Dans un entretien à L"Agefi suisse, Alfredo Piacentini, associé de la banque genevoise, indique que les fonds propres de la banque s"élèvent à 400 millions de francs suisses, «ce qui nous permet à la fois d"observer autour de nous des opportunités d"acquisition et d"investir dans les structures existantes. Nous avons quelques projets en cours dans le domaine onshore en Europe, sur lesquels nous ne pouvons pas encore nous exprimer en détail. De même nous poursuivons nos engagements de gérants. Il y a beaucoup de mouvements actuellement en Suisse, ce qui offre des opportunités d"achat. Des structures se ferment. Et nous sommes en pole position pour en profiter? ». L"an dernier, la Banque Syz & Co, a vu son bénéfice net reculer de 79% à 32,6 millions de francs, ses actifs sous gestion passant de 30 milliards de francs fin 2007 à 18,5 milliards fin 2008.
Spanish fund managers estimate that the leading category of products in the next few months will be guaranteed capital equities funds, which provide protection of capital for those who are not confident in the upward direction of the stock markets, and who are exposed to equities in order to profit from a possible rebound in this asset class. Paul Mercado, director of research at VDOS Stochastics, tells Expansión that 25% of new funds or funds whose guarantee has been renewed in the past three months are in this category, which represents 17% of total assets in Spanish funds.
Banco Madrid has announced the liquidation of its only hedge fund, Copernico, whose assets at the end of March had fallen to EUR21,000, Funds People reports. This amount represents the remaining assets in the fund after redemptions totalling 54% of the fund at the end of December.
One year ago, two natives of Madrid, Bruno del Ama and José Carlos González, founded the New York management firm Global X Funds, which received its SEC license after six months. Its first fund is the FTSE Colombia 20, launched in partnership with Interbolsa, the largest Colombian broker, Cinco Días reports. Global X is planning to launch ETF funds based on other emerging markets, including Peru, Egypt, and the Philippines. No other provider in the United States currently offers these niche products.
Irving Picard, the court-appointed trustee for Bernard Madoff’s business activities, stated on Thursday that he would not claw back money which victims of the fraud had received in the past if the investors in question are ?net losers? on the fraud overall. This means that Picard will not recover the entirety of the USD735m which he called on 223 investors to return last week.
The Swiss president, Hans-Rudolf Merz, has asked the US Secretary of the Treasury, Timothy Geithner, to drop a lawsuit against UBS clients, in exchange for a new agreement on taxation which the two countries are in the process of negotiating, the Financial Times reports.
Henderson Global Investors (HGI) has announced that it has launched a blog dedicated to the subject of socially responsible investment (SRI). The specialised fund management team at the asset management firm will use this vehicle to inform investors and other stakeholders about its opinions and its approach in this area. The project follows an announcement in March that HGI will be the patron of the 2009 edition of National Ethical Investment Week. HGI has assets of about GBP570m in SRI, in the form of funds and mandates.
South African alternative asset manager AMB Capital and Damille Partners IV, which own 27% of capital in LonZim (in which Lonrho holds 24.25%), will move at an extraordinary general shareholders’ meeting to dismiss the four executive directors of the company and sell its assets in Zimbabwe, the Sunday Times reports. LonZim has been listed on the AIM in London since 2007, and Lonrho, the founder, has operational control. LonZim’s assets include Celsys (mobile telephony, printing); Paynet (online payment systems), and Millpal (chemistry). The chairman, David Lenigas, has called on shareholders to reject the demands of AMB and Damille.
Due to the current market situation and the evolution of liquidity in its products, UBS Germany on Friday announced that it will be extending a freeze on redemptions from its open-ended real estate funds UBS (D) Euroinvest Immobilien and UBS (D) 3 Kontinente Immobilien for six months, the Börsen-Zeitung reports.
According to the Financial Times, private equity groups are preparing to invest about EUR400m in Springer Science and Business Media, which is selling 49% of the publishing business. Blackstone, CVC Capital Partners and TPG are expected to submit bids.
