From 25 April to 6 May, the German asset management firm SEB Asset Management is accepting redemption requests for the open-ended real estate fund SEB ImmoInvest (DE0009802306), with EUR6.3354bn in assets as of the end of March. Redemptions have been frozen for nearly two years. On 7 May, either gross liquidity (over 30% of assets) will be sufficient to honour all redemption demands, and all demands will be honoured, or else no redemptions will be given out.If enough shareholders wish to remain invested in the fund, the fund will not be liquidated, but will instead come under the new investor protection law (Anlegerschutz- und Funktionsverbesserungsgesetz or AnsFuG), which means that ImmoInvest will no longer be subject to daily liquidiy requirements, but will be allowed to issue redemptions only once per year. Ultimately, says Barbara Knoflach, Ceo of SEB AM, investors will decide the fate of the ImmoInvest fund.SEB Asset Management states that as a precaution, the net asset value per share has been reduced by 5%.The fund has already sold off 17 properties for over EUR1bn. SEB AM also adds that the fund’s Berlin properties on Potsdamer Platz should not be regarded as a single asset, unlike what reports in the press may have suggested, but are divided in 19 different properties corresponding to various uses (office, retail, residential, etc).
The Schroder ISF Pacific Equity fund is changing its name. The product, managed by Robin Barbrook and his team, will now become known as the SISF Asian Opportunities fund, in order to better represent its investment universe and objectives.
Kurt Feuerman, who left Caxton Associates to join AllianceBernstein in June 2011, is managing the new Luxembourg-registered fund AB Select Absolute Alpha Portfolio (LU0736558973), whose portfolio is composed of 60 to 120 positions, with the help of five analysts.The product is an absolute return fund with no benchmark, which invests in US equities.
According to a survey by PerTrac, the number of single-manager hedge funds and funds of hedge funds as of the end of 2011 came to 13,395, 3.73% more than one year previously, while total assets, at USD2.245trn, were up 3.37% in one year. The number of single-manager hedge funds increased by 6.98% in 2011, to 10.007, with assets up 4.2% to USD1.798trn.More than half of these hedge funds and funds of hedge funds are denominated in US dollars, and 77% are denominated either in US dollars or in euros.PerTrac also finds that single-manager hedge funds with assets of over USD1bn represent only 3.9% of funds which publish results, but control more than 60% of the total AUM. As of the end of last year, there were 322 single-manager hedge funds in this class, with total assets under management of USD1.080trn, which represents an increase of only 1.40% in one year.In the same period, the number of funds of hedge funds with assets under management of over USD1bn rose by nearly 18%, while the total number of funds of hedge funds fell 4.8%, to 3,388.In geographical terms, the PerTrac study funds that single-manager hedge funds and funds of hedge funds based in the United States as of the end of 2011 account for about USD950bn, or 42.3% of global assets, while the United Kingdom ranks second with USD574bn, or 25.6% of the total.
European equity and bond funds have undergone significant redemptions in the week to 25 April, due to tensions on European markets related to the victory of François Hollande in the first round of French presidential elections, as investors have been preferring US or emerging market bond funds. Bond funds have posted net inflows of USD4.8bn in the week to 25 April, with subscriptions to US bond funds representing 90% of this total, EPFR Global reports. For their part, emerging market bond funds have attracted a net total of USD540m. Equity funds, meanwhile, have seen redemptions totalling USD7.4bn. European equity funds have posted net outflows of USD4.6bn. Emerging market equity funds finished the week with outflows of USD377.6m, bringing net inflows since the beginning of the year to USD20.7bn. Lastly, inflows of USD2.8bn to European money market funds have more than offset redemptions from US money market funds.
In the past month, Spanish security funds have seen continuing net redemptions totalling EUR673m, compared with EUR427m in March, EUR4m in February and EUR401m in January. This is, therefore, according to statistics from the Inverco association of asset management firms, the 13th consecutive month of net redemptions.Total assets have declined by EUR2.343bn in one month, to a total fo EUR127.221bn as of the end of the month. In the first four months of the year, assets have declined by EUR510m, or 0.4%. Market effects are to blame for 79% of the decline in assets under management in April, compared with 21% due to net redemptions.Of the 14 largest asset management firms by asset volumes, only three show net subscriptions: Popular Gestión, which attracted EUR70.8m, Bankinter Gestión de Activos (with EUR60.95m), and Bestinver (EUR0.36m).On the opposite side, Santander Asset Management ande BBVA Asset Management have seen net redemptions of EUR135.9m and EUR175.5m, respectively. But the largest net outflow was from Invercaixa Gestión, with EUR218.6m.
Artio Global Investors made its initial public offering in September 2009, raising USD650m. Since then, the asset management firm owned by Julius Baer has seen tough times, the Wall Street Journal reports. Assets under management have fallen 48% in first quarter to USD26.6bn, compared with the previous year, particularly under the effect of client net redemptions. Since its IPO, the decline has totalled 52%. Its two flagship funds, two of them international equity products, underperformed in 2011.
