The French financial market authority (AMF) on 5 April announced that it has integrated guidelines by the European Securities Markets Authority (ESMA) on automated trading into a position published on that date (issue 2012-03). The terms of the regulations will be effective from 7 May 2012, the AMF states. The guidelines, based on financial market instrument directives (MiFID) and market abuse regulations, lay out the appropriate way to apply certain directives, and introduces specific clauses related to their application in the particular area of automated trading, including high-frequency trading. The regulations apply primarily to the following activities: operation of an electronic trading system by a regulated market or a multilateral trading system (SMN); use of an electronic trading system, including trading algorithms, by an investment firm, for trading on its own behalf or execution of orders for clients; provision of direct access to the market or sponsored access to an investment business to execute orders on behalf of its clients.
The common funds for employee shareholders in France Telecom, which owns 3% of capital, has decided to present a resolution at the general shareholders’ meeting on 5 June which would reduce the dividend from EUR1.40 to EUR1, Les Echos reports. The management of the firm is reportedly not opposed to the proposal.
The day after the official launch of its new French asset management firm, Russell Investments France, the US firm Russell Investments has announced the recruitment of Alexandre Attal (already named in yesterday’s Newsmanagers) as a portfolio manager and analyst. Attal, who joins the firm from Barclays Wealth Managers France, will report to Alain Zeitouni, CIO at Russell Investments France. He will be in charge of analysis and management of multi-asset class portfolios managed for clients of the Paris office of Russell Investments, and will support its commercial development. The other recruitment is the result of a transfer, as Jean-David Larson, the new director of client solutions, who has spent five years at Russell Investments in Seattle, where he had most recently been chief of staff, is transferred to France. In his new role, he will be in charge of client offerings; he will also participate in the design of multi-asset solutions and to commercial development.
The IFA group Infinitis on 5 April announced that it now has 205 agencies, with 313 member IFAs. Infinitis has seen inflows of EUR115m (excluding real estate) in 2011, with assets under management of EUR287m. All agencies of the group combine have assets of EUR2.7bn. The 2012 objective is to reach 300 agencies, in order to draw nearer to its ultimate goal of 400 member agencies.
BNP Paribas Investment Partners has announced the appointments of François Hullo as head of bond management at BNPP AM and of David Bouchoucha as head of institutional sales for southern Europe. Hullo will lead a team composed of 100 investment professionals in 8 countries, a statement says.Hullo has worked for over 24 years at the BNP Paribas group, half of it at BNPP IP. Before his appointment, he had been head of institutional sales for southern Europe at BNPP IP. Between 2000 and 2004, he set up the alternative investment structure at BNPP IP, and developed a complete range of structured and alternative products.Bouchoucha, for his part, joined BNPP IP in May 2010, as head of mission, reporting to the CEO and deputy head of institutional sales for southern Europe. He joined BNP Paribas in 2007 as head of strategy for the group, and managed several projects in collaboration with the general management.
Finance professionals can be satisfied. According to a survey by eFinancialCareers in the United States, set pay levels for finance professionals rose 6% in 2011. Nearly half of professionals surveyed (47%) say they are “very” or “rather satisfied” with their pay scales in 2011, compared with 43% in 2010. Nearly half of professionals, 54% of respondents, saw a pay raise in the space of one year. The raises were largest at boutiques and alternative management firms, at +14% and +13%.
The bottom line for March published by the German BVI association of asset management firms (see Newsmanagers of 5 April) finds that three of the major asset management firms have posted net inflows to open-ended securities funds, with net subscriptions in first quarter totalling about EUR1.15bn. The firms are Allianz Asset Management, which alone attracted EUR2.86bn, largely thanks to Pimco Europe, the DWS/DB Advisors/DB family (Deutsche Bank), which took on EUR515.1m (including EUR504.5m for ETFs from db x-trackers), and Union Investment (co-operative banks), with net inflows of EUR114m.However, Deka (savings banks) underwent net outflows of EUR1.43bn in January-March, while BlackRock, with its iShares brand ETFs, saw outflows of nearly EUR1bn, ComStage (ETF provider from Commerzbank) has seen net redemptions of EUR289m.For ETFs, the provider for the Deka group, ETFlab, has posted net subscriptions of EUR64.5m.
