On 17 November, Deutsche Börse admitted eight new ETC and eight ETN products from Commerzbank to trading on the Xetra electronic trading platform. The ETCs on high-grade brent crude and natural gas are available in bull and bear versions, either neat or with leverage of 2. They bring the number of ETC products listed in Frankfurt to 210, with an average monthly trading volume of EUR900m. ETNs replicate the evolution of futures on the HangSeng and HangSeng China Enterprises indices, also in long and short versions, as well as neat or with leverage of 2. Frankfurt now lists 83 ETN products, and trading volumes in this segment total EUR100m per day.
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, the Caymans’ fiduciary services industry, which provides the boards of hedge funds with professional independent directors, is coming under pressure, according to the Financial Times. Some of the world’s biggest investors in hedge funds are demanding transparency over exactly how many directorships individuals on the islands hold. The numbers can be high, accordint to an investigation by the Financial Times. A document from an international bank from 2006 reveals one Cayman individual on more than 560 boards. Analysis of current US regulatory filings shows another person with more than 250 directorships and several others holding more than 100.
One of the real estate funds from Morgan Stanley has opted to sell Blackstone a portfolio of 16 office properties (3 million square feet), rather than pay off debts of USD820m which were set to mature next month, the Wall Street Journal reports. The properties were added to the portfolios of Morgan Stanley upon the acquisition of the Glenborough Realty Trust in 2006.Blackstone already holds about USD225m in junior debt from Glenborough, which it acquired over a year in small instalments from banks and insurers. That now allows it to take control of the properties, and not to take on the USD600m in debt.Blackstone manages USD41bn in real estate assets, and has already raised USD4.6bn for a global real estate fund, for which it is aiming for total volume of USD10bn.
Invesco on 17 November announced the recruitment of Gregory McGreevey as head of Invesco Fixed Income (IFI), effective from 28 November. In his new role, McGreevey will have operational responsibility for fixed income activities. He will be based in Atlanta, and will report directly to Karen Dunn Kelley, senior managing director. McGreevey has previously worked as chairman of Hartford Investment Management Company, and executive vice president and chief investment officer at The Hartford Financial Services Group. IFI employs more than 150 investment professionals worldwide, who as of the end of September, managed over USD200bn in assets.
BlackRock has announced that its iShares division has launched the first ETF which allows investors access to preferential equities from developed countries outside the United States on the NYSE Arca platform. The fund is the iShares S&P International Preferred Stock Index Fund (acronym: IPFF), which is the international version of its US sibling, the iShares S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index Fund (PFF), which has already attracted USD7.2bn in assets.The new product is aimed at investors seeking regular returns outside the US market. It replicates the S&P International Preferred Stock Index, a cap-weighted index, which is “rebalanced” every quarter. The heaviest exposures are currently to Canadian, British and New Zealand equities. The index has a strong bias in favour of the financial sector.
Fidelity Worldwide on 16 November launched an inflation-linked bond fund dedicated to emerging markets, Investment Week reports. The new fund, managed by Andrew Weir, will invest in government debt in local currencies in Latin America, the Middle East, Eastern Europe and Asia, in order to benefit from long-term inflationary movements in emerging markets. The benchmark index is the Barclays Emerging Market Tradable Inflation Linked Index. The fund is aimed at qualified investor clients. The minimal investment for “Y” class shares is USD1m.
Although Monéterme remains the top fund from the asset management firm, with EUR600m in assets and EUR200m in net inflows since the beginning of the year, Hugau Gestion has ambitions for its Obli 1-3 fund, even though it has seen outflows of about EUR100m, to EUR200m, and for tis High Yield Recovery fund, launched on 20 May, but still not actively promoted or marketed.The new product is an UCITS-compliant, French-registered FCP fund, with 20-25 positions, in companies whose activities bring recurring cash flows to pay off debts. The fund is a prudent high yield fund, which invests in “5B” bonds, on the line between investment grade and high yield (BB-/BBB-), a universe where volatility is 3.3%, compared with 9.1% for high yield.The fund, which so far has only EUR13.1m in assets (of which 20% come from retail investors), meets the needs of investors who are seeking additional income beyond a short/mid term euro bond investment, by trying to capture outperformance from issuers who choose not to be rated (such as Lagardère), non investment-grade issuers with investment grade profiles (Pernod), default risks which have already been anticipated by the market (Lafarge), and aberrations in the euro zone (short flows on PIIGS corporates).The management team will make an effort to benefit from regulatory sales of bonds by investors who are required to unload assets when downgrades are announced. It will also buy when issuers are moved to high yield following external growth deals which are estimated to create value, but which are financed through debt, and when issuers are about to be promoted to investment grade.CharacteristicsName: Hugau High Yield RecoveryISIN code: FR0011033984Management fees: 1%
Joseph “Skip” Skowron III, former hedge fund manager at FrontPoint Partners, was sentenced on 18 November to five years in prison, the Wall Street Journal reports.Skowron confessed to using insider information in 2008 about the results of clinical trials of Hepatitis C medication from Human Genome Sciences, which was supplied to him by a French doctor, Yves Benhamou. The insider information allowed the manager to avoid USD30m in trading losses.