In the fiscal year ending on 31 March, Legg Mason, Inc has earned net profits of USD220.8m, compared with USD253.9m in 2010-2011, but Mark Fetting, chairman and CEO, says that the asset management firm has now completed its streamlining program, with annual savings of USD140m on its costs, and a redistribtion to shareholders of USD440m in the form of share repurchases and dividends.As of the end of March, assets totalled USD643.3bn, compared with USD627bn as of the end of December, as positive market effects (USD24.4bn) were partially offset by net redemptions of USD4.9bn, and dispositions totalling USD3.2bn. Compared with the end of March 2011, when they totalled USD677.6bn, assets under management are down by 5%.Legg Mason states that total assets consisted 55% of bonds, 26% of equities and 19% of liquidity as of 31 March. 63% of assets under management came from the United States.
The British fund Lion Capital is in excclusive negotiations to acquire the stakes held by the two largest external shareholders in the French optics group Afflelou, with a view to acquiring the group, according to a joint statement released on Monday evening. The capital in Afflelou is currently 57.05% controlled by the investment fund Bridgepoint, 20.14% by the Apax fund, and 21.97% by the holding company of the family of the founder, Alain Afflelou. In February, Bridgepoint and Apax announced that they were putting their stakes up for sale. According to the financial newspaper Financial Times, citing sources familiar with the matter, the transaction is expected to proceed on the basis of a valuation of Afflelou at EUR780m.
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney has announced the launch of its “Investing with Impact” responsible investment platform. The platform allows retail investors and their advisers to select their investments on the basis of environmental and social criteria. MSSB has about 4 million clients, with over USD1.7trn in financial assets, a statement says.
City National Bank has announced that it has signed an agreement to acquire the asset management firm Rochdale Investment Management (USD4.8bn in assets). Rochdale will merge with City National Asset Management to create a entity with over USD18bn in assets, to be known as City National Rochdale Investment Management.
On 30 April, Deutsche Börse announced that it has acquired the remaining 15% of Eurex Zürich AG from the SIX Swiss Exchange/SIX Group, for EUR295m and 5.3 million shares in Deutsche Börse (equivalent to 2.7% of capital in the German firm). Deutsche Börse had previously controlled 85% of Eurex, compared with 50% at the time of the launch.The transaction is retroactive to 1 January 2012, since the initial contract, signed on 7 June 2011, was supposed to apply only after the merger between Deutsche Börse and NYSE Euronext would be signed.The Eurex futures market will continue to be operated by Eurex Zürich AG.
Schroders announced on Friday that its wholly owned subsidiary, Schroder Singapore Holdings Private Limited, has reached agreement to acquire 25 % of the share capital of Axis Asset Management Company, the Indian asset management business of Axis Bank Limited.Longer term, in addition to distributing Axis AMC’s funds internationally, there will be an opportunity to distribute Schroders funds in India through Axis’ distribution network, according to a press release.Axis AMC was founded in 2009 and has assets under management of circa USD2.3 billion.The transaction is subject to regulatory approval and is expected to complete during 2012.
Alliance Trust Investments has recruited the bond manager Juan Valenzuela from SWIP, to manage a new bond fund, Investment Week reports. He will join the firm in May.
Assets under management at Man group as of 31 March totalled USD59bn, compared with USD58.4bn as of the end of December 2011, according to statistics released by the British group.First quarter ended with outflows of USD1bn, as subscriptions of USD3.1bn were not enough to compensate for redemptions totalling USD4.1bn. Market effects totalled USD2bn, with gains of 5% or more for many strategies. There was also a negative currency effect of USD400m.
15% of shareholders in Man Group rejected the firm’s 2011 annual report on remuneration at a general shareholders’ meeting on Tuesday, the Financial Times reports. The firm has missed its objectives on six key performance indicators set by the board of directors last year. Despite that, Peter Clark, CEO, was proposed a USD7m pay. The hedge fund firm, listed in London, nonetheless managed to see off a larger rebellion by promising to improve in the coming months, the FT adds.
Aberdeen has posted a 14% increase in its underlying pre-tax profits for the first half of its fiscal year (ending on 31 March 2012) compared with March 2011, at GBP162.2m. Its earnings totalled GBP413.1m, up 7%. The Scottish asset management firm has posted assets under management as of the end of March of GBP184.7bn, up from GBP181.2bn at the end of March 2011. Compared with GBP169.9bn at the end of September 2011, Aberdeen has also seen an increase in its assets, largely due to positive market and interest rate effects. The firm has seen net redemptions, however, of EUR0.4bn in first half, despite net subscriptions of GBP4.9bn to equities.
The transposition of the UCITS IV directive into Italian law is becoming a major ordeal, Plus 24, the weekly supplement of Il Sole – 24 Ore reports. After a long delay, the Italian council of ministers on 6 April approved a decree to transpose the directive. But since then, the decree has still not been published in the Italian official journal (Gazette Ufficialle), which would allow Consob, the Italian financial regulator, to make modifications to its rules.
