Les pays du G7, réunis demain à Marseille, sont partagés entre relance et rigueur budgétaire. La capitalisation des banques européennes s’invite au menu
Les ministres des Finances et les banquiers centraux des pays du G7, réunis demain à Marseille, sont partagés entre relance et rigueur budgétaire, et ne devraient donc pas annoncer de mesures coordonnées. La capitalisation des banques européennes s’invite par ailleurs à l’ordre du jour.
Démentant des informations du Tagesanzeiger, le gouvernement helvète a affirmé n’avoir livré aucune donnée relative à des clients américains détenant des comptes en Suisse, résistant à une injonction des Etats-Unis. «Nous ne donnerons pas d’autres détails sur les négociations en cours», a déclaré la ministre des affaires étrangères Micheline Calmy-Rey.
De sources concordantes, la société de private equity dirigée par Guy Hands aurait engagé une procédure devant la justice britannique pour obtenir la publication de documents concernant la valorisation d’EMI à l’occasion de son combat perdu au bénéfice de Citigroup en février dernier pour le contrôle de l’éditeur musical.
La production industrielle britannique a reculé contre toute attente en juillet de 0,2% en raison surtout d’une baisse de l’extraction de pétrole et de gaz, selon des données officielles publiées mercredi. Ces dernières laissent entendre que l’industrie britannique a commencé le troisième trimestre en étant quasiment au point mort, alors que l'économie du pays vient d’enchaîner neuf mois de croissance quasi-nulle.
La Cour constitutionnelle allemande a tranché ce matin en rejetant les plaintes visant à bloquer la participation de l’Allemagne au plan d’aide à la Grèce, en la jugeant conforme à la constitution. Suite à cette décision, la Chancelière allemande, Angela Merkel, a déclaré que «la Cour a confirmé la marche suivie par le gouvernement pour combattre la crise de la zone euro». Toutefois, le Tribunal de Karlsruhe a stipulé que le Gouvernement d’outre-Rhin doit obtenir l’approbation de la commission budgétaire du Parlement avant de pouvoir débloquer toute nouvelle garantie dans le cadre du fonds européen de stabilité financière, le FESF. Les Sages ont précisé que cette décision ne devait pas être vue comme un «blanc seing» pour une participation à un futur plan de sauvetage. En réaction, les taux à 10 ans allemands se sont tendus de 6 pb à 1,90%, tandis que les taux français ont stagné à 2,68%. Le spread contre OAT s’est ainsi resserré de 6 pb à 78 pb. Tandis que leurs homologues italiens et espagnols se sont détendus, dans l’ordre, de 11 pb à 5,38% et de 8 pb à 5,10%, ceux de la Grèce ont continué à se tendre de 25 pb à 20,06%.
Chypre a annoncé qu’elle envisageait de demander à la Banque centrale européenne (BCE) de racheter des obligations souveraines détenues par des banques locales qui ont dû passer de lourdes dépréciations dans le sillage de la crise grecque. Les banques chypriotes, habituellement bénéficiaires, ont enregistré la semaine dernière des pertes au premier semestre, du fait de leur participation à un programme d'échange sur la dette grecque. Cet échange leur coûterait plus d’un demi-milliard d’euros en dépréciations.
Il est envisageable que le Benelux (Belgique, Pays-Bas, Luxembourg) se joigne à l’initiative franco-allemande d’harmonisation de l’impôt sur les sociétés, déclare le ministre belge des Finances Didier Reynders dans un entretien publié mercredi par le quotidien Le Soir. Le président Nicolas Sarkozy et la chancelière Angela Merkel prévoient pour 2013 l’adoption d’un impôt sur les sociétés commun «dans son assiette comme dans son taux».
La banque centrale de Suède a laissé à 2% son taux d’intervention mercredi et ajouté qu’en raison d’une détérioration des perspectives économiques, elle remettait à plus tard tout nouveau durcissement monétaire. «La situation des finances publiques inquiète de plus en plus à l'étranger et les perspectives de croissance mondiale se sont dégradées; ainsi, le ralentissement de l'économie suédoise sera sans doute plus marqué que ce qui était prévu en juillet», explique la Riksbank.
Les réserves japonaises de devises étrangères ont atteint fin août le niveau record de 1.218 milliards de dollars (866 milliards d’euros), après les ventes de yens massives entreprises par Tokyo pour en abaisser le cours. Les achats de devises ont eux aussi atteint un record sur le mois d’août, avec 4.513 milliards de yens dépensés (41,6 milliards d’euros), selon des données publiées auparavant par le ministère des Finances.
