouter cette année 5 milliards de dollars. Une proportion croissante de ces nouveaux fonds pourrait être investie dans l’alternatif, y compris le private equity, l’immobilier, les hedge funds et les commodities. Les allocations les plus significatives devraient aller au private equity.A terme, l’exposition à la gestion alternative pourrait se situer dans une fourchette de 15% à 20%.
Selon Les Echos, l’assureur italien Generali et le Crédit Agricole ont annoncé hier soir le débouclage du pacte d’actionnaires qui les liaient depuis bientôt un an, au tour de table du deuxième groupe bancaire italien Intesa Sanpaolo. L’opération sera effective le 19 mars, à la prochaine réunion du conseil de gestion d’Intesa, l’instance qui doit convoquer l’assemblée générale des actionnaires appelée à renouveler le conseil de surveillance de la banque milanaise.
Le gestionnaire alternatif espagnol Intelectia Capital va lancer Intelectia Blue, un compartiment de la sicav luxembourgeoise Newcits d’Adepa AM qui sera spécialisé dans les emprunts-catastrophe (cat-bonds) et visera une performance de 15-20 % avec une volatilité de 5-8 %, rapporte Citywire. Ce fonds conforme à la directive OPCVM III pourra aussi «shorter».
Le conseil de surveillance d’AXA a annoncé, dans un communiqué mercredi 16 février, avoir approuvé les projets de modification des statuts qui seront soumis à l’approbation de l’assemblée générale des actionnaires du 29 avril 2010, dans le cadre du changement de gouvernance proposé aux actionnaires. Il sera proposé de remplacer la structure duale actuelle à conseil de surveillance et directoire, par une structure unitaire avec un conseil d’administration. Dans ce cadre, la direction générale et la présidence du conseil d’administration seraient confiées à Henri de Castries, actuel président du directoire. Selon Axa, la crise financière en 2008 et 2009 a mis en lumière la nécessité d’une plus grande réactivité dans les processus de décision et de fait la nécessité de revoir la structure duale du groupe. De fait, l’adoption d’une structure à conseil d’administration doit permettre de renforcer le rôle, les responsabilités et l’implication du conseil et de ses membres, tout en permettant une gouvernance équilibrée grâce notamment à un rôle accru confié aux administrateurs indépendants. Ainsi, le conseil de surveillance a recommandé la nomination d’un conseil d’administration constitué de 15 membres dont 11 indépendants : - Mme Wendy Cooper (représentante des salariés actionnaires), - Mme Isabelle Kocher (indépendante), - Mme Suet-Fern Lee (indépendante), - Mme Dominique Reiniche (indépendante), - M. Henri de Castries, - M. Jacques de Chateauvieux (indépendant), - M. Norbert Dentressangle (indépendant), - M. Denis Duverne, - M. Jean-Martin Folz (indépendant), - M. Anthony Hamilton (indépendant), - M. François Martineau (indépendant), - M. Giuseppe Mussari (indépendant), - M. Michel Pébereau, - M. Ramon de Oliveira (indépendant), - M. Ezra Suleiman (indépendant). La présidence de chacun des quatre comités du conseil (audit, financier, rémunération & ressources humaines et éthique & gouvernance) sera assurée par un administrateur indépendant.
Sous réserve de l’obtention de l’autorisation des autorités de contrôle de la concurrence et du dossier bancaire définitif, AXA Private Equity vend sa participation de 65,6 % dans Spotless Group à BC Partners et à la direction de l’entreprise. Le montant de la transaction n’a pas été dévoilé, mais serait proche de 600 millions d’euros.Spotless Group a été créé suite à l’acquisition en 2005 d’Eau Ecarlate pour quelque 150 millions d’euros. Depuis lors, Spotless Group a poursuivi sa politique de croissance, notamment grâce à l’acquisition de six marques de produits d’entretien en Europe : Guaber en Italie et Punch en Irlande en 2006, Citin aux Pays-Bas, Eparcyl en France et Ballerina en Espagne en 2007, et Dylon au Royaume-Uni en 2008.