La Caisse de pensions de la République et Canton du Jura (CPJU) (950 millions de Francs Suisse) a sélectionné un nouveau gérant, Mirabaud & Cie, à qui a été confié un mandat de gestion semi passive sur les actions Suisses. La Caisse a suivi les conseils du cabinet PPCmetrics à Zurich. Le régime a aussi approuvé une nouvelle stratégie d’allocation d’actifs proposée par PPCmetrics mais doit attendre des décisions politiques à propos du Fonds avant de l’exécuter. Concernant ses investissements core, la Caisse a délégué un mandat de gestion passive d’actions internationales à Pictet Asset Management, un mandat d’obligations en devises étrangères à Valiant Privatbank et le mandat à Mirabaud cité ci dessus. L’actuelle stratégie d’investissement est la suivante : 11% en obligataire en Francs Suisses, 14% en obligataires non Suisses, 15% en actions locales, 18% en actions internationales, 4% en actions pays émergents, 22% en immobilier Suisse, 3%en immobilier international, 6% en Hedge Funds, 7% en matières premières gérées passivement.
Jean-Pierre Mottura, directeur général de la Capssa dans un entretien accordé à Newsmanagers: Au 30 mars, notre portefeuille était composé de 79,18 % de monétaire, dont 4,83 % en certificats de dépôt d’une grande banque avec un rendement de 2,11 % sur neuf mois. Nous avions aussi 0,5 % de trésorerie dynamique (monétaire plus actions), 7,4 % en obligataire, dont 5% en duration courte de 3 ans avec des notations comprises entre A- et BBB+. Notre portefeuille affichait aussi environ 2 % de produits de gestion alternative court terme (arbitrage de risques, VaR2 etc.) et 0,8 % en hedge funds multi gérés sans délais de préavis trop longs. Il y avait par ailleurs 6,1 % en actions, dont 35 % en marchés émergents, 1,4 % en immobilier pierre, 2,2 % en private equity et 0,4 % dans un OPCI institutionnel. Notre allocation est du type 80 % monétaire, 10 % actions et 10 % obligataire. Nous souhaiterions à terme une répartition du type 60/20/20. Et nous avons en principe une visibilité à 10 ans... J’ai pensé qu’il nous fallait augmenter notre allocation aux actions pour améliorer notre rendement. Nous ne sommes certes toujours pas aux 25-30 % que j’avais théoriquement en tête, mais nous conservons le cap avec une approche coeur/satellite, le coeur étant monétaire et le reste étant dédié à la performance pour la performance. Nous ne nous sommes pas soumis au dogme de la gestion sous contrainte de passif (asset-liability management ou ALM) toujours en vogue actuellement, ni à l’allocation-type 60/40 obligations/actions. Nous recherchons davantage la performance que la sensibilité sur notre poche risquée (10%) et notre portefeuille, s’il a un horizon moyen de 8,5 ans (contre 9 ans et 6 mois lorsque je suis arrivé en avril 1999) n’est pas construit dans une approche de long terme. Cela nous a permis de passer finalement sans encombre les années 2008 et 2011.
La société américaine de private equity devrait faire demain matin ses premiers pas en Bourse. Si tout va bien. Le quotidien souligne en effet que nombre d’investisseurs manquent d’enthousiasme. Carlyle tente de les convaincre qu’elle est différente de ses concurrents dont le parcours boursier s’avère chaotique. Le nouveau venu sur le marché évoque particulièrement l’intérêt d’une détention de ses titres à long terme plutôt que d’un gain à court terme au moment de l’introduction. Le quotidien cite Timothy Ghriskey, patron de la gestion de Solaris Group, qui indique avoir décliné l’invitation à une réunion de présentation et souligne la volatilité des revenus.
Les ministres des finances de Vingt-Sept se réunissent à Bruxelles pour tenter de déminer le dossier de l’harmonisation de la capitalisation des banques. Ils doivent en particulier trouver un terrain d’entente sur la surpondération discrétionnaire des fonds propres bancaires.
Un scénario d’atterrissage brutal de l’économie chinoise «apparaît hautement improbable» selon Lee Il Houng, le représentant chinois du FMI cité par le journal. Pékin bénéficie, selon lui, de marges de manœuvre suffisantes pour adoucir le ralentissement de son économie, même dans le «scénario extrême» d’une récession sévère en Europe.
Le milliard d’euros de facilité de crédit octroyé par China Development Bank à la Hongrie ne serait qu’une « fraction » des fonds que la Chine serait prête à investir dans l’économie du pays, selon des déclarations au média du premier ministre hongrois Viktor Orban après sa rencontre avec le vice-premier ministre chinois Li Keqiang. Un investissement supplémentaire conditionné à la réalisation d’investissements dans des projets « sensés ».
Dans une tribune rédigée dans le journal, le vice premier ministre chinois, Li Keqiang, ouvre la porte à un renforcement des liens commerciaux entre les deux zones. Il estime en outre que chaque point de pourcentage supplémentaire dans les exportations de produits à haute technologie européens vers la Chine représente au moins 2,2 milliards d’euros en plus dans la balance commerciale européenne.