La SPGP s’apprête à compléter sa gamme de fonds d’investissement en lançant, le 7 mars prochain, Sélection Small Caps. Ce fonds de stock-picking est exclusivement investi dans des petites capitalisations, inférieures à 500 millions d’euros, avec un univers d’investissement européen dont un biais français marqué. En chiffres, le fonds sera ainsi investi à 75 % en titres de la communauté européenne dont 60 % minimum en actions françaises. «Le portefeuille restera plutôt concentré avec un cinquantaine de valeurs, dont la capitalisation sera plutôt proche de 300 millions d’euros mais évitera les titres illiquides, avec des flottants insuffisants, explique Roger Polani, directeur général délégué qui cogèrera le fonds avec Gonzague Ruchaud. En dépit du bon comportement récent des petites et moyennes capitalisations, Roger Polani estime que le «timing» pour lancer ce fonds n’est pas mauvais. Cela dit, le fonds intègre la classification diversifiée pour permettre aux gérants de couvrir le portefeuille en cas de tendance durablement dégradée. En termes d’encours, la gestion compte également limiter la taille du fonds à 30 millions d’euros, sachant qu’il devrait débuter avec 4 ou 5 millions d’actifs d’euros «d’amorçage». En outre, la société exonère pendant au moins six mois les droits d’entrée de l’OPCVM destiné essentiellement aux particuliers via les conseillers en gestion de patrimoine, et les plateformes. Sélection Small Caps rejoint plusieurs fonds actions, dont le poids lourd de la gamme, R.P. Sélection Mid Cap, investi dans des capitalisations de moins de 5 milliards d’euros, et dont l’encours tend vers les 100 millions d’euros. En taille, ce fonds est le seul investi en actions à rivaliser avec les deux produits obligataires de la maison, RP Sélection Convertibles et Oblig Corporate 1-2 ½ Y euro, dont les actifs sous gestion sont respectivement de 125 et 82 millions d’euros. Il est vrai qu’outre leurs bons résultats, notamment pour RP Sélection Convertibles, ces deux fonds sont proposés à des investisseurs institutionnels, segment de clientèle que souhaite désormais développer la SPGP. A ce jour, la société affiche près d’un milliard d’actifs sous gestion dont 750 millions d’euros dans des OPCVM et le solde en gestion privée. Caractéristiques du fonds Code ISIN : FR0011001460. Commission de souscription : 1 % (exonération temporaire pendant au moins 6 mois)Frais de gestion fixe annuels : 2,4 % Commission de surperformance annuelle : 10 % au-delà de 10 % Montant de la part : 100 euros
Le fonds d’investissement français Axa Private Equity a annoncé le 28 février dans un communiqué le rachat d’une part de 10% dans la société espagnole de transport et stockage de pétrole CLH (Compania Logistica de Hydrocarburos) auprès du groupe de stations service Disa."La transaction valorise la société à environ 3,6 milliards d’euros», a précisé Axa PE, ce qui suppose donc un prix d’acquisition de 360 millions. Le fonds d’investissement se félicite de devenir ainsi «l’un des actionnaires de référence de CLH», derrière le groupe pétrolier espagnol Cepsa, qui détient une part de 14,15%. Les groupes Oman Oil, AMP Capital y Repsol contrôlent déjà environ 10% de CLH chacun, mais Repsol a indiqué mi-janvier qu’il avait chargé une banque d’affaires de l’aider à en vendre une partie. Le reste du capital est détenu par des banques et d’autres groupes pétroliers. «Par cette opération, Axa Private Equity signe un nouvel engagement significatif sur le marché espagnol des infrastructures, suite à la récente acquisition d’une participation stratégique dans Autopista Trados 45", souligne le fonds. Il s’agit aussi pour Axa PE d’"investir dans des actifs stratégiques d’infrastructure, permettant de bénéficier d’une protection contre l’inflation et d’une faible volatilité».
Selon Asian Investor, CCB International Asset Management, qui fait partie de la China Consruction Bank International à Hong Kong, vient de lancer un fonds obligataire libellé en renminbi.Le fonds investira en priorité dans des instruments libellés en renminbi émis à Hong Kong et ne comprendra pas d’obligations synthétiques ou de produits structurés.
