p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } James Syme, head of global emerging markets, has announced that Barings has repositioned its emerging markets strategies for the short to mid-term, to focus more on companies, particularly in South Korea, which are benefiting from global growth. Bets on household retail consumption is beginning to be integrated into the share prices on several markets.Currently, the portfolio includes South Korean exporters of refined materials, naval shipyards, automobile and technology manufacturers, Indian IT service providers and Taiwan consumer electronics companies. Barings is underweight on energy, but overweight on oil; in the materials sector, the British manager has a bias for bulk metals such as iron and nickel, as well as gold.Barings also says the strength of emerging economies represents a supporting factor for the currencies of these countries, which increases local purchasing power.Inflation remains a cause for concern, particularly in Indonesia and India. Returns on equities in these markets has been high, but valuations may be attractive elsewhere, particularly in Russia and South Korea.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Barrie Whitman, manager of the Credit Opportunities Fund and head of the high yield team, will become the principal manager of the Threadneedle European High Yield Bond Fund (GB0009692087, GBP1.03bn in assets as of 31 December), which was previously managed by Roman Gaiser. Gaiser has resigned to return to Switzerland, according to a spokesperson for Threadneedle. Whitman, who set up the high yield strategy 12 years ago, will be assisted by Michael Poole for the management of the fund.Gaiser also co-managed the Credit Opportunities Fund (see Newsmanagers of 7 and 11 May 2009) with Whitman and Alasdair Ross.According to Funds People, Gaiser may soon join another London management firm.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Barings, BlackRock, Fidelity, Franklin Templeton, Investec, Schroders, and Silkinvest were invested in Egypt to varying extends as of the end of last year, according to Fund Strategy.The highest relative exposures are for the MENA fund from Barings (USD21.1m), with 21.7%, and the African Lions Fund from Silkinvest (21.67%).The Schroder ISF Middle East Fund (USD321m) was underweight on Egyptian equities as of the end of December, with 8.7%, where the benchmark index has a weight of 9.1% for Egypt.At BlackRock, exposure of the Frontier Investment Trust was “very minimal,” lower than the 1.6% allocation to Jordan.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Investment Week reports that Guillermo Osses, formerly of Pimco, has joined HSBC Global Asset Management as head of emerging markets debt (EMD).Osses replaces Peter Marber, who had been appointed interim head until a replacement could be found for the three EMD managers, Denise Simon, Arif Joshi and George Varino, who moved to Lazard Asset Management last September.Marber will remain in the group as chairman for management of EMD operations and the development committee.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 31 January, Union Bancaire Privée (UBP) announced that it has recruited a complete team from Majid Al Futtaim Asset Management, a Dubai-based management firm. The five specialists, including two senior portfolio managers (Habib Oueijan, director, and Mahmoud El Safty), and three analysts, will continue to manage their MENA fund, which has recently been transferred to the Swiss firm, at UBP.In 2010, UBP recruited 11 investment professionals for emerging markets, and launched three equities funds (Emerging Europe, Turkey, and Russia) in connection with this theme, as well as a corporate bond fund and a fund of hedge funds.
