Andrew McCaffery, a founding member of Alignment Investors, a division of BlueCrest, is returning to Aberdeen Asset Management, a firm he left in 2008, as head of absolute return strategies. He will return as head of institutional hedge funds, and will belong to the fund of hedge fund management team (over GBP4bn in assets), alongside Graham Duce and Aidan Kearney, the British management firm announced on 31 March. McCaffery will report to Anne Richards, CIO and head of alternative investment strategies.
The head of marketing at Ignis Asset Management, Rob Page, is leaving the firm to join his former colleagues at Liontrust, Jeremy Lang and William Pattison, at Ardevora Asset Management. He will be a partner at the firm, which was launched in January 2010. James Senior, assistant head of marketing at Ignis, will replace Page.
The real estate fund Segurfondo Inversión will be liquidated by Inverseguros, which on 1 April notified the CNMV that, two years after permission was issued to suspend redemptions from the fund (3 April 2009), it is not in a position to amass sufficient liquidity to pay back investors who want to withdraw from the fund. In agreement with the depositary bank, Segurfondos has therefore decided to liquidate the fund. One month after the publication of the decision in the official bulletin (Boletín Oficial del Estado), in order to allow time for any potential legal filings, Inverseguros will undertake to divide the assets in the fund between subscribers. Participations which remain unclaimed after three months will be transferred to the Caja General de Depósitos, where they will be held in the name of the shareholder. During the liquidation period, Inverseguros will maintain the reduced commission regime which was in force during the redemption suspension period. Assets under management represent EUR492m, of which 62% are in residential and 27% in office properties. The fund has about 500 subscribers, of whom 86.7% are institutional investors.
Last month, net subscriptions to Spanish securities funds totalled EUR712m, the highest amount since March 2006, the Spanish association of management funds Inverco has announced. Since the beginning of the year, net subscriptions have totalled EUR320m, while net inflows in February were the first following 16 consecutive months of net outflows (November 2009-January 2011). Assets as of the end of March totalled slightly over EUR139.95bn, which represents an increase of EUR870m, or 0.6%, in one month. Inverco says that assets under management have increased by more than EUR1.94bn since 1 January. In March, Santander Asset Management and InverCaixa Gestión posted the largest net subscriptions, at EUR511m and EUR506.55m, respectively. However, Ahorro Corporación Gestión and Caixa Catalunya Gestión have seen net outflows of EUR106.94m and EUR181.49m, respectively.
The South Korean government pension fund National Pension Service (NPS), with USD283bn in assets under management, has appointed BlackRock, Credit Suisse and Nomura as transition managers, Asian Investor reports. The decision of the government fund last month is an instance of a growing trend in Asia to make more regular use of providers of transition services. Transition management for sell-side establishments involves helping buy-side firms to “transition” their portfolios following any of a variety of events (acquisitions, changes to management, or management strategy). NPS will pay relatively high costs for transition management, as a part of its move to outsource its investments. Assets under management at NPS are expected to increase 6% this year, to about USD300bn, of which 30% will be outsourced. Total assets outsourced will include 90% of equities and 60% of bonds. On the domestic market, the percentages are 55% and 8.5%, respectively.
The wealth management advising firm Pelican Investment Management (USD500m in assets advised) has been acquired for an undisclosed sum by Eaton Vance Investment Counsel, or EVIC (USD4bn in assets).The heads of Pelican, Anthony Pell, David Callard (the two founders) and John Paolella, will join EVIC with their team.Pelican, founded in 2001, and EVIC, founded in 1924, are both active in the high net worth private investor niche.
iShares is launching two new ETFs on NYSE Arca: iShares MSCI China and iShares High Dividend Equity. The first of these funds will allow investors 85% exposure to the largest capitalisations on the Chinese equities market. The second will provide investment in high-quality equities from companies that pay high dividends. The ETF is based on the Morningstar Dividend Yield Focus Index.
In two years, Blackstone has managed to raise about USD350m for its first global infrastructure fund, well below the planned USD2bn, and has further reduced the carried interest fee from 15% to 10%, and cut the management commission, the Wall Street Journal reports, citing Financial News.In these conditions, the private equity investor is going to inject USD50m in seed capital into the fund, and place it in the hands of Blackstone CEOs Michael Dorrell and Trent Vichie, who will relaunch the fund in May. Blackstone will also refer infrastructure deals to the fund, provide back office, and appoint directors for its investment committee.According to sources familiar with the matter, Blackstone was concerned that the fund would be too small to generate adequate revenues for the group.
