Le capital-investisseur américain Lone Star tarde à trouver des acquéreurs pour la banque allemande IKB qu’il a achetée pour 137 millions d’euros à la KfW en 2007, rapporte Cinco Días. Selon les proches du dossier, les candidatures sérieuses pourraient ne se manifester que dans quelques mois. Cela dit, les garanties publiques obtenues par Lone Star pour IKB expirent en 2012.
Le hedge fund Macquarie Asian Alpha Fund de la banque australienne Macquarie a enregistré en 2010 une performance de 15,97 %, indique Hedgeweek. Investi selon la stratégie du market neutral equity, le fonds a triplé ses encours à 640 millions de dollars australiens l’an dernier.
HSBC annonce la nomination de Ronald Tham au poste de responsable de son family office à Hong Kong, une fonction nouvellement créée par la banque, indique Finance Asia. Par ailleurs, HSBC a recruté Roger de Basto en tant que head of transaction management for equity capital markets pour la région Asie Pacifique. Il sera également basé à Hong Kong, tout comme Rajeev Sahney, qui devient head of the corporate sector group pour l’Asie Pacifique.
Selon les proches du dossier, le fonds RREEF Infrastructure de la Deutsche Bank a acquis pour un montant non divulgué une participation de 49 % dans trois sociétés espagnoles qui possèdent cinq fermes éoliennes dans la province de Castille-Leon, rapporte Cotizalia.Le vendeur est le promoteur immobilier Rafael González Vallinas, patron d’Inversiones Empresariales Vapat, qui va ainsi céder jusqu'à 200 mégawatts de puissance installée au fonds allemand.
Le gestionnaire de fonds de Julius Baer, Swiss & Global Asset Management, a vendu la participation de 31 % qu’il détenait depuis sept ans dans la banque privée indépendante espagnole Atlas Capital. Expansión rapporte que cette transaction s’est effectuée à la valeur comptable alors que l’acquisition s'était opérée sur la base de 3 millions d’euros.A fin 2010, l’encours d’Atlas Capital portait sur 660 millions d’euros gérés pour le compte de 2.400 clients. Le bénéfice net s’est situé à 1,14 million d’euros.Avec la sortie du groupe Julius Baer, le capital est contrôlé par les 14 associés fondateurs, le principal actionnaire étant l’administrateur délégué Jorge Sanz.
Bankinter a annoncé le lancement du Fondo Bankinter Eurostoxx Inverso, un produit actions qui, comme son nom l’indique, cherche à répliquer l'évolution inverse de celle de l’indice Euro Stoxx 50. La durée minimale de détention recommandée est de 1 an.Ce fonds de gestion passive, qui a été enregistré le 16 décembre mais créé le 9 octobre 2008, investira en futures et sera autorisé à placer jusqu'à 10 % de son actif dans d’autres fonds.Caractéristiques :Dénomination : Bankinter Eurostoxx InversoCode Isin : ES0164585004Commission de gestion 1 %Souscription minimale : 60
Carmignac Gestion a annoncé, vendredi 21 janvier, l’arrivée de Marco Fiorini au sein de son équipe commerciale. Il y occupera le poste de directeur de la clientèle professionnelle Suisse et aura pour mission de développer la présence de la société de gestion de la Place Vendôme auprès de la clientèle professionnelle sous la responsabilité de Davide Fregonese, directeur de la clientèle professionnelle Europe, précise un communiqué.Agé de 40 ans, Marco Fiorini occupait jusqu’ici la fonction de directeur général, responsable de la clientèle professionnelle, de Clariden Leu Asset Management.
La Banque cantonale de Zurich (BCZ ou ZKB) a continué de croître dans le secteur du private banking. «En 2008 et 2009, nous avons rentré près de 26 milliards de francs suisses de capitaux nets. L’an dernier, un peu plus de 10 milliards de francs suisses», a déclaré le CEO Martin Scholl dans un entretien accordé à la «Sonntagszeitung» (édition du 23 janvier).La banque entend encore accroître ses positions dans le private banking. Elle veut renforcer ses activités de placement ainsi que de gestion de fortune et étayer ses activités de négoce. La banque vise une collecte nette de quelque 10 milliards de francs suisses en 2011 mais a ramené ses objectifs de rendement de fonds propres dans une fourchette de 9 à 12%, contre 10 à 13% précédemment.