SAM, the investment boutique focused on sustainability investing, part of Robeco, has announced the departure of its CIO, Stephanie Feigt and a series of appointments.Effective immediately, the head of portfolio management, Raimer Baumann, and head of research functions, Daniel Wild, will be represented on SAM’s executive committee. Neil Johnson, previously in charge of sales at SAM USA, has been appointed head of global clients & marketing and will also join the executive committee. He takes over the position that was vacant since the appointment of Michael Baldinger as CEO. The company’s executive team now consists of Michael Baldinger (CEO), Rainer Baumann (head of portfolio management), Stefan Gordijn (COO), Neil Johnson (head global clients & marketing), Andrew Musters (head of private equity) and Daniel Wild (head of research).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) is launching two retail volatility funds on the British market, the Volatility Controlled Cautious Managed Fund and the Volatility Controlled Balanced Managed Fund, two vehicles which offer the same levels of volatility that would ordinarily be expected for cautious and balanced funds, Fundstrategy reports.RBS says that independent financial advisers refuse to recommend 33% of balanced managed products and 28% of cautious managed products, as they consider the risk too high. But this does not prevent these advisers from investing 44% of their clients’ capital in cautious and diversified funds in second half 2010. A minority (8%) estimate that this percentage may decline in first half 2011.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Fundstrategy reports that JP Morgan Asset Management has launched a low-cost actively-managed fund, the JPM UK Active Index Plus Fund (a modified version of the UK Active 350), whose total expense ratio (TER) is 0.55%. The product may compete with passive management products.Management fees have been lowered to 0.25% per year, with set costs of 0.15% per year. A performance commission of 10% will be limited to as to prevent the TER for the fund from exceeding 0.55%.A head at JP Morgan AM says that the product is the first, or at any rate one of the very first funds to comply with RDR regulations, in that all advisory commissions have been removed.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Investment Week reports that Fidelity International will launch an opportunistic fund on the British retail market on 10 February, which will be dedicated to British small caps. The new product aimed at retail clients will integrate the UK Opportunities fund, which is reserved for institutional clients. The fund will include 100 shares, 80% from small firms, while the remainder will be divided between mid- and large caps. The benchmark index will be the Hoare Govett Smaller Companies ex IC. No position will exceed 4% of the portfolio.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Alexander Gunz, who was most recently head of equities strategy and the edition of best ideas reports for institutional investors at Edison Invesment Research, has been recruited by Heptagon Capital (USD3.3bn in assets) as a fund manager in the asset management division, Hedge Week reports.Heptagon has also recruited Sebastian Hybinette, who was previously chief investment officer for a large family office in the United Kingdom, where he was in charge of a portfolio composed of private equity, hedge funds, real estate and publicly traded assets, as vice president of the ultra-high net worth investor (UNHWI) group, mainly to serve Scandinavian clients.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Richard Baker, president of the Managed Funds Association, on Monday asked the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to provide clear directives for its approximately 3,000 members, including many hedge funds, on the use of the services of “expert networks,” which have been the subject of a vast Federal investigation into suspected insider trading, the Wall Street Journal reports.The association is seeking to establish clearly whether or not hedge funds are allowed to use the often internal information which is provided by these expert networks, which employ as independent consultants people who may be employees of publicly-traded companies.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The fund sector in Europe has not paid enough attention to non-financial risks, such as liquidity, counterparty, compliance, and misinformation risks, and has not measured the operational consequences of financial innovation, the Edhec-Risk Institute finds in a new study undertaken with Caceis, by the research chair in “risks and regulation of the fund industry in Europe.” “Even the UCITS IV directive itself does not sufficiently take into account the operational consequences of financial innovation. Although investment funds are internationally diversified, use more derivatives and other complex strategies, and have developed in many areas, and although European regulations and recommendations have admitted, or fostered these changes, no study of their impact has been undertaken, and no regulations have been modified as a result,” the authors of the study continue. The Edhec-Risk Institute finds that “although member states of the European Union have not reached agreement on reforms, a distinction must be drawn between UCITS funds which are not exposed to non-financial risks, and more modern UCITS funds, which are potentially more exposed to non-financial risks.”
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } As of 1 January, the former Baklan Baltikum Fonds from Berenberg Bank has absorbed the Berenberg Emerging Ukraine fund. The merged fund will become known as the Berenberg Osteuropa; the absorption will take place at one Osteuropa share for every two Emerging Ukraine shares, Das Investment reports, citing manager Peter Reichel.The Ukraine fund had only EUR7m in assets, and some institutional investors had been using the fund for short investment durations which hurt the performance of a product which was also penalised by transaction costs in Ukraine of 1% to 1.5%. The Ukrainian market is also of limited size, with an average daily trading volume of only EUR10m.The Osteuropa fund may hold 0% to 20% Ukrainian equities (currently 2.5%). The preferred countries for the manager are Kazakhstan, Romania and Croatia.
Avec l’aide de Mercer IC, AG2R - La Mondiale vient de retenir la société de gestion suisse, Unigestion pour gérer un portefeuille de 100 millions d’euros, sous forme de mandat, investi en multigestion alternative.
Le fonds de dotation du Louvre (120 millions d’euros d’actifs), a récemment choisi BNP Paribas Asset Management pour gérer un mandat de 60 millions d’euros sur les obligations investment grade de la zone euro, et a ajouté quatre autres fonds obligataires actifs à la liste. Mercer Investment Consulting à Paris et Amadeis ont conseillé le fonds de dotation du Louvre. PIMCO et Loomis Sayles & Co héritent de 6 millions d’euros chacun sur des fonds d’obligations high yield tandis que Investec et Pictet ont été sélectionnés sur la dette des pays émergents (5 millions d’euros chacun dans des fonds ouverts). La prochaine étape, selon le directeur Thierry Brevet, sera de sélectionner des produits actions actifs sur les marchés émergents, et explique: « Dans les actions des marchés émergents, je pense qu’il y a de l’alpha pour la gestion active. Et ce seront les marchés émergents mondiaux, car nous n’avons pas la taille pour investir au niveau régional.