European money market funds, which began reducing their exposure to Spain and Italy in summer 2011, had virtually eliminated their exposured to the two countries as of the end of February, Fitch Ratings announced in its most recent monthly bulleting about European money market funds. European money market funds had already reduced their exposure to Greece, Ireland and Portugal to 0% in 2009 and 2010. Fitch states that as of the end of February, European money market funds no longer had any exposure to Italian banks, and allocation to Spanish banks, mostly to Banco Santander, were marginal and would be maturing in the next two months. As of the end of February 2012, funds maintained a significant allocation to issuers in major European countries (France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands), while increasing their investments in Australian, Scandinavian, Japanese and Canadian financial institutions.
The hedge fund sector has done well in first quarter, but has not really shined, according to information from the major press agencies. Third Point Partners by Daniel Loeb gained 7.1% in first quarter, with the Third Point Ultra fund posting gains of 10%. Greenlight Capital by David Einhorn has posted gains of 6.9% for the first three months of the year. There are many good results, but no exceptional ones. Hedge funds have earned an average of about 2.3% in first quarter, according to analysts at BofA Merrill Lynch, compared with gains of 12% for the Standard & Poor’s 500. The hedge fund giant John Paulson is a good illustration of the muted mood for hedge fund quarterly results. The oldest portfolio from the management firm, Paulson Partners, has earned gains of 6.6% in first quarter, and the Paulson Enhanced Fund has gained 13.3%. But the Advantage fund lost 1.05%, and its leveraged version Advantage Plus lose 2.23%. The Glod fund lost 13.41% in March, and has lost 6.37% over the quarter.
The German asset management firm Deka Immobilien has acquired “The Rock” (30,000 square metres), an office property located in Amsterdan, from Evans Randall for about EUR132m. The property will be added to the portfolio of the open-ended real estate fund WestInvest InterSelect, bringing the proportion of the portfolio invested in Netherlands properties from 8.1% to 10.5%, with the strategy of slightly reducing the exposure of the portfolio to Germany, and to bring younger properties into the portfolio.
Ken Hsia has taken over as manager of onshore and offshore European equity funds at Investec, as part of a reshuffle at the South African asset management firm, InvestmentEurope reports. Hsia, who has been at Investec for seven years, will be responsible for equity funds, including the European (GBP27.6m in assets under management) and Continental European (GBP60m in assets). He replaces Nigel Hankin, who will continue to serve as sectoral head in the 4Factor equities team at Investec.
Employees from Clariden Leu, the former Credit Suisse affiliate, have decided to found the wealth management firm Metropole Partners, the specialist website finews reports. The firm was founded in mid-March, and will have 30 employees, including 15 client advisers, as well as portfolio managers and back-office assistants. The initiative was initiated by the American Anthony Cagiati, a former banker at Clariden Leu The members of the board of directors include client advisers Bruno Lienhart (formerly of Clariden Leu) and Christian Sieber (formerly of Bank Leu). The former banker and lawyer Christian Brunner will stand for the position of chairman of the board of directors. He is currently a partner at the Zurich-based research agency Brunner & Decurtins.
According to statistics from the Swiss firm Alix Capital, the UCITS Alternative Index Global, which measures the performance of UCITS hedge funds, fell 0.49% in March, following returns of 0.87% in February and 1.37% in January. Since the beginning of the year, these funds have posted average gains of 1.75%.All strategies, excluding fixed income, which have gained 0.31%, show losses in March, with the heaviest losses (1.70%) from emerging market funds.
Pending the publication of a complete study of the ETF market, the Hanover-based research agency Kommalpha has published a survey of professional investors which finds that the growth margin for this type of fund is limited. According to 43.4% of respondents, the needs of new ETF promoters are considered weak, while 47.4% estimate that these needs are highly limited. In other words, over 90% consider that there is no room for new ETF providers, while 3.9% think that this is a major need, and 2.6% consider it most important.
Rathbone Investment Management, an affiliate of Rathbone Brothers, has acquired the wealth management firm RM Walkden & Company, Investment Week reports. The cost of the acquisition is said to have been GBP948,393. Assets under management at Rathbone Investment Management total GBP15.8bn.