The IBEW Local 90 Pension Fund and the Plumbers & Pipefitters’ Local #562 Pension fund have sued seven banks which the two US pension funds accuse of having misled them about MF Global’s USD6.3bn exposure to European government debt, the Telegraph reports. The defendants are RBS, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Deutsche Bank, Citigroup and Jefferies.
Hedge fund strategies recovered in October, according to monthly statistics from the Edhec-Risk Institute. Event-driven and long/short equity strategies posted gains of 2.97% and 4.30%, respectively, their best results of recent years. Returns have not entirely offset losses in September, nor since the beginning of the year, as event-driven shows losses of 2.8%, and long/short equity shows losses of 3.8%. Despite its limited exposure, the market neutral strategy has earned gains of 1.58%, which offset losses in September. Since the beginning of this year, the strategy has gained 0.8%. Good results for emerging markets strategies and distressed securities have also brought returns of 3.91% and 2.98%. Funds of funds earned returns of 1.22% in October, but since the beginning of the year, they show losses of 4.2%.
Sovereign funds and other institutional investors are increasingly turning to short positions on ETFs, Asian Investor reports. This trend is likely to continue in the next few months. Short-selling ETFs is common in the United States, where USD34.9bn in ETF assets were on loan as of the end of September, compared with only USD923m in Asia, and USD15.7bn Europe, according to the financial data provider Data Explorers. ETF providers are in favour of short-selling of their products, since it provides liquidity and increases interest in ETF vehicles. However, hedge funds have not yet embraced this trend in Asia, Asian Investor notes.
Banif Banco Privada, convinced of the advantages that investment funds offer, has launched five unit-linked profiled pension funds, which will be managed by Santander Asset Management. Each retirement savings receptacle product will invest its portfolio in 10 to 20 different funds, Funds People reports. The profiles selected are Conservador (80-100% bonds), Moderado (60-100%), Equilibrado (40-100%), Dinámico (10-50%), and Agressivo (0-60%). All of these products carry a performance commission of 9%, in addition to management commissions ranging from 1.10% for the first product to 1.35% for the last three, while the Moderado fund charges management fees of 1.20%.
The Swiss bank Wegelin, a specialist in quant strategies, is preparing a new investment approach in bonds, in close collaboration with the Ecole polytechnique fédérale in Zurich. The concept is to develop a new strategy on sovereign debt, based on an index which measures the quality of the debt. “In government bonds, the traditional index is not very intelligent, insofar as it gives priority to the quantity of debt. The higher the amount of debt, the higher its weighting. We will rather take into account the quality of the debt,” explains Magne Y. Orgland, managing partner at the Swiss bank. In addition to the quality of the debt, Orgland also insists on the importance of variable liquidity. Based on these two essential factors, a range may be created in the first month of 2012. Assets under management at the bank total about CHF25bn, olf which two thirds are in private banking, and one third from institutional clients. Since the beginning of the year, inflows have been near zero, Orgland says. This development is linked to a desire on the part of the bank no longer to sers US clients, due to the FACTA regulations. That process is underway, and means that the firm will need to replace CHF500m in assets. In France, the bank has gained some notoriety for its double product range: on the one hand, its flagship strategy Active Indexing, available in France since November 2010, and on the other the Global Diversification strategy, launched in mid-June 2011, which is based on an equally-weighted risk allocation. Assets under management in the Global Diversification fund total slightly over EUR200m, while assets in the Active Indexing strategy total about EUR1.5bn.
The Bavarian pension fund for self-employed persons Bayerische Versorgungskammer (BVK, EUR50bn in assets) on 16 November awarded the Munich-based UBS Real Estate Kapitalanlagegesellschaft mbh an initial mandate of EUR500m for a real estate fund of funds. The fund will invest in core portfolio funds, as well as in niche products, with the objective of avoiding overlap with other real estate investments by BVK as much as possible.In order to do that, the management firm will explore new segments, such as hotels, parking facilities, properties under construction, and major shopping centres. It may also move into risk classes such as “value add” and “opportunistic.”BVK has stipulated that UBS RE much also invest in funds which themselves invest in BRIC coutnries (Brazil, Russia, India and China), where BVK does not yet have any holdings. Daniel Just, vice-chairman of the managing board and chief investment officer at BVK, says that the mandate comes as an addition to direct real estate investments (which currently total EUR3.2bn), and investments in institutional real estate funds (EUR2.7bn).
