QFS Asset Management ferme son hedge fund devises et restitue près de 1 milliard de dollars à ses clients, rapporte le quotidien américain. La stratégie avait perdu 8,7 % en 2013 et 8,6 % en 2012. C’est la première fois en vingt ans que QFS perd de l’argent deux années de suite.
Les législateurs européens ont scellé mardi soir un accord sur la révision de la directive MIF où persistent d'importantes différences entre classes d'actifs
Les législateurs européens ont scellé mardi soir un accord sur la révision de la directive sur les marchés d’instruments financiers où persistent d’importantes différences entre classes d’actifs. Le texte crée notamment un nouveau type de plates-formes de négociation, les OTF.
La société de gestion et d’investissement spécialisée dans les infrastructures a désigné Olivier Brousse pour succéder à Adrian Ewer au poste de directeur général. Cette nomination sera effective à compter du 1er mars 2014. Olivier Brousse, qui sera basé à Londres, arrive de la Saur dont il était jusqu'à la semaine dernière le président exécutif.
«La circulaire (publiée fin juin, ndlr) a permis à ce jour à 11.000 personnes de venir se régulariser devant l’administration fiscale, ce qui représente une recette potentielle de plus d’un milliard d’euros», a indiqué mercredi le ministre du Budget Bernard Cazeneuve lors de la séance des questions au gouvernement à l’Assemblée nationale.
L'économie américaine a continué à croître à un rythme modéré de fin novembre jusqu'à fin 2013, rapporte la Réserve fédérale dans son nouvel état des lieux de la conjoncture. Dans son «Livre beige», la Fed a ajouté que les deux tiers des douze districts ont vu augmenter le rythme des embauches. Cette progression soutient la thèse selon laquelle la forte baisse des créations d’emplois annoncée en décembre est due au froid glacial qui a paralysé une partie du pays pendant un mois. «Les perspectives économiques sont positives dans la plupart des districts, certains d’entre eux s’attendant à ce que la croissance se poursuive au même rythme et certains tablant sur une accélération de la croissance», signale la banque centrale. Ces résultats, tirés de données collectées jusqu’au 6 janvier inclus, sont globalement conformes aux récentes statistiques qui ont montré un raffermissement de l'économie à la fin de l’an dernier.
L’Union européenne doit évoluer si elle veut garder la Grande-Bretagne parmi ses membres et ne peut que décliner si elle résiste au changement, a déclaré mercredi le ministre britannique des Finances, George Osborne. «Notre détermination est claire : il faut réformer puis laisser le peuple décider», a-t-il ajouté, évoquant la promesse du Parti conservateur qui s’est engagé à consulter les Britanniques par référendum sur le maintien dans l’UE s’il est reconduit au pouvoir en 2015.
La trajectoire d'économies dans les dépenses publiques est pour l’instant inchangée, avec 18 milliards d’euros prévus en 2015, autant en 2016 et 13 milliards en 2017, mais d’autres économies seront bientôt programmées, a rapporté hier Reuters d’une source à l’Elysée. Ces économies supplémentaires, trouvées notamment à la lumière des travaux sur le «pacte de responsabilité» avec les entreprises, qui doit se traduire par une nouvelle baisse du coût du travail, modifieront cette trajectoire.
«Aujourd’hui, l’euro a atteint un niveau surprenant étant donné, par exemple, que les prévisions de croissance sont meilleures pour les Etats-Unis que pour l’Europe», a déclaré mercredi Anne Le Lorier, premier sous-gouverneur de la Banque de France, lors d’un débat organisé par la Bundesbank à Sarrebruck. Elle a toutefois ajouté que la balance commerciale de la zone euro était plus équilibrée que celle des Etats-Unis. «Quand on regarde la balance commerciale, on remarque que celle de l’Europe est très bonne, alors que celle des Etats-Unis est en déficit», a-t-elle dit.
Luis de Guindos, le ministre de l’Economie espagnol, a annoncé une réforme fiscale destinée à diminuer l’impôt sur les sociétés tout en réduisant les niches fiscales. «L’idée est de rendre le système plus favorable à la croissance», a-t-il indiqué, sans plus de précisions. Un groupe d’experts doit présenter d’ici à fin mars ses pistes de réforme.
Joel Ross, a New Jersey doctor, has declared before a jury that he delivered Matthew Martoma, a former manager at SAC Captial Avisors, the results of experimental tests on Alzheimer drugs, in exchange for tens of thousands of dollars in consultation fees and contacts for his clinical practice, the Wall Street Journal reports. The man is a key witness for the government in the insider trading trial of Mathew Martoma. Ross claims that he supplied confidential information to Martoma several times.
The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) board of administration unanimously re-elected Rob Feckner as board president and elected Priya Mathur as vice president, according to a statement released on 14 January. Feckner will be serving his 10th term as president, while it will be Mathur’s first vice presidential term. She replaces George Diehr who has served as vice president for the last six years.
Robeco is adding to its team in Asia-Pacific. Ryan Changwon Kim last month joined the Dutch group in Seoul as head of its South Korean office. His mission will be to provide development of activities in Korea. Kim, who had previously served as head of investment advising at Mercer, replaces Ken S. Park, who in July last year joined Oaktree Capital Management in Hong Kong as vice president in charge of marketing and client relationships.