Selon SG CIB, ce sont 3 millions de barils par jour de pétrole brut et de produits raffinés qui sont à risque dans le Canal de Suez et l'oléoduc Sudmed
Portée par un différentiel de taux avantageux et des positions acheteuses spéculatives, la monnaie unique a crû de 6,3 % en trois semaines face au dollar
Cinq groupes ont profité de l’accalmie pour placer 3,9 milliards d’euros d’obligations la semaine dernière. Les carnets d’ordres ont été bien remplis mais pas forcément par des investisseurs de qualité. Compte tenu du risque souverain, les corporates ont offert des rendements élevés.
La Commission européenne et la Hongrie, qui préside actuellement l’Union européenne, soutiendraient selon le Financial Times Deutschland la chancelière allemande Angela Merkel dans son combat pour mener des réformes structurelles sur les régimes sociaux. La Commission prône l’allongement de l’âge de départ à la retraite en lien avec l’allongement de la durée de vie, la réduction des déficits publics et la hausse du taux d’emploi à 75%.
Un candidat allemand à la tête de la BCE serait le mieux accepté par l’ensemble des pays de la zone euro, indique une enquête réalisée par le quotidien en association avec l’institut de sondage Harris. Le président de la Bundesbank, Axel Weber, serait ainsi le candidat qui aurait le soutien en Europe le plus important pour succéder à Jean-Claude Trichet, dont le mandat expire fin octobre. Jusqu’à présent, les déclarations très restrictives en termes de politique monétaire d’Axel Weber l’avaient desservi, mais il semble que la rigueur budgétaire et le dynamisme de la croissance allemande aient retourné l’opinion sur le sujet, selon le sondage.
La société de private equity Advent International a prévu d’investir 200 millions de livres dans le courtier d’assurance britannique Towergate, ainsi que dans Cullum Capital Ventures, détenu par le PDG et fondateur de Towergate. L’opération est conditionnée à la levée de capitaux bancaires et obligataires d’ici la mi-février. Le courtier prévoit de lever au total 930 millions de livres (360 millions de livres de crédits bancaires et 570 millions d’obligations).
L’acteur du cloud gaming a levé 10 millions de dollars auprès de deux actionnaires de référence, les fonds de capital risque, JVP et MK Capital, qui rejoignent Xenia au capital de la société.
Les traders sur les matières premières ont exhorté Bruxelles lundi à rouvrir les opérations sur le marché du carbone dans les prochains jours. La fermeture du marché a un impact sur les transactions physiques, une vente de 300.000 tonnes de carbone en Allemagne ayant été annulée aujourd’hui.
L’inflation s’est accélérée plus fortement qu’attendu en janvier dans la zone euro, restant pour le deuxième mois consécutif au-delà de l’objectif fixé par la Banque centrale européenne (BCE). Selon une première estimation publiée par Eurostat, l’inflation ressort à 2,4% sur un an dans les 17 pays de la zone, contre 2,2% en décembre et un consensus de 2,3%. L’objectif de la BCE, qui publie sa décision de politique monétaire, est de maintenir l’inflation très légèrement en dessous de 2%.
Les ventes au détail en Allemagne ont reculé de 0,3% en décembre en termes réels par rapport à novembre, selon les chiffres publiés lundi par l’Office fédéral de la statistique. Les économistes de marché attendaient une hausse de 2% sur un mois. En novembre, les ventes avaient reculé de 1,9% par rapport à septembre.
Moody’s a annoncé avoir abaissé d’un cran la note souveraine de l’Egypte et l’avoir assortie d’une perspective négative, après les manifestations demandant le départ du chef de l’Etat. La note est ramenée à Ba2, notamment en raison d’une hausse importante du risque politique, précise Moody’s, qui notait auparavant l’Egypte Ba1 avec une perspective stable. L’agence de notation pourrait encore abaisser cette note à un horizon de 18 mois.