According to a study by Russell Investments of British defined-benefit pension funds, conducted in July and August 2011, trustee boards and investment boards dedicate an average of 15.6 hours per year to investment questions, and never more than 26 hours, equivalent to one half-hour per week for the largest and most complex funds. This appears to be very little for strategic decisions about, for example, liability-driven investment (LDI), overlays, portfolio structuring, or selection and monitoring of managers.However, the study finds that there has been increasing use of investment committees, and more appointments of fiduciary managers than in the 2009 edition of the study, with large funds more likely to select the investment committee solutions, while smaller funds often opt for a fiduciary manager. In the latter case, the percentage of small funds using a fiduciary manager has risen from 15% in 2009 to 26% in the 2011 study.Russell also points out that despite the installation of investment committees or the appointment of fiduciary managers, these structures are rarely able to take investment decisions: 75% of trustee boards retain control of selection of managers, and the trustee is cited by less than 70% of respondents as the decision-maker for all points in the survey.Lastly, the study finds that over 80% of trustees are convinced on every point raised that the decision-making structures at their fund meet the needs for their purpose, and particularly that they are able to respond to rapid changes in the business environment. This appears paradoxical, as there is no indication of a change in the frequency of meetings (generally quarterly meetings of the investment committee) or an increase in delegation to entities which are better equipped to respond in “real time”.
La Caisse de Prévoyance Sociale Te Fare Turuutaa (CPS) est une personne morale de droit privé chargée d’une mission de service public et dotée de l’autonomie financière. Elle fonctionne sous tutelle du Gouvernement de Polynésie Française. En novembre 2011, la CPS a investit 84 millions d’euros sur un mandat de gestion obligataire zone euro, avec l’aide de son consultant, Amadeis.
Expertise du patrimoine immobilier de placement détenu par le RSI en sa qualité de propriétaire bailleur d’immeubles de bureaux, de commerces et d’habitation loués à des personnes morales ou physiques. 63 immeubles dont 39 immeubles à usage d’habitation et 24 immeubles à usage commercial (bureaux et boutiques). Pour lire l’avis complet: cliquez ici
La consultation lancée début 2012 par le régulateur européen, l’Esma, sur l’encadrement des fonds indiciels cotés est terminée. Le nouveau cadre réglementaire, censé apporter plus de transparence, devrait être finalisé au deuxième trimestre. Les professionnels sont plutôt satisfaits.
Citant Huang Danhua, vice-directeur au sein de la Commission de supervision et d’administration des actifs contrôlés par l’Etat, le quotidien chinois indique que les sociétés contrôlées par le pouvoir central devraient utiliser de manière «proactive» les marchés de capitaux internationaux. Certaines devraient émettre des obligations libellées en yuans.
Le quotidien a consulté un courrier adressé hier aux clients du fonds alternatif londonien, l’un des plus importants au monde sur le segment des matières premières, selon lequel BlueGold met actuellement en œuvre une «fermeture ordonnée». Le fonds, dirigé par Pierre Andurand et Dennis Crema, entend rendre aux investisseurs d’ici mai 98% du capital engagé.
Le Chicago Board Options Exchange, qui gère les plus gros volumes de contrats d’options sur actions aux Etats-Unis, aurait lancé une vaste enquête sur les pratiques des traders qui opèrent sur son marché, selon le quotidien. L’opérateur aurait ainsi envoyé cette semaine une lettre aux sociétés qui opèrent sur son marché pour passer en revue des «violations apparentes» sur les trois dernières années.
La Société Générale aura mis une semaine à comptabiliser les voix des 160 actionnaires d’Altamir-Amboise s’étant exprimé à l’assemblée générale du 29 mars dernier. Les taux d’approbation ont été plutôt bas pour la validation des comptes (72,5%), la fixation du dividende (68,4%), les conventions réglementées (71%) et les renouvellements de deux administrateurs (72,2%). La proposition de dividende à un euro présentée par Moneta et l’Adam a été approuvée par 31,3% des actionnaires, mais 49,8% des actionnaires hors la participation de Maurice Tchenio, patron d’Altamir, et des associés Apax.