According to sources familiar with the matter, the Blackstone Group has received investment commitments totalling over USD6bn for its new real estate fund Blacksone Real Estate Partners VII, which will invest most of its portfolio in distressed assets, the Financial Times reports. Fundraising began last spring, and the closing will come later this year.The previous fund, Real Estate Patners CI, closed in 2008, raised USD10.9bn. Tony James, chairman of Blackstone, has said in the past that he expects REP VII to be at least as large as its predecessor.
The German asset management firm Sauren Fonds Service (EUR2.1bn in assets under management) has announced that it has added a share class to its Sauren Global Defensiv fund of funds (EUR1.24bn), launched in February 2003, that pays 3% annually. The Global Defensiv is a sub-fund of the Luxembourg Sicav Sauren Fonds-Select. Subscriptions for the new 3F share class (ISIN LU0731594668) will be open from 9 to 28 February 2012. Front-end fees are 3%, and the management commission is 0.45%, while sales commission is 0.35%.Sauren will charge a 10% commission on performance exceeding the annual 3%.
On 26 January, about 90,000 shareholders in DEGI Europa (ISIN code: DE0009807800) will receive a third payment as part of the liquidation of the open-ended real estate fund, announced on 22 October 2010, Aberdeen Asset Management Deutschland has announced. The distribution this time will be EUR3 per share, which represents a total of EUR78.6m, or 8.5% of remaining assets of EUR921.9m as of 31 December.The fund had already paid out EUR9.70 per share on 24 January 2011, and EUR1.85 on 25 July 2011. The next distribution will take place in July 2012, and its amount will depend on the liquidity generated from sales of properties. The final liquidation of the fund is scheduled for 30 September 2013.
Daniel Mudd, CEO of the hedge fund management firm Fortress Investment Group, resigned on Teusday from his position on the board and from the firm, slightly over one month after the SEC filed civil charges against him for securities fraud, the Wall Street Journal reports. Mudd has been accused of fraud during his time as CEO of Fannie Mae (a position from which he was ousted in September 2008), and of failing to accurately disclose risks that the government-backed mortgage lender bore on the sub-prime mortgage markets. Fortress (USD43.6bn in assets as of the end of September) says that Randal Nardone, one of the co-founders of the firm, will continue to serve as interim CEO, which he has done since Mudd began a leave of absence in December.
Allen Stanford told “lie after lie” to investors in order to be able to use their money to finance his lavish billionaire lifestyle, as part of a Ponzi-type fraud scheme, a US prosecutor claimed in the first day of Stanford’s trial on Tuesday, the Financial Times report. Robert Scardino, Stanford’s lawyer, replied that his client was a “Texas boy” who did not lie to investors. Stanford will plead not guilty to all charges.
Investors should give the priority to high-quality diversified investments which offer good returns, due to bleak growth outlooks for the global economy in 2012, Bill O’Neill, chief investment offiver at Merrill Lynch Wealth Management for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) claimed in a press conference on 24 January.“Emerging markets will play a preponderant role in global growth, which will total 3.6% this year. US growth will increase slightly to 2.1%, and the Chinese economy will have a smooth landing,” says O’Neill.“For selection of equities in 2012, we recommend positions on large caps with solid cash flow and rising dividends,” the strategist says. “We recommend prudence, but are not predicting a disaster this year. We still insist on the need to adopt a strategic framework to manage the ‘new normal,’ which is characterised by weaker growth and higher risks. In particular, investors need to anticipate periods of significant loss and volatility bubbles, and frequent changes in risk appetite and aversion.”“Our three favourite sectors are cyclical consumer goods, inelastic consumer goods, and tech.” These sectors are the most attractive in terms of the quality of corporate results and valuations, and are in phase with the macroeconomic environment. Merrill Lynch Wealth Management EMEA also favours the major themes of growth, including consumer spending in emerging markets and global infrastructure. “We are expecting Chinese monetary policy to loosen, and will then strengthen our exposure to emerging markets,” says O’Neill.Merrill Lynch Wealth Management EMEA also recommends underweight positions on Japanese and euro zone actors in 2012. Japanese growth will recover this year, but corporate results may prove disappointing. Euro zone equities are inexpensive and investor confidence is already at a low point, but O’Neill esimates that it is still too soon to invest in the region, due to the high level of risk.For bond markets, investors should prefer corporate bonds to government issues, particularly investment grade and high yield securities, particularly from US businesses. Valuations for high yield bonds have already integrated an acceptable default threshold. Investors should steer particularly clear of banking sector shares and debt from peripheral European countries. “Credit spreads are attractive, as they reflect a significant incrase in defaults, which we estimate will be unlikely to materialise. Government bonds from ‘core’ countries remain unattractive from any perspective, except if there is a prolonged global recession,” says O’Neill.