According to Ahorro Corporación, Spanish equities funds have seen slight net outflows of EUR100m in March, while money market funds have posted their first net subscriptions since October 2009, at EUR200m, Cinco Días reports.The newspaper also reports that assets in the real estate fund Caixa Catalunya Proprietat, whose liquidity window opened on Friday, have fallen 17.7% in one year, and 32.2% since 2008. Its cumulate returns since launch in 2006 come to 4.29%, despite a loss of 4.78% in 2010. Caixa Catalunya points out that it is the only fund in its category not to have required assistance from its depositary bank.
The Prosperis Mephisto 1 fund, designed by Conrad Mattern, is aimed at investors who do not necessarily want to save the world, and who prefer to pocket comfortable returns. It thus invests in “sinful” investments, such as weapons, gambling, sex shops and luxury goods. However, Handelsblatt calculates, by 2016, when the fund matures, investors will have paid 43% of their input in commissions and various fees. And returns are not at all a foregone conclusion, as the fund is a blind pool.
The German financial management association BVI on 1 April announced that Allianz Global Investors Europe GmbH and Allianz Global Investors Europe Holding GmbH have joined the professional organisation. The two firms have their headquarters in Munich. Allianz Global Investors Europe GmbH is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Allianz Global Investors Europe Holding GmbH, which is 100% owned by Allianz Global Investors AG. The association says in a statement that, counting these two new additions, it now has 85 members, including 65 investment firms, 13 management firms, and 7 holding companies, with overall assets under management of EUR1.8trn, largely in open or closed funds.
Katrin Altmann, who previously worked at ebase and DJE Kapital, has been recruited as senior sales manager at Nestor-Fonds-Vertrieb, the German affiliate of the Luxembourg-based Nestor Investment Management SA. From 1 April, she is head of wholesale distribution, IFAs, and distribution partners. Nestor has created the new position following a strong increase in its assets. Altmann will report to Tobias Pfab, head of distribution.
Reinhard Berben, CEO of Franklin Templeton for Germany, has announced that the firm is planning to increase its presence in the diversified fund niche in Germany, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. In addition to the classic products in this category, such as the Global Fundamental Strategies Fund, the manager is also planning to boost sales of multi-asset class funds, such as profiled products of the Strategic Allocation range, overseen by Matthias Hoppe in Frankfurt.
According to financial industry sources, Commerzbank and Sal. Oppenheim are planning to sell their stakes of 45% and 10%, respectively, in the Bavarian asset management firm KGAL (EUR25.2bn in assets), Handelsblatt reports.The shares may be bought by BayernLB, which owns 30% of capital, and the Hambourg savings bank (Haspa). However, as BayernLB is required by the European Union to reduce its balance sheet, it will not acquire a majority stake in KGAL, which it would then be required to completely consolidate.
Amundi ETF has celebrated its first year on the Italian market with the launch of 4 new ETFs on Borsa Italiana, Bluerating reports. They are Amundi ETF MSCI Nordic, Amundi ETF MSCI Emerging Markets, Amundi ETF Global Emerging Bond Markit Iboxx and Amundi ETF AAA Govt Bond EuroMTS.
At a press conference on Friday, Pascal Heurtault, chief investment officer at Aviva Investors France, announced that compared with a balanced portfolio consisting of 50% equities and 50% bonds and money markets, the asset management firm is currently overweight in equities (58%), after taking some profits (the proportion was previously 63%).This predilection for equities, despite the recent oil crisis and the Japanese disaster, are due to good corporate results and positive surprises in terms of profits and earnings. Margins are at their highest, and crisis management at businesses has proven effective. “The markets are not all that expensive, and they are earning more than Bunds,” says Heurtault. In addition, the context for a recovery in merger and acquitions activity is shaping up.Prime rates are expected to increase slightly, and the manager, which is cautious about German and French long-term rates, still holds some positions in Spain and Italy. The credit market has now reduced many of its spreads, but there is still potential there. Aviva Investors therefore remains positive about the banking sector. In light of continuing low interest rates, the manager is “reserved” about money markets.