The worsening euro zone debt crisis, and the approaching deadline for debt reduction in the United States are driving investors to remain on the defensive in mid-November.In the week to 16 November, investors favoured ETFs dedicated to US large caps, commodity funds specialised in precious metals, and dividend funds, EPFR Global reports.Equity funds have posted net inflows of USD1.51bn in the week under review, of which USD870m are in dividend funds. Since the beginning of the year, outflows have totalled USD92bn. This total would be much larger if there were not such hunger for dividend funds, which ave attracted over USD24bn since January 2011.Bond funds earned net inflows in the week under review of USD2.37bn.Since the beginning of the year, inflows total USD112bn, compared with USD384.3bn in the corresponding period of 2010.EPFR Global also reports, without providing exact figures, that there has been growing interest in the past few weeks in inflation-linked bond funds.
Discretionary activities by independent financial advisers are likely to grow strongly in the next few years, from 59% of assets in 2011 to 71% by 2013, according to estimates by Cerulli («The Cerulli Edge : Advisor Edition, 4Q 20011»).This likely development is a sign of a desire on the part of advisers to increase their discretionary portfolio management activities.From the point of view of the broker/dealer, use of pre-fabricated investment solutions by financial advisers allows for economies of scale and a reduction in exposure to risk. Advisers agree that outsourcing the construction of portfolios may have an impact on the effectiveness of the portfolio, but despite that, they remain hesitant to engage this appraoch. “Our research shows that advisers prefer the freedom of programmes which are open to pre-fabricated solutions,” says Patrick Newcimb, a senior analyst in the managed accounts practice at Cerulli.From another point of view, results of a partial analysis of the capacity of advisers for allocation do not argue in their favour. Pre-fabricated equity offerings have seen setbacks in 2008-2009, but their post-recession returns are encouraging. Package solutions do not yet appear to be favoured by advisers.
Expansión relays reports in Funds People that Bankia has appointed Isabel Bastit, one of the regional heads at Caja Madrid, to head of its asset management unit, Bankia Fondos, replacing Luis Gabarda, who becomes head of Bankia Bolsa. Bastit will report to Fernando Sobrini, head of the retail bank. Bankia Fondos was born of the merger of Gesmadrid, Bancja Fondos and Ges Laetana, and has assets under management as of the end of October of EUR6.34bn, making it the fourth-largest Spanish asset management firm, after, in order, Santander, AM, BBVA AM, and Invercaixa. The private banking unit of Bankia Banca Privada has an asset management firm of its own, Bankia Banca Privada Gestión, which has assets of EUR1.31bn in 189 Sicav funds.
Despite USD500m in net outflows in ten days in September, total assets in the emerging market debt strategies from Pictet Asset Management currently total USD18bn, compared with USD17bn as of the end of September. This total includes, in addition to mandates, five UCITS-compliant, Luxembourg-registered funds with a total of EUR11.18bn, in euros and strong local currencies.The Swiss asset management firm is keeping a close eye on subscriptions. After a period of soft closing, which resulted in a temporary limitation to EUR1m per day in net inflows per client, Pictet has slightly relaxed its vigilance, due to outflows in September. Monitoring is concentrated mostly on the Pictet-Emerging Local Currency Debt fund, which already has EUR6.654bn in assets (as of 14 November).Similarly, the funds managers (14 people in Singapore and London) would like to see an increase in the proportion of institutional assets in the products, as these clients are more “sticky” (loyal), up to 50% from 35% currently, says Eugene Choi, product specialist, in Paris.Choi says the objective is to generate outperformance of 1 to 3 percentage points over a period of 5 years. Management relies on top-down and bottom-up approaches, and Pictet has teams managing currencies and rates separately. Choi also tells Newsmanagers that, despite the significant scale of assets in emerging market debt, Pictet does not yet need to invest in illiquid products such as structured notes.
Warren Buffet is going to welcome analysts for the first time at Berkshire Hathaway’s next annual meeting, according to the Wall Street Journal. Three research analysts have been invited on May 5. It might be a sign he views his company as overlooked by investors.