BNY Mellon has announced the appointment of Ian Stewart as head of Europe, Middle East & Africa (EMEA) Client Management, a role previously held by Hani Kablawi, who has been appointed head of EMEA Asset Servicing for BNY Mellon. Reporting to Jim Palermo, vice chairman and CEO of Global Client Management, Stewart continues in his role as head of North America Client Management.
Normative exclusion, which consists in banning investments in businesses which violate international, social or environmental conventions, may help to make socially responsible investment more credible, a new study by Novethic which surveyed 30 French and northern European investors has found. “the practice makes it possible to exclude the most visible black sheep in portfolios,” explains Anne-Catherine Husson-Traore, CEO of Novethic. However, due to its limited impact on businesses, exclusion may be considered only a step in the direction of SRI in the strict sense. It is thus best suited to be associated with other practices (best-in-class, engagement), the authors of the study claim. Respondents in the Novethic study have eliminated an average of only 13 businesses from investment universes of 500 to 3,000 shares. Only severe and repeated violations without the introduction of corrective measures may lead to exclusion. In addition, the composition of lists varies from one investor to another. As a result, nearly three quarters of businesses are excluded by only one player participating in the study. The other limit of the practice is index-based management. Most businesses which are subject to normative exclusion are listed on most global indices, while an increasing proportion of institutional assets are allocated to passive management.
The German Andreas Wenk, who until recently was region head EMEA at Pioneer Investments, is joining Itaú UK Asset Management Ltd as director of wholesale distribution for Europe, alongside Griff Williams, who will retain his position as head of institutional clients, Fonds Professionell reports.Wenk will be based in London, and will report to Rainer Schwarz, managing director and head of Itaú Asset Management for Europe and the Middle East.Itaú UK Asset Management is the European asset management affiliate of the Brazilian firm Itaú Unibanco, whose assets total USD159bn.
Old Mutual today announces that it will be combining its Wealth Management Continental Europe business (France and Italy) with the Skandia Retail Europe business unit (Germany, Austria, Poland and Switzerland). Hein Donders has been appointed CEO of the new business unit called «Wealth Management Europe», which will sit within Old Mutual Wealth Management, with immediate effect. Jonas Jonsson, currently CEO of Retail Europe, will work with Hein for several months to establish the new business unit, before assuming a new strategic role within Old Mutual.
With Pimco Deutschland GmbH, which was entered on the commercial register on 7 December 2011, the US firm Pimco (Allianz Global Investors group) has created a German-registered affiliate, based in Munich, with assets of about EUR200bn, led by Craig Dawson and Andrew Bosomworth.The new asset management firm has been licensed by BaFin to sell products aimed exclusively at professional investors.As of the end of November, the Irish-domiciled Pimco Europe managed EUR42.74bn in Germany in open-ended funds.
On 20 January, the CNMV issued a license for a new bond fund maturing on 30 April 2014, created by InverCaixa on 10 January, and entitled Foncaixa Objetivo Abril 2014. The fund has two share classes, with performance targets of 2.5% per year (Estandar share class) and 2.75% (Extra share class), between 29 March and maturity.The portfolio will be invested until maturity in government bonds and bonds guaranteed by EU governments. It may invest up to 20% of its assets in private bonds.InverCaixa has scheduled eight intermediate liquidity windows, at which times investors will be permitted to subscribe or redeem parts without paying a 4% commission.CharacteristicsName: Foncaixa Objectivo Abril 2014 EST and Foncaixa Objectivo Abril 2014 EXTISIN codes: ES0137777001 and ES0137777019Management commission: 0.775% (EST) and 0.55% (EXT)Minimal initial subscription: EUR600
The global network of UBS, including professional areas such as wealth management, Swiss banking, global asset management and investment banking, will now be supplied with environmental, social and governance (ESG) data by RepRisk, and the data will also be integrated into the compliance database at the banking group, particularly for “controversial” businesses.This will allow the bank to improve risk management and control new, onboarding, clients and investments, as well as to undertake due diligence on transactions. UBS has pledged not to provide financial services and not to use any provider whose primary activities or revenues may carry risks related to environmental and social issues.
Valiant bank has lost several executives from its Bern offices in the past few months in investment advising, Agefi Switzerland reports. Four directors and a client adviser in this segment, who had joined the Private Banking department, have left to join competitors. The style of management of the head of private banking and board member Martin Gafner is said to be the cause.
The institutional asset management firm specialised in convertible bonds, Fisch Asset Managemnt, on 24 January announced a net inflow of CHF900m for 2011. Assets under management have increased by about 20%, to a record level fo CHF5.2bn, despite a strong appreciation in the franc against the euro and US dollar in particular.The firm ,which mostly serves institutional clients in German-speaking countries, now has 49 employees, following the recruitment of several convertibles specialists. Fisch AM also states that it has improved its client reporting.