USD466bn in US Treasury bonds (of all maturities, including t-bills, t-notes and t-bonds) will be issued in second quarter 2009, experts at the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (Sifma) estimate, according to La Tribune. They also estimate that rates will remain low: the median prediction for 10-year rates is 2.50% until the end of second quarter 2009, and 2.60% up to the end of third quarter.
According to the British magazine Unquote, cited by the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the number of transactions realised by private equity investors in Europe has fallen to 219 in first quarter, for a total of EUR4bn, compared with 358 deals worth EUR27bn in January-March 2008. This is the lowest level of activity since autumn 1996. The largest deal was the acquisition of Euromisure by BCC Private Equity for EUR454m.In Germany, Unquote counted only 6 acquisitions, for EUR156m, compared with 13 deals worth EUR1.1bn in first quarter 2008.
According to a study by the consulting firm Mercer, managers of Spanish retirement savings plans have increased their exposure to bonds to 61% since the beginning of the year, compared with 49% in 2008, Cinco Días reports. Allocation to equities has fallen to 32%, 8 points lower than at the end of 2006.
The financial crisis has negatively affected 50.1% of individual investors and 58.3% of institutional investors in the retirement planning industry, according to a survey conducted by Kommalpha Institutional Consulting entitled ?Altersvorsorge in der Asset Management Industrie.? The study finds that a large majority of investors feel that for retirement planning, insurers are better positioned than asset managers. In addition, the knowledge of potential clients of the largest actors is relatively limited: only 20% of investors are able to name one, and 65% of respondents are unable to name an asset management firm with an especially strong position in retirement savings. The best-known are Allianz and Deutsche Bank, as well as Union Investment (co-operative banks) and Fidelity.
Credit Suisse Index Co has announced that on 1 April 2009 it made routine adjustments to its hedge fund indexes AllHedge Index (SECTAH) and Blue Chip Index (INVX), to which 12 and 14 funds, respectively, were added. The funds in the SECTAH and INVX indexes are part of the Broad Index. The SECTAH funds are the largest in each of the ten sectors of the Broad Index, weighted according to their sectoral weight in the general index, while the INVX funds replicate the largest open-ended funds in these ten sectors.
The 30 largest British pension funds (4.86 million members, GBP351bn in assets) have an average score for socially responsible investment of 40%, according to a study by FairPensions. Though many of these funds admit that extra-financial factors (such as environmental, social and governance, or ESG, issues) may affect the value of their investments, many of them still do not have strategies to manage this risk. One third of managers apparently neglect to apply their ESG principles in their instructions to fund managers or in their selection of managers. Nearly half of them have no personnel dedicated to ESG issues either internally or externally. Transparency also is under-optimal, as half of funds do not disclose their major investments, and two thirds of them do not disclose details of their votes in general meetings.
A report on derivatives commissioned by the City of London Corporation claims that London may lose its place as a top financial centre if authorities decide to regulate derivatives without distinguishing between products which contributed to the financial crisis and other types of products, the Financial Times reports.
Crédit Agricole Asset Management (CAAM) has launched the CAAM Funds Equity Statistical Arbitrage (EUR), a sub-fund of its international Luxembourg Sicav. The product is a European variant of the CAAM Dynarbitrage Actions, aimed at institutional clients. It is a long/short statistical arbitrage fund, whose objective is to generate performance which is as decorrelated as possible from the evolution of the markets. The product (200-400 positions), which combines mean reverting and momentum investment, complies with UCITS III. The product aims to outperform the Eonia by 400 basis points per year for a minimum investment horizon of 4 years, with an ex-ante VaR of under 10%. The equities arbitrage management team includes three portfolio managers and one analyst. Minimal subscriptions are set at USD0.5m. In addition to subscription and management commissions, CAAM is charging a performance commission of a maximum of 30% on performance above the EONIA capitalisation plus 400 basis points per year.