The fund management industry is destroying USD1,300bn of value each year, according to an unpublished draft report conducted by IBM and seen by FTfm. This includes USD300bn in excess fees for actively managed long-only funds that fail to beat their benchmark, USD250bn in fees for wealth management and advisory services that fail to deliver above-benchmark performances, and USD51bn in fees for hedge funds that also fail to deliver their targeted returns.
AXA announced on 1 April that it has finalised its AXA APH transaction, including the sale of its life insurance, savings, and retirement activities in Australia and New Zealand, and the acquisition of the life insurance, savings, and retirement activities of AXA APH in Asia. The Australian insurer AMP has acquired 100% of the existing shares in AXA APH, for AUD13.3bn (about EUR9.5bn). AXA then acquired 100% of the Asian activities of AXA APH from AMP, for AUD9.8bn.
Hong Kong, which receives large volumes of investment from Spain, on Friday signed a double taxation agreement with Spain, which allows it to be removed from the blacklist of countries which do not cooperate with the Spanish finance ministry, Cinco Días reports.The treaty signed by the Spanish finance minister, Elena Salgado, and obtained by Cinco Días, covers personal income tax, company tax, and taxation of non-residents. It stipulates that corporate profits may be taxed in only one of the two countries. Spanish legislation provides for an exemption for dividends earned abroad, which did not apply to Hong Kong when it was considered an offshore tax haven.
BlackRock has announced the arrival of Edwin Conway Managing as director of its activities serving institutionals in the United States and Canada. He will be based in New York, and was previuosly managing director and head of investor relations at Blackstone Alternate Asset Management (BAAM).
La Banque Privée 1818 and Rothschild & Cie Banque on 1 April announced that they have signed a definitive agreement to create Sélection 1818, a joint platform for independent financial advisers (IFAs), to be created from a merger of Sélection R and 1818 Partenaires. Cyril Chapelle, who was previously CEO of 1818 Partenaires, will become CEO of Sélection 1818 from 31 March 2011. The new group, which will be 66% controlled by Banque Privée 1818 and 34% by Rothschild & Cie Banque, will be known as Sélection 1818, and will be led by Cyril Chapelle, who has been named as CEO effective from 31 March 2011. It will have a hybrid management team, bringing together members of both companies. With combined assets of EUR6bn as of 31 March 2011, Sélection 1818 is a distribution platform offering a large range of investment products (banking, insurance, international, real estate), and a variety of services to assist independent financial advisers with their activities. The range, which uses open architecture, includes a variety of selections from among the best on the market.
The Kuwait sovereign wealth fund Kuwait Investment Authority (USD200bn in assets) and the Government of Singapore Investment Corp (GIC, USD100bn) have acquired about 4.5% of TPG Holdings (USD48bn in assets), in an operation which values the US private equity investor at about USD11bn, the Wall Street Journal reports. This will allow TPG to bring in several hundred million dollars, avoiding a potential IPO.
Following the transfer of José María Martínez-Sanjuán to Santander Asset Management (see Newsmanagers of 16 March), Banif has appointed Luis Pérez Box, who had been a member of the third-party fund analysis team since 2007, as head of fund and alternative investment analysis. He had previously spent his entire career at BBVA Gestión.
Aviva Investors has confirmed plans to bring the management of the group’s multi-management mandates, representing GBP1.3bn in assets, back into the company, Investment Week reports. Ian Aylward and Peter Fitzgerlad, senior portfolio managers, will manage the funds of funds which were previously mandated out to FundQuest. The team will also take over the range of managers of managers, which was mandated out to Close Investments.
Citywire has learned that Morgan Stanley Investment Management is to launch a UCITS III fund dedicated to emerging market corporate debt. The strategy will be managed by William Perry.
Investment Week reports that Sanlam Universal Funds has transferred the management of its Global Equity fund from Pictet, and awarded it to Centre Asset Management. The US-based consulting firm Centre Asset Management will now take over management of the GBP8bn fund domiciled in Dublin, which Pictet has managed for the past 5 years.
Henderson Global Investors is launching a defined-contribution version of its Diversified Growth fund, whose objective is to earn 4% over the Libor 3 month. The fund will be managed by Bill McQuaker, and will be included in the retirement savings product range from HGI.
Henderson Global Investors is planning to launch an emerging markets currency fund, Citywire reports. The product would be managed by the currency team at the firm, led by Bob Arends in Amsterdam.