Aberdeen Asset Management has created a fund providing dedicated exposure to local currency short duration Asian bonds.The Aberdeen Global – Asian Local Currency Short Duration Bond Fund is domiciled in Luxembourg and managed by Aberdeen’s Asian Fixed Income team in Singapore which manages over USD6.4 billion in assets.The fund will invest mostly in sovereign bonds, across as many as ten different countries in Asia ex-Japan, with an expected initial duration of less than 1.65 years (making it relatively insulated from current inflation threats). The average credit rating will be A-minus. The benchmark will be the iBoxx – Asia ex Japan sovereign 1-3 years index.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Since 24 February, the listings of the London Stock Exchange (LSE) include four more ETF funds from Credit Suisse. Only one of these, the Global Alternative Energy, is a synthetic replication fund, while the other three (Fed Funds Effective Rate, Eonia and MSCI World) are physical replication products.Pimco (Allianz Global Investors group) has also listed the Irish-registered ETF PIMCO Euro Enhanced Short Maturity Source ETF (IE00B5ZR2157). This is the first actively-managed ETF to be listed on the LSE.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The German BVI association of asset management firms on 28 February announced that it has admitted IntReal International Real Estate Kapitalanlagegessellschaft mbH, a wholly-owned subsidiar of Warbirg-Henderson KAG, which manages five open-ended real estate funds with assets of EUR228.5m as of the end of 2010, as a new member. The executive board at the firm consists of Eitel Coridaß, Henning Klöppelt, Detlef Mertens and Michael Schneider.With this new member, the BVI now has 83 “full” members, of whom 65 have the status of KAG, 12 asset management firms, and 6 holding companies, which manage a total of over EUR1.8trn in open-ended funds, institutional funds and mandates.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } From 1 March, Wulf Matthias, a board member at Credit Suisse Deutschland, will join Banque Sarasin in Frankfurt, to serve ultra-high net worth individuals (UHNWI) and family offices in Germany. Matthias will report directly to Frank Niehage, chairman of the board at Banque Sarasin.The Swiss private bank has had a branch in Nuremberg since October 2009. It recently announced that it is the largest foreign financial services provider in Germany to become profitable less than three years after receiving a full banking license for the country.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 25 February, the CNMV issued registrations for nine funds launched by the Swiss management firm Bellevue Asset Management, an affiliate of Bellevue Group. Sales in Spain will be conducted by Banco Inversis.The funds, all sub-funds of the group’s Luxembourg Sicav, are the following: BB African Opportunities, BB Biotech, BB Entrepreneur Europe, BB European Opportunities, BB Global Macro, BB Healthcare, BB Meditech, BB Selection and BB Silk Road Opportunities.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Dow Jones Credit Suisse hedge fund index rose 0.69% in January, with positive results for six strategies out of ten. The best-performing sector was convertibles arbitrage, with gains of 2.16% for the month, followed by event-driven strategies (1.80%) and equity market neutral (1.79%). However, dedicated short bias and global macro lost 0.83% and 0.77%, respectively.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 25 February 2011, the CNMV issues a sales license for Spain for the Echiquier Global fund (FR0010859769 and FR0010868174) from La Financière de l’Echiquier. The distributor for Spain will be Allfunds Bank.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The British asset management firm M&G Investments is now offering the new M&G European Inflation Corporate Bond Fund, managed by Jim Leaviss and Ben Lord, which invests in investment grade corporate bonds, with the objective of generating performance at least equivalent to the European inflation rate, for sale in Germany, Das Investment reports.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Schroders Germany has released the European Small & Mid Cap Value sub-fund of its Luxembourg Sicav Schroder Isf, launched on 30 November 2010, based on the seven-year track record of a similar Swiss-registered fund, for sale in Germany. The manager remains the same: Caspar Benz, assisted by Daniel Lenz as co-manager.As its name indicates, the value fund focuses on European small and midcaps, including shares from central and eastern Europe and Russian companies, with total capitalisations of EUR500m to EUR10bn. The portfolio of 70-100 positions is managed with a stock-picking approach, and a good deal of freedom to diverge from the benchmark index (MSCI Europe Small & Mid Cap TR).CharacteristicsName: Schroder ISF European Small & Mid Cap ValueISIN code: LU0559386015Front-end fee: 5%Management commission: 1.5%Minimal initial subscription: EUR1000
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In a letter to shareholders, the German asset management firm KanAm has announced that the freeze on redemptions from it open-ended real estate fund grundinvest will probably be extended for another year, from 6 May 2011, the Börsen-Zeitung reports. The move comes as a result of depreciations of assets, tax charges, poor returns (0.3% in 2010), and legislative changes in preparation.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Italian Fund Hub, an internet platform which is intended to bring together data on funds from asset management firms members of Assogestioni, the Italian association of asset managers, has been a mitigated success, Plus, the money supplement of Il Sole – 24 Ore reports. Of 74 financial groups registered with the association, only 18 have released information on the site so far, though among them are the major players in the sector: Eurizon Capital, Generali, Pioneer, Allianz and Mediolanum. The cost of the service is not prohibitive: from EUR1,440 to EUR7,200 per year. The idea is to offer investors a single location where information on funds from various asset management firms can be found.