High-net-worth investors in the U.S. (investable assets greater than USD5 million) maintain an average of 4 investment provider relationships, according new research from Cerulli Associates."Wealth provides many investors with the privilege of benefiting from institutional products and prices across asset managers, and it also grants them the ability to leverage their status among providers and advisors,» states Donnie Ethier, associate director at Cerulli. «High-net-worth investors continue to steadily diversify their advice providers.» «Overall, high-net-worth investors appear reluctant to terminate existing relationships,» Ethier explains. «In fact, nearly one-quarter of high-net-worth households report their primary provider controls at least 90% of their investable assets.»
Fitch Ratings has updated its global criteria for rating money market funds, consistent with its practice of reviewing rating criteria on an annual basis. The changes to the criteria are limited, reflecting certain market developments and clarifying some aspects of criteria application. No rating changes are expected. Regulatory proposals under consideration by US and European regulators would, if enacted, fundamentally change the frameworks under which MMFs operate. The proposals have not, however, been finalized yet and there is a wide range of possible outcomes. This updated criteria report reflects, therefore, the current regulatory status quo.
Allianz Global Investors (GI) has launched a new fund, domiciled in Luxembourg, dedicated to emerging market equities, which will be managed by its US office based in San Diego – for a good reason. The vehicle, entitled Allianz Emerging Markets Equity Opportunities, already has a solid track record in the United States. The fund, now registered in Luxembourg and aimed at investors in Europe, will be managed by a team of 8 people based in the United States, led by Kunal Ghosh, who currently manages overall USD1.8bn in assets. The fund offers investors a way to gain access to emerging markets via a disciplined approach to stock-picking, with the objective of locating activities which show potential for profits. The product will invest in 100 to 150 positions.
The European mutual fund industry, with overall net inflows of EUR12.7bn for long-term mutual funds, showed a healthy growth pattern for November 2013, according to Lipper’s latest Fund Flash. The inflows were mainly driven by inflows into equity funds (+EUR9.8bn) and mixed-asset funds (+EUR4.8bn). Over the course of the year 2013 so far the European fund industry enjoyed net inflows of EUR177.2bn, equally driven by net inflows into bond funds (+EUR95.8bn) and equity funds (+EUR95.7bn). In contrast, money market funds showed the highest net outflows (-EUR86.3bn).BlackRock, with net sales of EUR2.6 bn, was the best selling group of long-term funds for November, ahead of JP Morgan Asset Management (+EUR2.0 bn) and Schroders (+EUR1.2 bn).
Tobam on Tuesday, 14 January announced the launch of the Anti-Benchmark All Countries World Fund. Its objective is to offer broad diversification via a very large investment universe, the MSCI ACWI, which currently includes 23 develped markets and 21 emerging markets, or about 2,500 securities, the asset management firm says. The Anti-Benchmark All Countries World Equity fund has USD80m in seed capital from a major European pension fund. “In April 2013, at the request of an institutional investor, we launched a USD325m mandate with ‘All Countries’ coverage. Since then, we have sought to create an open-ended vehicle, in order to make the strategy available to a larger base of investors. In 2014, we intend to continue to add to our range of maximal diversification solutions, in order to respond to the evolving needs of our clients,” says Christiphe Roehri, director of development at Tobam.
The Geneva-based asset management firm Argos Investment Managers is planning to develop in France, Luxembourg and the United Kingdom, Investment Europe reports. The firm, founded in 2005, offers a number of investment strategies, including the micro-capitalisation fund Argonaut, mnaged by Philip Best and Marc St John Webb.
The asset management division at JP Morgan earned net profits of USD568m in fourth quarter 2013, up 19% compared with the previous quarter, and 18% compared with fourth quarter 2012, according to statistics released on 14 January by the banking group. Assets under management increased by 12%, o USD172bn, to a total of USD1.600trn as of the end of December, due both to inflows and positive market effects. The group posted net profits of USD5.3bn in fourth quarter, compared with USD5.7bn one year previously, and USD17.9bn for the year as a whole, compared with USD21.3bn in 2012. Results were affected by the resolution of the Madoff affair, as the bank recently agreed to pay USD2.6bn to settle claims by the government and in the private sector.
The daily trading volume of on-book trades on the European markets of NYSE Euronext in December totalled EUR231.9m, up 19% compared with the previous month, and 20% compared with December 2012. Trading volumes totalled EUR4.6bn, up 13.3% compared with November, and 14.4% compared with December 2012. Block trades totalled EUR249.5m, up 80% compared with November, but down 79.4% compared with December 2012. As of the end of December, assets under management in all ETFs listed on the markets of Euronext totalled EUR160.2bn.
Assets under management at the Swiss group Bordier remained stable in 2013, at over CHF10bn, Grégoire Bordier, a partner at the private bank, has told Agefi Switzerland. “The markets have had a positive effect and restructuring asset have had a negative effect, since we are very clearly in the category of the declared money strategy,” says Bordier, who says that net inflows have been negative overall, but positive outside Switzerland, particularly in Singapore, where Bordier now has about CHF1bn in assets under management.
As an addition to its investment expertise unit, Hottinger & Cie has recruited a team specialised in management of commodity investment funds and energies, Agefi Switzerland reports. Pierre Martin, 38, will manage a range of funds specialised in natural resources. He worked for Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, and then URAM in Geneva. Thomas Couvret, 33, becomes Product Specialist, in charge of sales of funds managed by Hottinger & Cie. He has worked for PIM Gestion France (now known as FourPoints Investment Managers since its merger with IT AM) and then URAM.