Only 9% of Italian institutional investors invest indirectly in real estate via funds, while the majority of them prefer to buy real estate properties directly, Il Sole - 24 Ore reports, citing participants in a seminar organised by Fimit SGR.
On Monday, UBS is expected to announce the departure of Jerker Johannson, the global head of its investment bank, the Financial Times reports. The departure of the director, who joined the Swiss bank only one year ago, after 22 years at Morgan Stanley, will be one of the most significant changes the firm has seen since the arrival of Oswald Grübel.
The Financial Times reports that shareholders opposed to a sale of Fortis to BNP Paribas are mobilizing ahead of a general shareholders’ meeting on Tuesday, which will vote on the possible sale. The Modrikamen agency, which represents 2,300 shareholders, is also planning to take legal action to obtain the list of voters, which would delay the vote.
Ignites Europe reports that the European Commission on 29 April will publish a draft directive for hedge fund managers, which bears a significant resemblance to the UCITS framework. Management firms will be allowed to sell their products throughout Europe after receiving permission from local regulators, according to an initial version of the directive obtained by Ignites.
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts has asked its investors to contribute EUR730m to support distressed companies belonging to its 2005 European fund, the Financial Times reports. Other private equity firms are expected to follow suit.
Russell Investments has announced that it has released eight new ?global? real-time indexes, available at www.russell.com/indexes/default.asp: large cap, small cap, ex-U.S. large cap, ex-U.S. small cap, and value and growth style indexes covering the small cap, large cap and ex-U.S. Segments. The indexes offer weekly, monthly and yearly recapitulations for each segment, with the highest and lowest levels of the day and the year to date. Financial data for the indices is provided by SIX Telekurs. Other real-time global indexes will be made available subsequently.Previously, real-time data had existed for seven of the major US indexes, all of them Russell products.
According to the newspaper Libération, Société Générale may announce EUR5bn to EUR10bn in new losses due to high-risk investments, this time at its alternative asset management affiliate Société Générale Asset Management Alternative Investments (SGAM AI). The bank formally denies the reports, and states that ?losses at SGAM for the 2008 fiscal year total EUR258m after taxes,? as stated in its publication of results in February. The newspaper reports, however, that Daniel Bouton, chairman, and Frédéric Oudéa, CEO, have ?ordered a house-cleaning? at the affiliate, whose ?top directors have either been discreetly pressured into leaving, or are about to do so.?
Société Générale has issued a formal denial of claims in the newspaper Libération that the bank has undergone further losses related to activities at SGAM AI. Libération has confused losses with the total volume of assets transferred in 2008 from OPCVM funds at SGAM to Société Générale. The total volume of assets transferred, to ensure the liquidity of funds and protect shareholders, was EUR11.2bn; these assets have subsequently been actively managed to reduce this exposure, according to Société Générale. Losses at SGAM in 2008 totalled EUR258m after taxes, a figure which has no resemblance to those alleged by the newspaper, the bank states.
Last Monday, the Swedish management firm Davegårdh & Kjälls launched its third fund, entitled Sol, Vind & Vatten (sun, water, and earth), Privata Affärer reports. In the first three days, the entity received SEK10m in assets for the fund, and has already invested nearly half of that amount. The new fund will focus on Scandinavian eco-friendly businesses.
Morningstar Research Inc, a Canadian affiliate of US-based Morningstar Inc., has bought the equities research and data businesses of CPMS Computerized Portfolio Management Services Inc., which has about 40 employees in Toronto, for CAD16.1m. The transaction is expected to be closed by the end of the quarter.CPMS provides monitoring of fundamental data concerning shares in approximately 4,000 businesses in the United States and Canada. It also monitors earnings projections by brokers on Canadian businesses, and offers eight quantitative portfolios modelled on the US and Canadian equities markets.The firm has about 500 clients, including institutional investment managers, pension funds, endowments, and independent financial advisers.