Dans le cadre de son activité de third party marketing (TPM), la Compagnie Financière Jacques Cœur (CFJC) fournit aux sociétés de gestion une aide à la commercialisation de ses produits auprès d'investisseurs professionnels. Dans un entretien avec Newsmanagers, Alain Tanneur, membre du Conseil de Surveillance de la société, analyse ce métier en pleine expansion sur un marché français qui attire de plus en plus de sociétés de gestion étrangères et revient sur les grands projets de la CFJC.
Le gestionnaire helvétique Lombard Odier Investment Managers (LOIM) a annoncé le lancement du fonds obligataire coordonné 5Bs Bond Fund, un produit luxembourgeois géré activement qui investit en obligations d’entreprise notée aussi bien BBB que BB. Le benchmark est un indice à pondération fondamentale qui, contrairement aux indices pondérés en fonction de la capitalisation, n’accorde pas davantage de pondération aux entreprises et aux secteurs affichant des niveaux plus élevés de dette. Le fonds sera géré par Kevin Corrigan, head of credit de LOIM.Stéphane Monier, CIO fixed income & currencies chez LOIM, explique que «le potentiel de l’univers «frontalier» couvrant le triple B et le double B a été jusqu'à présent négligé. En effet, beaucoup d’investisseurs sont obligés de vendre des titres en cas d’abaissement de la note, et ces obligations sont alors disponibles pour les investisseurs qui ne sont pas assujettis à une telle contrainte».Le fonds 5Bs a pour objectif de capturer un surcroît de performance en se focalisant sur les «anges déchus» dont la note a été abaissée à haut rendement et les «étoiles montantes» qui vont être promues à l’investment grade. «Ce n’est pas un marché de niche, puisque l’univers des obligations d’entreprises 5B représente trois fois le volume du haut rendement en produisant une performance supérieure à celle de l’investment grade avec une volatilité équivalente et une dose négligeable de risque supplémentaire», souligne Stéphane Monier.
Aberdeen Asset Management vient de lancer trois nouveaux compartiments de sa Sicav de droit luxembourgeois : Aberdeen Global - Emerging Markets Corporate Bond Fund, Aberdeen Global - Ethical World Equity Fund et Aberdeen Global – American Smaller Companies Fund.La société de gestion d’origine écossaise a d’ores et déjà levé auprès de ses clients 120 millions de dollars pour ces trois produits.L’Aberdeen Global – Emerging Markets Corporate Bond Fund, investi dans des obligations d’entreprises des marchés émergents, démarre avec 32,5 millions de dollars. Il sera géré par l’équipe dette émergente d’Aberdeen dirigée par Brett Diment qui a déjà investi à ce jour plus de 600 millions de dollars dans des obligations d’entreprises des marchés émergents sur un encours sous gestion total de plus de 5 milliards de dollars.De son côté, l’Aberdeen Global – Ethical World Equity Fund, qui part avec 54,5 millions de dollars, sera calqué sur le fonds éthique de droit britannique Aberdeen Ethical World Fund et sera géré par l’équipe actions mondiales de la société basée à Edimbourg. Composée de 14 personnes, cette équipe dirigée par Stephen Docherty gère plus de 1 milliard de dollars en fonction de critères environnementaux, sociaux et de gouvernance (ESG). Elle exclura dans le fonds les entreprises dont le chiffre d’affaires dépasse les 10 % dans les secteurs de l’alcool, le tabac, les jeux et l’armement et 5 % dans la pornographie. Les sociétés seront également étudiées en fonction de critères ESG.Enfin, le Aberdeen Global – American Smaller Companies Fund sera géré depuis Philadelphie par l’équipe actions Amérique du Nord composée de 12 personnes et dirigée par Paul Atkinson. L’équipe utilisera pour ce fonds investi dans des petites valeurs américaines une approche «bottom-up». Aberdeen AM précise qu’une fois qu’elle aura obtenu les autorisations nécessaires auprès des régulateurs nationaux, les fonds seront commercialisés en Europe et en Asie.
