In order to protect unit-linked life insurance policyholders against market shocks in the final phase of their policies, DWS (Deutsche Bank group) on 22 August announced the launch of DWS Shift, a solution which is tied to a guarantee system, DWS Flexible Portfolio Insurance. The solution allowed funds managed with it to be virtually completely sheltered from the recent market turbulence, or even allowed them to earn positive returns, the asset management firm says.In addition, DWS Shift has a 90% guarantee from DWS Investments SA on peaks recorded, valid for the last year of the contract for funds. More funds with a longer maturity will be gradually released.Currently, DWS Shift is being used to cover three funds (registered in Luxembourg, with maturities of 4.5, 5.5 and 6.5 years). The degree of exposure is constantly adapted to the market situation in the light of an analysis of trends and market volatility.For the three funds, the front-end fee may be up to 5%, and the management commission is 1.4%. The distribution commission is a maximum of 0.75% for the DWS Shift 2015, 1% for the DWS Shift 2016, and 1.25% for the 2017 funds. Meanwhile, the penalty for early withdrawal will be a maximum of 0.75%, 1% and 1.25%, respectively.
According to the VGF (Verband Geschlossene Fonds e.V.) association of German closed fund managers, the 45 member companies of the association in second quarter 2011 posted subscriptions of EUR1.06bn, compared with EUR803.2m in January-March, and over EUR1.18bn in the corresponding period of last year.Institutional investors contributed EUR86.9m to total inflows, compared with EUR48.2m in the previous three-month period, and EUR226.5m in second quarter 2010.Most new subscriptions went to funds specialised in German real estate, which took on EUR531m, compared with EUR248.3m in first quarter, and EUR346.7m in April-June 2010.
Investec has launched an African bond fund to be managed by the co-heads of fixed income, John Stopford and Andre Roux, who is based in South Africa, Investment Week reports. The Investec GSF Africa High Income Bond fund is a Sicav domiciled in Luxembourg, with indicative returns of 9.4%, on the basis of a portfolio managed by Stopford. The majority of the portfolio will be invested in South African corporate and government debt, with a very large exposure to the South African rand. The remainder of the portfolio will include exposures to fixed income from other African countries, such as Kenya, Nigeria, Angola and Ghana. One third of the portfolio is rated A, one third BBB, and the remainder is distributed between BBB- and BB+.
Henderson Global Investors on 22 August announced the recruitment of Sam Cotton as co-manager in the European retail sector for its European Retail Property Fund (EUR930m). Cotton, previously at Savills Commercial, will be based in London, and will be co-head of fund strategy deployment.
The ratings agency Standard & Poor’s has added to its range of indices dedicated to Asia, with two dividend products developed for providers of ETF funds, Asian Investor reports. One of the indices will be the basis for the first ETF dedicated to high dividends in Hong Kong. S&P will unveil the S&P Pan Asia Select Dividend Opportunity Index on 22 August, along with an ethical version of the index. The first of these indices was designed for a management firm which plans to launch the first dividend ETF in Hong Kong, while the second was developed for a management firm in Malaysia which also plans to launch an ETF in Singapore.
BNP Paribas Securities Services (BNPP SS) announced on Monday, 22 August, that it is adding to its Corporate Trust Services (CTS) range in the Asia-Pacific region. The firm will now offer a complete range of services in the region, from traditional debt to structured and non-structured debt. For these services, BNPP SS has recruited Ben Lumley-Smith in Hong Kong as regional head of client development for debt markets. Lumley-Smith, formerly of Citigroup, JP Morgan and Hambros Bank, participated in the firm’s recent oversight of a major debt issue by Bank of China International, a statement says.
Global Pensions reports that HSBC Securities Services (HSS) has created an infrastructure and an operating model for fund administration, which allows Asian pension fund and sovereign wealth fund clients to meet increasingly strict requirements for transparency in an environment of volatile markets and toughening legislation.The multi-asset class platform, available in Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, India, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines, will eventually serve about 4,600 funds, while HSS administers a total of 10,500 funds with a total volume of USD2.6trn (as of the end of June).Its services include the Multifonds accounting platform, the Cadis system for trade processing, the Mig-21 solution for compliance monitoring, the Actuate reporting data warehouse, Transaction Lifecycle Management for reconciliation, and AWD for workflow management.