Bernard Madoff has claimed in a series of taped phone calls with a reporter for New York magazine that his Ponzi scheme, in which investors lost USD65bn, started off as a legitimate business that earned 15 per cent annual returns through much of the 1980s, according to the Financial Times. He said that he started defrauding investors in the early 1990s when a period of low market volatility made it hard for his strategy to work. “I thought I could extricate myself after a short period of time. But I just couldn’t,” he said.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Long/short equities strategies are expected to benefit from lower levels of correlation between securities, according to fund of hedge fund managers surveyed by Standard & Poor’s Fund Services. As correlation falls, fund of fund managers say in the most recent survey by Standard & Poor’s, hedge funds may generate alpha due to the dispersion between sectors and businesses. Funds of funds finished 2010 in a good position, with gains of 3.5% in fourth quarter, and returns of 5% for the year, according to statistics from HFN.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } BlackRock and the Ireland-based NTR group on 28 February announced that they have signed a strategic agreement to launch a new investment platform specialised in renewable energies.Partners at NTR will join the BlackRock Alternative Investors (BAI) investment platform, which currently manages more than USD110bn in assets in various alternative strategies. As a part of the partnership, NTR will provide market analysis to the investment team, and will have an economic interest in some of the products of the new investment platform. The CEO of NTR, Jim Barry, will serve as chief investment officer of the new BAI unit, and will be in charge of developing the platform.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } BlackRock Advisors (UK) Ltd on 28 February announced the admission to trading on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) of two UCITS-compliant sustainable development ETFs, using the Dow Jones Sustainability Indixes (DJSI0 from the Swiss firm SAM Sustainable Asset Management (Robeco group) as underlying.These physical replication products are registered in Ireland, as sub-funds of the Sicav iShares II plc.The “global” fund, iShares Dow Jones Global Sustainability Screened (IGSC, IE00B57X3V84), replicates the Dow Jones Sustainability World Enlarged index ex alcohol, tobacco, gambling, armament & firearms and adult entertainment. It charges 0.60%.The European version of the product excluding “sensitive” sectors, the iShares Dow Jones Europe Sustainability Screened fund (IESE, IE00B52VJ196), replicates the DJSE index with the same sectoral exclusions (tobacco, alcohol, gambling, armaments & firearms, and adult entertainment). The management commission is 0.45%.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Scottish asset management firm Baillie Gifford has decided to announce a provisional closure to new investors of its emerging markets fund. The soft close will take place on 6 April, fundstrategy reports. The Emerging Markets Growth fund, which recently topped GBP1bn in assets, is managed by Richard Sneller. The manager says that liquidity has become a real problem for the fund, driving the management team to take significant stakes in increasingly small businesses.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } F&C will launch an absolute return fund focused on Europe, which will be managed by Randeep Grewal, who has recently been recruited by the British asset management firm, Investment Week reports. The Thames River European Absolute Return fund will be available from 1 March, and will be offered as a UCITS III-compliant OEIC vehicle, domiciled in Dublin. The manager will select 10 promising investment themes, and three positions per theme.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Financial Times Fund Management reports that the Securities and Exchange Commission will probably pass a law requiring European asset management firms with clients in the United States for over USD25m to register with it by July, or to withdraw from the US market. The move comes despite lobbying by the European fund and asset management association (EFAMA) against the proposed legislation.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Swiss federal financial market surveillance authority (Finma) on 28 February announced that it has reprimanded HSBC Private Bank (Switzerland) for a data theft which took place between 2006 and 2007. Finma holds the bank responsible “due to insufficient internal organisation and control of IT activities.” The investigation, opened in March 2010, sought to determine how a data theft of such a scale could have taken place and been carried out, Finma announced on Monday. According to figures from the bank, 15,000 of its clients were affected by the data theft, committed by Hervé Falciani, a French former IT technician. In addition to this, 9,000 closed accounts were compromised. In light of the findings of the investigation, Finma requires that “HSBC continue in the direction it has begun, and complete the process of putting in place necessary measures to establish the required IT security.” Finma will monitor these measures, and “will oversee their establishment without delay.”