Aberdeen Asset Management has launched the Aberdeen Global - Emerging Markets Corporate Bond Fund, Aberdeen Global - Ethical World Equity Fund and the Aberdeen Global – American Smaller Companies Fund. The three funds are part of the Group’s Luxembourg-domiciled Aberdeen Global SICAV.The Scottish asset management company has secured over USD120 million of seeding for the three funds from existing clients - USD32.5 million for the emerging market corporate bond fund, USD54.5 million for the ethical world equity fund and USD41 million for the American smaller companies fund. Once authorised for sale by local regulators the funds will be actively marketed across Europe and parts of Asia.The Aberdeen Global - Emerging Markets Corporate Bond Fund will be managed by Aberdeen’s emerging market debt team, led by Brett Diment. Currently the team has over USD600 million invested in emerging market corporate bonds out of total assets under management of over USD5 billion.The Aberdeen Global - Ethical World Equity Fund will be based on the existing UK-domiciled, Aberdeen Ethical World Fund and will be managed by the Group’s global equity team based in Edinburgh. The 14-strong team, led by Stephen Docherty, manages over USD1 billion in Environmental, Social Corporate Governance (ESG) segregated mandates and pooled funds.The team will screen companies for involvement in alcohol, tobacco, pornographic products, gambling and weaponry. If a company’s turnover in any of these areas exceeds 10% (or 5% for pornography), it will automatically be excluded from the Fund’s investment universe. Companies will be also analysed on an ESG basis. The Aberdeen Global –American Smaller Companies Fund will be managed from Philadelphia by the Group’s 12-strong North American equity team, led by Paul Atkinson. The team will employ Aberdeen’s group-wide, disciplined, bottom-up equity investment process in managing the portfolio.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Swiss asset management firm Lombard Odier Investment Managers (LOIM) has announced the launch of the UCITS-compliant bond fund 5Bs Bond Fund, an actively-managed Luxembourg-registered product which invests in corporate bonds with ratings of BBB and BB. The benchmark is a fundamental weighting index, which unlike indices which are weighted in terms of capitalisation, give no advantage in the weighting to businesses in sectors which have higher levels of debt. The fund will be managed by Kevin Corregan, head of credit at LOIM.Stéphane Monier, CIO for fixed income & currencies at LOIM, explains that “the potential of the cross-border universe covering BBB and BB has been neglected up to now. Many investors are required to sell bonds when their ratings are lowered, and these bonds then become available to investors who are not subject to this constraint.”The 5Bs fund aims to capture additional performance by focusing on “fallen angels” whose rating has been lowered to high yeild, and “rising stars,” whose ratings are likely to soon be raised to investment grade. “This is not a niche market, since the 5B universe of corporate bonds represents three times the volume of high yeild, and produces higher returns than investment grade, with equivalent volatility and a negligible amount of added risk,” says Monier.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Wall Street Journal reports that Phil Roblee, head of alternative investments for the School Employees Retirement System of Ohio pension fund (USD10bn) has asked the hedge funds Level Global Investors LP (USD4bn) and Diamondback Capital Management LLC (USD5bn), who are among the asset management firms involved in a wide-ranging investigation by the SEC and the FBI of possible insider trading, for an explanation. They have not learned anything so far, and Diamondback has replies that it cannot provide any information while the investigation is underway.Roblee has hot withdrawn the money invested in the fund, nor has the Public Employees Retirement System of Pennsylvania, which has also maintained its allocation to Diamondback. The fund, which will have to handle redemption requests of USD400m by mid-February, has offered its clients a discount on management commissions to 1.75% from 2%. It is also planning to charge 1% on redemptions, to pay for potential sentencing that could require disgorgements.