The wealth management firm GAM Holding has reported a net profit for first half 2011 of CHF100.4m, a 6% decline year on year, but a 5% increase compared with second half 2010. Net inflows totalled CHF600m, GAM Holding says in a statement released on 23 August. In first half 2010, net inflows totalled CHF5.6bn. Assets under management as of the end of June totalled CHF113.5bn, down CHF4.3bn, or 4% from the end of December 2010. This development is exclusively due to appreciation of the Swiss franc against the main currencies in the portfolio (US dollars, euros, and to a lesser extent, pounds Sterling).
UBS on 23 August provided an update on its plans to eliminate expenses of a total of approximately CHF 2 billion from annual costs by the end of 2013, consistent with its announcement on July 26, 2011. “These plans include savings associated with headcount reductions of approximately 3,500, which will be achieved through redundancies as well as natural attrition, and further real estate rationalization,” the bank says in a statement. UBS expects to recognize restructuring charges of approximately CHF 550 million in connection with its cost reduction plans, approximately CHF 450 million of which will be booked in the second half of 2011. The substantial majority of the expected CHF 450 million charge will be recognized in the third quarter of 2011. Of the expected CHF 550 million in restructuring charges, approximately 55% is expected to be incurred in the Investment Bank, 30% in Wealth Management & Swiss Bank, 10% in Global Asset Management, and 5% in Wealth Management Americas. Of the expected 3,500 staff reductions, approximately 45% will come from the Investment Bank, 35% from Wealth Management & Swiss Bank, 10% from Global Asset Management, and 10% from Wealth Management Americas.
Citywire reports that Reto Gehring is leaving UBP, only three months after being appointed as head of multi-management. He will be replaced by Didier Chan-Voc-Chun, former CIO of fund selection at Fortis Investments.
The German federal financial services surveillance authority (BaFin) has issued the Assekurata Assekuranz Rating-Agentur company, founded in 1996, a license as a European ratings agency. The business, based in Cologne, is focused particularly on ratings of primary insurance companies.Eight other firms so far have received the status of licensed European ratings agency, five of them German (Euler Hermes Rating, Feri EuroRating, Creditreform Rating, PSR Rating et GBB Rating), one Greek (ICAP), one Bulgarian (Bulgarian Credit Rating) and one Japanese (Japan Credit Rating).
Agefi reports, citing a source familiar with the matter, that HSBC has commenced negotiations to sell its Canadian asset management affiliate as part of a global restructuring. Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper estimates the assets under management by the affiliate at about CAD30bn, Agefi states.
US money market funds (MMF) have reduced their exposure to European banks, according to a research released on 22 August by Fitch Ratings. As of 31 July, exposure to European banks from the ten largest money market funds was down 9% compared with 30 June, and down 20.4% compared with the end of May. Exposure to European banks represents 47% of assets in money market funds in the Fitch sample (43% of total assets in US money market funds), compared with 48.7% as of the end of June.
The SPDR Gold Shares fund from State Street Global Advisors has become the world’s largest ETF by market value, the Financial Times reports. Assets in the gold fund have risen to USD76.7bn, putting it ahead of the SPDR S&P 500, with USD74.4bn, for the first time.
The Credit Suisse group has decided to reduce its personnel in India in its wealth management division by 20%, as part of a global cost reduction programme, the Reuters news agency reports. Following the announcement of a 4% decline in pre-tax profits in second quarter 2011, to CHF843m, the Swiss group announced plans to reduce staff by about 4% in all divisions, equivalent to about 2,000 jobs.
State Street Corporation has announced that its existing contract with the Lloyds Banking Group (LBG) has been renewed. State Street becomes the preferred provider, responsible for all middle office, securities custody, accounting, depository, securities lending and investment administration services for life insurance, retirement and investment affiliates (Scottish Widows), and asset management activities (Scottish Widows Investment Partnership) of LBG. The consolidated portfolios include investment accounting for over GBP200bn in assets. Services currently provided by other providers will be transferred to State Street in the next 18 months, the statement adds.
Jonathan Sorrell, one of the top bankers at Goldman Sachs, and son of Martin Sorrell, CEO of WPP, will be joining Man Group as a member of the executive board. According to the Financial Times, Sorrell will become head of strategy at the hedge fund firm.
In the second quarter of this year, investors in Asia Pacific invested a net total of USD26.9bn in domestic funds, Lipper FMI reports, the highest level since fourth quarter 2009. The investment flows follow three consecutive quarters of net redemptions. Several major asset management firms, such as BlackRock and Franklin Templeton, have also seen a boom in demand for UCITS funds domiciled in Europe from Asian subscribers in first quarter 2011.