Moudy El Khodr, who had been one of the high dividend strategy managers at ING Investment Managers, has joined the Belgian asset management firm Petercam. He will dedicate himself to the dividend strategy in the institutional management team, with Olivier Hertoghe, who has been manager of the Petercam Equities Europe Dividend fund since its launch, and Kris Hermie, who joined the team in December 2010.At Petercam, El Khodr will manage a dividend fund dedicated to the United States, the US Dividend, which will soon be launched. In reality, the fund is the former North American Equities fund, which will be reconverted. The fund currently has assets of EUR15m, and comes as an addition to a range which already includes two funds, the Petercam Equities Europe Dividend, focused on Europe, with a total of EUR350m in assets as of the end of August, and the Petercam Real Estate Europe Dividend, focused on the European real estate sector, with EUR73m in assets. The family of products, logically enough, is expected to be complemented in the near future by a global dividend fund.The product range from Petercam will also gain a wealth-management fund, launched in early 2011, which will be released for sale in a year’s time. The Petercam L Patrimonial fund, managed by Maarten Geerdink, formerly of Brevan Howard, is currently in a testing phase, with EUR25m in seed capital from the Petercam private bank.The Brussels-based manager also states that in May it recruited an eleventh equities analyst. Bert Talloen becomes a buy-side analyst for the insurance and diversified financials segments (including asset management). He had previously been a financial analyst at Dexia AM.Lastly, the Belgian firm has signed up to the UN-PRI, and to the Eurosif principles for sustainable equity and government bond funds.Additions to sales forceIn sales, Petercam is also scaling up its teams. The Belgian asset manager now has two people in charge of responding to RFPs: Jurgen Vluijmans, Head of RFP & Communications joined last month, and Aurore Goethals, who was recruited earlier this year.Two sales staff have also recently been recruited: Amparo Ruiz Campo, who will work in Madrid with the support of the head of Spain, Brussels-based Tomás Murillo (who also covers the Belgian market), and Thomas Meyer, who will handle the German market from Frankfurt, as a support to Bernard Jans.Eventually, Petercam is planning to recruit two local employees for sales in Italy, where it plans to open an office, as it has planned for Spain and Germany. In addition, the Belgian asset manager is planning to recruit in Switzerland, where the group is already present via its private bank.
The wealth management unit of the Royal Bank of Canada, RBC Wealth Management, has appointed Hilary May as head of its Singapore arm, RBC Trust Company Singapore, which recived a license in July this year, Asian Investor reports. RBC Wealth Management, which has assets under administration of CAD575bn, and assets under management of over CAD300bn, is planning other senior recruitments in emerging markets.
Marco Strimer will take over as chief operations officer at Banque Sarasin & Cie SA from 1 November, the firm announced in a statement on 6 September. Strimer had previously been CEO of SIX x-clear SA. Strimer succeeds Julius Zuercher, who will be retiring in late 2011 after 44 years of activity in the banking sector, including twelve years at Banque Sarasin.
Franklin Templeton Investments controls 2% of the Italian asset management firm Azimut Holding, within its asset management activities, Bluerating reports, citing the Italian market regulator, Consob.
The manager of the European Growth fund (GBP641m in assets) at Royal London Asset Management (RLAM), Kevin Lilley, will be joining Old Mutual Asset Management (OMAM). Lilley will begin in his new role next month. He will be manager of the European Equity fund, whose assets under management total GBP71m. Lilley, who practices a conviction-based management, will also assist the group to develop its range of equity funds. The European Growth fund, which Lilley has managed since July 2001, has earned annualised returns of 5% over ten years. In the same period, the European Equity fund, launched in 1998, earned annualised returns of 4.4%.
Henderson Global Investors (HGI) now has a seven-member sales team in Frankfurt, to serve the German market and to sell products of the Henderson and Gartmore brands, Das Investment reports.The Frankfurt office will be led by Lars Albert, director of distribution, who worked at HGI from 2004 and 2006, and who returned to the firm in January 2010 after a period at SEB Asset Management. Albert will be assisted by Daniela Brogt, who until October 2008 worked at Gartmore Investment (which has since been acquired by Henderson), before joining the sales team at Aviva Investors in Germany.Alexander van den Berg was recruited in July 2010 as head of wealth management clients, funds of funds, and independent financial advisers; he had previously served in the wholesale distribution service at SEB Asset Management.The three heads of sales will be assisted in client relationships by four sales staff.
Carlos Aparicio Belmonte, who is responsible for trading and account management for the UK and Spain at CMC Markets in London, is joining the sales team of Massachusetts Financial Services (MFS) as senior salesperson for Spain and Portugal, Funds People reports. He will report to Juan Martín, director of sales for two countries, and since 2005, director of the Madrid branch. All MFS funds have a sales license for Spain from the CNMV.
Finance and utilities were the most sought-after sectors for sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) in first half. According to statistics from the SWF Institute, sovereign funds invested USD7.09bn in the financial sector between January and June 2011, and USD3.13bn in utilities.The countries which have attracted the most investment from sovereign funds since the beginning of the year were Spain, with a total of USD8.41bn, followed by France (USD6.76bn), China (USD6.61bn), and the United Kingdom (Usd6.25bn). The United States, Brazil and Canada were also popular destinations for sovereign funds, but for smaller investments.Sovereign wealth funds have also increased their investments in real estate.
A group of institutional investors representing about USD1.3trn in assets on 6 September announced the launch of Principles for Responsible Investment for agriculture, entitled “Farmland Principles,” with the objective of improving sustainable development, transparency and accountability aspects of investments in agriculture. The principles have been developed and adopted by several major institutions, including the Swedish fund AP2, the Netherlands’ ABP and APG, the Danish ATP, the British BT Pension Scheme and Hermes EOS, the Dutch PGGM, and the American TIAA-CREF, all of which are signatories to the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (UN-PRI).
Hermes BPK Partners, the alternative management advising boutique from Hermes, on 5 September announced plans to contribute seed capital and to assist candidates to create activities in the hedge fund sector, once the climate appears to have improved for start-ups. The specialised unit of Hermes will aim to identify and provide strategic and financial assistance to new players in the industry via an established platform, in partnership with Northern Lights Capital Group. Assets under management at Hermes BPK Partners as of 30 June totalled USD1.6bn.