Assets under management in Swiss investment funds as of the end of December 2011 totalled about CHF621bn, up by slightly over CHF4bn compared with the end of November, according to statistics from the Swiss Funds Association.Net inflows in December totalled CHF923.2m. The “other funds” category, which includes commodities funds, funds of hedge funds and private equity funds, attracted slightly over CHF1bn. Equity funds posted net inflows of CHF244m, while bond and money market funds saw redemptions totalled CHF76.3m and CHF81.4m, respectively. Asset diversification funds finished the month with net outflows of CHF174.2m.
Standard Life Investments has teamed up with Swedish banking group Länsförsäkringar to distribute its GARS fund to investors in Sweden.The fund will be available to the Swedish retail marketplace through Länsförsäkringar’s unit linked platform. Länsförsäkringar is Sweden’s only customer-owned and locally based banking and insurance group.
Yam Invest has announced the appointment of Pierre Coloin as CEO and board member at the group. Before joining the investment firm, Colin served as chairman of Bank of America Merrill Lynch for France. Via its affiliates Time Investors, Helse and Yareal International, Yam Invest is specialised in investments in mid-sized European businesses, particularly in the health and real estate sectors. The firm’s tier 1 equity totals over EUR350m, a statement says.
Marc Tournier has left Tocqueville Finance, confirming an information which had leaked in the press late last year (see Newsmanagers of 23 December 2011). The star manager of the Ulysse fund is no longer employed by the asset management firm, where he had been deputy CEO, and is also no longer a shareholder. At the end of the negotiations which have taken place over the past several days, the Banque Postale has acquired the 15% stake in the capital in Tocqueville that had been held by Tournier. The firm now controls 90% of the company. The sale price for the stake has not been disclosed.The departure of Tournier comes shortly after the sanctions commission of the French financial regulator, the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF), in early December issued a sanction against Tocqueville Finance. This included a fine of EUR250,000 for the fund manager and EUR150,000 for the asset management firm, for price manipulation of shares in the rental car business Ada (see Newsmanagers of 5 December 2011). This event is not said to have been the reason for the fund manager’s departure. Bruno Julien, CEO of the asset management firm, tells Newsmanagers that it “was a personal decision on which we have no comment.” Julien also says that Tocqueville Finance has no intention at this time to appeal the AMF’s verdict. Tournier may yet appeal the decision in a personal capacity.In now appears that the graft of a manager known as a firebrand and free spirit to La Banque Postale, which invested in the capital of Tocqueville Finance in 2009, never took root. The arrival of the partner firm in the capital of the asset management firm, however, helped to reassure clients of the asset management firm and cemented its position in the competitive independent financial adviser market. For its part, the firm contributed a value management style, which the group had not previously had, and a “flagship” manager. “The increased stake in the capital of Tocqueville Capital is a successful integration.” says La Banque Postale. “Following the departure of Tournier, the ADN for active management at Tocqueville Finance, the firm he founded, will remain unchanged,” says Julien.In practice, the departure of Tournier will lead to changes in the management of funds: the man who had been co-manager of the Ulysse and Odyssée funds with Didier Roman will be replaced by Jacques Burlot, head of collective management, who is already manager of the Tocqueville Dividende fund, another heavyweight in the range, with EUR318.1m in assets as of the end of 2011, compared with EUR354.3m for the Ulysse fund, and Tocqueville Olympe Patrimoine.“Our organisation allows managers to continue to realise our value management philosophy with complete independence,” says Julien. “The solid shareholder which is La Banque Postale allows us to plan for the forthcoming development of our management teams and fund launches, while continuing to work to meet client expectations.”
Martin Wheatley, qui va diriger la nouvelle autorité financière britannique issue de la scission de l’autorité actuelle qui aura lieu l’année prochaine, a indiqué au journal qu’une attention toute particulière sera portée aux consommateurs qui ne fonctionnent pas de manière «rationnelle», afin qu’ils aient recours à des produits financiers adaptés.
Michel Prada, nouveau président des Trustees de la Fondation IFRS estime dans un entretien à L’Agefi qu’une révision de la présence des Etats-Unis au sein de l’IASB ne s’impose pas pour l’heure. Il espère limiter les désaccords avec les normalisateurs nationaux et les auditeurs.
Le Fonds monétaire international ferait pression sur la BCE afin qu’elle accepte des pertes ou renonce à ses profits réalisés sur les 40 milliards d’euros de titres grecs qu’elle détient, selon le journal qui cite des sources officielles. Le rendement des obligations détenues par la BCE est estimé à plus de 7%, ce qui engendrera un fort retour sur investissement si le pays ne fait pas défaut.