The Wall Street Journal reports that the hedge fund management firm Centerbridge Partners (USD10bn in assets) acquired bank debts from MF Global for USD15m, just after its collapse. David Tepper, who manages about USD14bn at Appaloosa Management, has also invested nearly USD50m in equities, bonds and bank debts from MF Global. The hedge fund management firm Elliott Management is on the creditors’ boardat MF Glboal, and is reported to hold a significant amount of MF Global debts. Other hedge funds also say they have bought MF Global shares, which were trading at USD0.13 per share on Friday, compared with USD8.00 six months ago. These are very high risk bets, and that is why hedge funds are engaging less than 1% of their portfolios. But it could be a very good deal for them, if at least part of the missing USD600m are found.
The British press reports that the local arm of Axa IM has announced plans to place an international strategic bond fund which will be launched in 2012 to Nick Hayes, formerly of New Star and Henderson, who since June 2010 has been manager of the Axa Sterling Strategic Bond Fund. Hayes will be assisted by Chris Iggo, CIO for bonds.
The British asset management firm JP Hambro is planning to launch a long/short fund, but has no plans to move into the fixed income sector, or absolute returns, Money Marketing reports. “We are going to launch a long/short fund. That’s a strategy that falls within our area of expertise, and which could represent a way to diversify our offerings. We have launched four new funds in the past twelve months, and launching new products next year is unlikely. We remain an equity management firm, and we are not going to get involved in fixed income,” says Gavin Rochussen, CEO of JP Hambro.
Alliance Trust Asset Management has confirmed plans to launch the Global Thematic Opportunties fund, which will be managed by Ilario Di Bon, head of global equities, in December. Fundweb reports that the former head of institutional global equities from Fidelity will be assisted by Jürgen Lanzer, senior investment manager.
Thierry Brevet, Directeur du fonds de dotation du Louvre est revenu sur les principaux faits marquants des derniers mois au niveau de la gestion financière et les évolutions à venir en termes de stratégie de placements: Nous sommes investis sur la quasi totalité des classes d’actifs désormais à l’exception des small caps. La très forte volatilité récente des marchés ne nous encourageait guère à effectuer cette diversification. Si l’environnement économique et financier s’améliore, alors on remettra ce chantier sur la table. Aucune modification n’a été faite et aucune modification n’est envisagée en dehors de la sélection d’un ou deux fonds d’actions émergentes. Nous souhaitons privilégier une approche régionale (par exemple en Asie et au Brésil) en sélectionnant des fonds de sociétés de gestion locales de taille moyenne qui investissent notamment dans les mid caps. Mais il est très difficile d’identifier de telles sociétés de gestion avec un bon degré de confiance. Un investissement à travers des fonds globaux restent donc l'éventualité la plus probable à ce stade, en veillant à la qualité du stock???picking. La baisse des marchés actions n’a pas totalement été compensée par la hausse des obligations AAA, ce qui ne nous a pas permis d’accroître naturellement la valeur du portefeuille. Par ailleurs, nous avons reçu en 2011 un premier don important de la part de Mme Elahé Omidyar, présidente de la fondation Roshan aux Etats???Unis, et nous attendons d’ici la fin de l’année un premier don d’un jeune entrepreneur français. Rétrospectivement, la mise en place de forte contrainte d’investissement dans le mandat géré par BNP Paribas AM a été très payante : la sur-représentation des obligations AAA et la sous-représentation ou l’absence des dettes périphériques ont très fortement contribué à la performance pendant la période de stress des derniers mois.
Marielle Cohen-Branche a été nommée médiateur de l’Autorité des marchés financiers à compter du 16 novembre. Pour mener à bien sa mission, elle s’appuiera sur une équipe de juristes pilotée par François Denis du Péage, responsable du pôle médiation au sein de la direction des relations avec les épargnants. Elle sera directement rattachée au président de l’AMF.
L’Etablissement de retraite additionnelle de la fonction publique a attribué son premier mandat de gestion d’actifs immobiliers à AEW Europe SGP. Ce dernier aura notamment pour mission la réalisation du premier investissement immobilier de l’ERAFP pour un montant maximum de 40 millions d’euros.
Selon le journal suisse Tagesanzeiger, douze hauts responsables de la banque privée suisse Sarasin, dont le directeur général Joachim Straehle, ont adressé un courrier au conseil d’administration afin de battre en brèche la proposition de reprise émanant de Julius Baer. Sarasin a indiqué le mois dernier que Rabobank étudiait toutes les options pour la participation de 46% au sein de son capital, ce qui équivaut à 68% des droits de vote.
La visite de David Cameron à Berlin n’a permis aucun rapprochement des positions sur les questions européennes comme la taxe sur les transactions financières