Columbia Management (USD362bn in assets as of the end of June), an affiliate of Ameriprise Financial (like Threadneedle), has announced the launch of two international equities mutual funds. The two products, targeting firms with capitalisations of under USD5bn, will be managed by Columbia Wanger Asset Management (USD35.7bn), which already manages two other products of the Columbia Acorn range.The first of the new funds is the Columbia Acorn Emerging Markets Fund (acronym CAGAX), whose lead managers are Fritz Kaegi and Stephen Kusmierczak, and co-managers Zach Egan and Louis Mendes. The fund will invest at least 80% of their assets in companies headquartered in Brazil, China, India, or other emerging and frontier markets, or in businesses which export primarily to these countries. The objective is to identify small and innovative businesses which serve local consumers and have good long-term growth outlooks.The Columbia Acorn European Fund (CAEAX) will invest at least 70% of its assets in countries of western Europe. It may also have an exposure of up to 30% to central and eastern Europe, of which up to 10% may be to Russia and Ukraine. The lead manager is Andreas Waldburg-Wolfegg, with Stephen Kusmierczak as co-manager.
According to statistics from CB Richard Ellis, relayed by Fondsprofessionell, investments in real estate in Germany in first half totalled EUR11.1bn, 28% more than in January-June 2010. EUR4.2bn of this total comes from foreign investors.As some transactions are beginning to reach large volumes, asset and fund managers were the largest category of investors, with nearly EUR2.6bn, or 23% of total volume, followed by open-ended real estate funds and institutional funds (Spezialfonds), with EUR2.3bn, or 21% of total volume.
Jonathan Sorrell, l’un des principaux banquiers de Goldman Sachs, fils de Martin Sorrell, le directeur général de WPP, va rejoindre Man Group en tant que membre du comité exécutif. Selon les informations du Financial Times, il deviendra le responsable de la stratégie de la société de hedge funds.
Le groupe Credit Suisse a décidé de réduire de 20% ses effectifs en Inde dans sa division wealth management dans le cadre des réductions de coûts programmées au niveau mondial, rapporte l’agence Reuters.Après l’annonce d’un bénéfice avant impôts en recul de 4% au deuxième trimestre 2011 à 843 millions de francs suisses, le groupe suisse avait annoncé un projet de réduction des effectifs d’environ 4% dans toutes les divisions, soit quelque 2.000 postes.
Après avoir récemment recruté l’un des dirigeants de Superfund, Helmut Spitzer (lire notre article du 18 août), comme responsable du développement, l’autrichien FTC Capital a annoncé l’embauche du professeur d'économie allemand Bernd Scherer comme CIO.Ancien managing director chez Morgan Stanley à Londres et titulaire d’une chaire à l’Edhec, l’intéressé est un spécialiste de la gestion quantitative... tout comme le Roumain Stefanel Radu, qui été responsable de la recherche chez Kaiser Trading Group à Melbourne et qui rejoint FTC Capital comme head of research.
Selon L’Agefi qui fait référence à une source proche du dossier, HSBC a entamé des discussions en vue de céder sa filiale canadienne de gestion d’actifs dans le cadre d’une restructuration mondiale. Le journal local Globe and Mail évalue les actifs gérés par la filiale à environ 30 milliards de dollars canadiens, précise le quotidien.
Afin de protéger les détenteurs d’assurances vie en unités de compte contre de mauvaises surprises sur les marchés alors que leur contrat est proche de son échéance, DWS (groupe Deutsche Bank) a annoncé le 22 août le lancement de DWS Shift, une formule qui est couplée à un système de gestion de garantie, DWS Flexible Portfolio Insurance. Cette dernière a permis aux fonds ainsi gérés de se soustraire presque totalement aux dernières turbulences des marchés, voire d’afficher des résultats positifs, indique le gestionnaire.De plus, DWS Shift comporte une garantie par DWS Investments SA de 90 % des plus hauts atteints, valable sur la dernière année des fonds entrant dans le contrat. Au fur et à mesure, de nouveaux fonds avec une échéance plus lointaine sont lancés.Actuellement, DWS Shift couvre trois fonds (luxembourgeois à échéance avec des durées de 4,5, 5,5 et 6,5 ans. Le degré d’exposition est adapté en permanence à la situation du marché à la lumière d’une analyse des tendances et de leur volatilité des marchés.Pour ces trois fonds, le droit d’entrée peut aller jusqu'à 5 % et la commission forfaitaire de gestion se situe à 1,4 %. La commission forfaitaire de distribution se situe au maximum à 0,75 % pour le fonds DWS Shift 2015, 1 % pour le 2016 et 1,25 % pour le 2017. Parallèlement, la pénalité de sortie avant échéance se montera respectivement à un maximum de 0,75 %, 1 % et 1,25 %.