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } For 2010, the Bellevue Group has posted net profits of CHF1.53m, compared with losses of CHF95.06m in 2009, though the cost/income ratio deteriorated to 91.4% from 85.2%.As of the end of the year, total assets were down to CHF4.1bn, from CHF4.85bn. Net outflows totalled CHF526m, compared with CHF520m.The group’s affiliate Bellevue Asset Management, for its part, saw losss of CHF2.3m, compared with CHF1.4m. New niche strategies, particularly entrepreneurial strategies, allowed the firm to raise CHF200m, but those inflows were insufficient to offset net redemptions from historic strategies in the area of health (capital reduction at the affiliate BB Biotech), further structural adjustments, and negative market effects.Bellevue Group will propose a dividend payment for 2010 of CHF4 per share from reserves at its general shareholders’ meeting on 21 March.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Marco Van Bussel at the end of January joined the 13-member global real estate securities management team at First State Investments (UK) as a portfolio manager. He was previously in charge of mandates focused on European real estate securities at Macquarie Fund Management in London. Van Bussel will continue to be based in London with First State, and will be in charge of continental European and UK real estate securities. He will report to Andrew Nicholas, head of global property securities.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The BGF European Income sub-fund of the Luxembourg Sicav BlackRock Global Funds (61 funds) has been issued a sales license for Spain by the CNMV, Funds People reports. The product, which aims for average annual returns of at least 110% of the MSCI Europe index, is managed by Andreas Zoellinger and Alice Gaskell. It invests at least 70% of its portfolio (40-70 positions) with a bottom-up approach in businesses domiciled in Europe or which realise most of their activities on the continent.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Investment Week reports that Pimco has launched a high yield bond fund, whose largest allocations will be dedicated to ABS, RMBS and CMBS. The Select UK Income Bond Fund is a UCITS-compliant vehicle, which will be managed by Mike Amey, and which will aim for gross returns of 5% per year. The fund will invest as a top priority in investment grade rated British assets. About 50% of the allocation is dedicated to ABS and MBS, 30% to investment grade credit (largely from the UK), 10% to high yield, and 10% to emerging markets debt.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In its half-yearly evaluation, released on Monday, the Financial Services Authority (FSA) esimates that arbitrage funds present a limited risk to the stability of the financial system, Agefi reports. Based on a study undertaken between April and the end of September 2010, it finds that funds surveyed have a high level of liquidity, and 55% of portfolios could be liquidated in under five days. According to statistics collected by the FSA, five institutions account for more than 60% of net exposure to credit risk, the newspaper adds.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The equities managers Stephen Corr and James Kinghorn will join the international equities team at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP), led by Mike McNaught-Davis, on 3 March and 14 March, respectively. The team on 4 January already gained Craig Bonthron, who previously managed the Global Water Fund at Kleinwort Benson, and who will be in charge of the management of ethical and environmental products, under Johnny Russell. Corr previously worked at BlackRock, where he was director and portfolio manager. Kinghorn was senior manager for North American and Latin American equities at Scottish Investment Trust.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Assets under management at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP) as of 31 December totalled GBP146.2bn, compared with GBP141.7bn as of the end of December 2009. Gross inflows totalled GBP3.1bn.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } La Tribune reports that the pension fund for Louisiana municipal police employees have filed a lawsuit against Nyse-Euronext. The fund claims that the proposed deal with Deutsche Börse does not value the transatlantic market operator at a fair price.