A Morgan Stanley banker allegedly leaked details of Advanced Micro Devices plan to buy ATI Technologies, which was ultimately passed to Galleon Group co-founder Raj Rajaratnam, prosecutors say, according to the Financial Times. A spokesman for Morgan Stanley said that the banker has been placed on leave and that the bank is fully co-operating with the government’s investigation.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The ETF range from Charles Schwab has gained two new members, and now includes 13 products. The new ETFs are the Schwab U.S. REIT ETF (acronym SCHH) and the Schwab U.S. Mid-Cap ETF (SCHM), both of which charge fees of 0.13%.Like the other ETFs of the range, they may be bought and sold without a commission from Schwab online accounts.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Van Eck Global has announced that the board of trustees at the Market Vectors ETF Trust has approved a 1-for-3 split share split in the Market Vectors Indonesia Index ETF (acronym: IDX). Shares were trading at USD75.54 on Friday, 21 January.The split will take place at the close of trading on 28 January 2011, and shares resulting from the operation will begin to be traded on 1 February.The split will allow for a lower unit price for shares, making the fund more accessible to investors. Van Eck global estimates that the move will increase liquidity, and by extension, tighten bid-ask spreads.Assets in the fund, focused on the most liquid Indonesian shares, on Friday totalled USD494.79m.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } With the Frost Diversified Strategies Fund (actonym FDSFX), Frost Investment Advisors has launched a mutual fund which offers investors access to alternative strategies which have previously been available only to hedge fund and private equity fund clients. The objective is to preserve capital and to reduce potential losses while also offering potential outperformance. About 60% of the portfolio will be allocated to traditional investments (equities, bonds, cash and publicly-traded options). The hedge fund replication portion will total 30% to 40%, and will rely on beta and hedge fund index replication strategies, using freely available products.The fund will be managed by four people: Tom Stringfellow, president of Frost, David Telling, principal portfolio manager, Brad Thompson, director of research, and Jeffrey Elswick, fixed income director.Front-end fees will be limited to a maximum of 5.75%, and TER will total 2%.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Aberdeen Asset Management Deutschland on 21 January announced that its fiscal year to 30 September brought gross subscriptions to EUR1bn in Germany and Austria. As of this date, assets totalled EUR8.1bn, of which EUR3.8bn were in securities funds, and EUR4.5bn in the distressed real estate branch (redemptions from two DEGI funds are frozen, while a third is to be liquidated).Since the beginning of October, Aberdeen AM has won mandates totalling about EUR300m.Among plans announced for 2011 by CEO Hartmut Leser are the launch of institutional real estate funds (see Newsmanagers of 18 January). In terms of sales, Aberden AM will emphasize emerging markets funds, global equities, European corporate bonds and pan-European institutional real estate funds.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to iShares data provided to Agefi, the European market in exchange-traded products (ETP) finished last year with an inflow of EUR4bn in December, compared with EUR2.6bn in November. In 2010, the sector absorbed EUR38.5bn in new inflows, which brings assets under management to a record EUR234bn, the newspaper reports.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The DB Hedge Fund index gained 2.33% in December, according to the most recent statistics from Deutsche Bank. The strategies which contributed most to the performance of the index were Equity Hedge, event-driven, Systematic Macro, Global Macro and credit and convertible indices.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Retail investors are earning “succulent yields” thanks to the ongoing pitched battle between financial institutions to get their hands on liquidity, Cinco Días reports. According to statistics from the Bank of Spain, the interest being offered by banks and savings banks for savings accounts has risen by 20.8% since the end of 2009. Banks are offering an average of 3.14% on one and two-year products.Since then, managers of about 3,200 Sicav funds registered with the CNMV did not pass up the opportunity to allocate EUR3.59bn to bank savings accounts as of the end of September. That represents 13.7% of their assets, whereas the percentage was only 6.6% as of the end of third quarter 2009. This increase has come largely to the detriment of listed bonds and investment funds, particularly money markets.