Selon les informations du Handelsblatt, Rolf Wiswesser, patron pour l’Allemagne du prestataire de services financiers AWD (groupe Swiss Life) remplacera dès cet automne Jürgen Vetter comme directeur de la distribution de l’assureur Ergo (groupe Munich Ré). Ergo a été secoué ces derniers temps par de nombreuses affaires de conseils financiers erronés et des scandales d’ordre sexuel.
HSBC France vient d’annoncer la sortie des rapports Développement Durable 2010 du Groupe HSBC France et du Groupe HSBC en français, sur son site hsbc.fr. HSBC France rappelle, dans un comuniqué publié le 22 août, que ses initiatives et ses actions se sont de nouveau structurées autour des trois axes de sa stratégie. Dans le cadre du premier d’entre eux portant sur l’intégration des enjeux du développement durable aux métiers de la banque, deux fonds ISR ont été insérés dans la gamme cœur du réseau particuliers, précise l'établissement dont l’encours global ISR en épargne salariale a augmenté de 32% en un an, à 79,3 millions d’euros à fin 2010. Le deuxième axe portant sur la maîtrise de l’empreinte environnementale de la banque a également permis à HSBC d’atteindre en 2010, tous les objectifs de réduction de son empreinte environnementale directe - voyages en avion mis à part. Enfin, le troisième axe portant sur l’engagement des collaborateurs HSBC France par la sensibilisation et le mécénat a conduit HSBC France à dédier en 2010 plus de 1,8 million d’euros - soit une augmentation de 50% par rapport à 2009 – et à des programmes caritatifs, auxquels près de 40% des collaborateurs de HSBC France ont participé pour un total de près de 14 000 heures. La banque a également lancé, entre autres, un programme de mécénat environnemental pour HSBC France, prévoyant notamment de soutenir des recherches sur l’impact du changement climatique sur les métiers de la finance.
finaréa, société spécialisée dans le capital-risque annonce son entrée au capital de la société LC Outdoor, agence média spécialisée dans la gestion et la location d’espaces ublicitaires extérieurs sur l’île de La Réunion, dans le cadre d’une augmentation de capital de 350.000 euros.
Selon nos informations, les trois collaborateurs qui avaient quitté la société de multigestion HDF Finance en début d’année (lire article du 7 février 2011) ont rejoint Theam, la structure issue de la fusion entre Harewood Asset Management et l’équipe Sigma de BNP Paribas Asset Management, filiale à 100 % de BNP Paribas Investment Partners (lire article du 16 mars 2011).Ainsi, Eric Debonnet, l’ancien directeur de la recherche et de la gestion des risques de HDF Finance, devient head alternative investments chez Theam. David Gilleron, qui était co-directeur de la gestion actions de la boutique française, a de son côté été nommé co-CIO alternative multi management au sein de la filiale de BNP Paribas IP. Thierry de Rycke, précédemment co-directeur de la gestion – taux et devises, valeur relative de HDF Finance, a lui aussi rejoint Theam.Les trois transfuges de HDF Finance retrouvent Gilles Guérin, le CEO de Theam, qui avait fait un passage éclair chez HDF en tant que directeur général et vice-président du directoire. Pour mémoire, l’activité de Theam se structure autour de quatre spécialités, dont la gestion alternative, qui représente 5,4 milliards d’euros selon les chiffres de mars 2011. Les autres sont la gestion de fonds garantis et protégés (25,1 milliards d’euros), l’activité ETF et gestion indicielle (15,9 milliards d’euros) et la gestion systématique active (2,4 milliards d’euros).
Investec vient de lancer un fonds obligataire africain pour les coresponsables du fixed income John Stopford et Andre Roux, qui est lui basé en Afrique du Sud, rapporte Investment Week.Le fonds Invectec GSF Africa High Income Bond est une sicav domiciliée au Luxembourg avec un rendement indicatif de 9,4%, sur la base du portefeuille géré par John Stopford. La majorité du portefeuille sera investi dans de la dette corporate et souveraine sud-africaine, avec une très large exposition à au rand sud-africain. Le reste du portefeuille comprendra des expositions au fixed income d’autres pays africains comme le Kenya, le Nigeria, l’Angola et le Ghana. Un tiers du portefeuille est noté A, un tiers BBB, le reliquat étant distribué entre BBB- et BB+.