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The fund management firm from Julius Baer, Swiss & Global Asset management, has sold the 31% stake it had held for seven years in the Spanish independent private bank Atlas Capital. Expansión reports that the transaction will take place at book value, while the stake was purchased for EUR3m. As of the end of 2010, Atlas Capital had assets of EUR660m, managed on behalf of 2,400 clients. Net profits totalled EUR1.14m. Following the exit of Julius Baer, the group’s capital is controlled by its 14 managing partners, with the largest shareholder being deputy director Jorge Sanz.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Global Wealth and Investment Management unit of Bank of America has earned net profits of USD1.34bn for the 2010 fiscal year, compared with USD1.71bn the previous year. In fourth quarter alone, net profits fell by nearly USD200m compared with the previous year, to USD332m. As of 31 December 2010, assets under management totalled USD643.9bn, compared with USD749.8bn one year earlier. The decline in assets under management is due to the sale of Columbia to Ameriprise in autumn 2009.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } As of the end of December, Barings had assets in France of about EUR1.2bn, or about EUR400m more than one year previously; once again, assets at the French arm of the British management firm increased by nearly 50% (see Newsmanagers of 8 December 2009). Half of this increase, or EUR200m, is due to positive market effects, while the remaining 50% come from net subscriptions, while gross subscriptions totalled EUR600m, Benoît du Mesnil du Buisson, president of Baring France SAS, tells Newsmanagers. A net total of about EUR120m has been collected for the Global Emerging Markets fund (USD2.18bn as of the end of December); sales to European specialist multi-managers have been good for the German Growth fund (GBP277.4m).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } HP has decided to extend and expand the management mandate for its corporate savings plans to Fidelity Investments, which has been in place since 1991.From 1 January 2011, the management firm will also take charge of 162,500 members of the EDS (Electronic Data Systems) program, who were previously mandated to other management firms. Fidelity will thus become the single manager for HP retirement plans, including 135,000 defined-contribution and 192,000 defined-benefit clients. As of 30 November, assets un defined contribution plans totalled USD14.2bn.
Some of the world’s biggest investors have turned increasingly negative on government bonds from developed countries as they warn of the growing danger of inflation, according to the Financial Times. “Why would you want to be a bondholder with bond yields so low and that sort of inflationary trend,” Bill Gross, who runs the world’s largest bond fund at Pimco, asked the Financial Times. Jim Rogers, the investor based in Singapore, said western governments were concealing the extent of inflation, leading him to avoid bonds and continue his preference for commodities.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Société Générale Private Banking has created a new executive boards, whose mission will be to “guide strategy and development and the private bank.”The division will be led by Daniel Truchi, director of Société Générale Private Banking, and from 1 February will include Yves Thieffry, deputy director of Société Générale Private Banking, who will oversee private banking activities in Switzerland, Luxembourg, Monaco and the Middle East; Patrick Folléa, director of Société Générale Private Banking France, who will also oversee activities in Belgium; Eric Barnett, director of Société Générale Private Banking Hambros, who will oversee activities in the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States; Bruno Lèbre, director of the investment solutions department, who will oversee activities in Asia (Singapore, Hong Kong, continental China and Japan); and the new director of sales and marketing, who will be appointed in the coming weeks.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The French firm DNCA Finance (Banca Leonardo group) has brought all of its funds on sale in Europe together under its own brand name with immediate effect. Products on sale in Germany will drop the Leonardo Invest name, and the Luxembourg Sicav will change names to become known as DNCA Invest. Five DNCA Finance funds managed in Paris (Europe, Evolutif, Centifolia Europe, Infrastructures, and Convertibles) have been available in Germany since September 2010, says Jan Schünemann, director of sales for Germany.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Citi Private Bank will soon launch its family office in Hong Kong, to serve the north Asian region. The new activity will be directed by Richard Straus, Asian Investor reports. According to a spokesperson for the bank, plans to serve south-east Asia are also in preparation, and recruitments are underway. Earlier in the week, Citi Private Bank announced the appointment of James Holder as director for its family office for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.