p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Irving Picard, the legally-appointed trustee for the businesses of Bernard Madoff, on 7 December filed another lawsuit against UBS, seeking USD555m. The Swiss group responded on 8 December in a statement, calling the trustee’s position incomprehensible and baseless. The trustee had already filed a first legal action against UBS and Access International Advisors LLC on 24 November (see Newsmanagers of 25 November 2010), seeking USD2bn for what he claims is their presumed implication in the Ponzi scheme operated by Madoff. UBS is accused of setting up feeder funds through which clients’ money was piped to the investment vehicle operated by the former Nasdaq president. The legally-appointed trustee has also filed suits against JPMorgan Chase & Co and HSBC, seeking USD6.4bn and USD9bn, respectively. The previous day, Picard filed suits against BNP Paribas, Legacy Capital and Khronos Capital Research, among others, according to documents submitted to the US courts.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The European Commission on 8 December announced the launch of a consultation on revisions to the financial market instruments (MiFID) directive, as part of a strategy to create a more transparent and stable financial system. The directive, which has been in force since November 2007, increased competitiveness and integration on the financial markets of the EU, and considerably improved investor protection.However, rapid advances in technology, the complexity and volatility of financial markets, and the lessons of the financial crisis militate for “a profound revision” whenever insufficiencies are observed or improvements are deemed necessary, the Commission says in a statement.The objective of the consultation is to gather contributions from all parties concerned, to inform legislative proposals planned for spring 2011. The deadline has been set for 2 February 2011.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Amundi ETF on 8 December announced an extension of its range of emerging markets tracker products, with the listing on Nyse Euronext Paris of Amundi ETF MSCI Emerging Markets and Amundi ETF Global Emerging Bond Markit Iboxx. “With this launch, we are adding to our range of emerging markets ETFs, which already includes China, India, Brazil, and Eastern Europe. In the Amundi ETF range, investors now have access to two essential elements for their portfolio allocation at very competitive prices,” says Valérie Baudson, director of Amundi ETF, cited in a statement. With these two new products, Amundi now has 93 ETFs. Amundi ETF MSCI Emerging Markets (ISIN: FR0010959676) offers exposure to the largest caps of emerging equities markets. Amundi ETF MSCI Emerging Markets, which is eligible for PEA, aims to replicate both upward and downward evolutions oof the MSCI Emerging Markets index. This index, a benchmark for many investors, allows exposure to the evolution of 20 emerging markets, and covers 85% of the market capitalisation of each country. Amundi ETF Global Emerging Bond Markit Iboxx (ISIN: FR0010959668), for its part, is designed to provide exposure to the foreign debt of emerging countries. This ETF aims to replicate both upward and downward evolutions of the Markit iBoxx USD Liquid Emerging Markets Sovereigns index. This index is composed of bond issues denominated in US dollars, from 20 emerging countries whose minimal rating is CCC (or equivalent at S&P, Moody’s and Fitch). The choice of this new index is largely based on its many advantages related to its strict construction regulations to ensure good diversification and liquidity of its underlyings, while remaining representative of the emerging market bond universe. The first of these ETFs charges 0.45%, while the second charges 0.30%.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Singapore sovereign fund GIC, China Investment Corporation (CIC) and the investment board of Abu Dhabi (ADIC) have participated in a capital increase operation at the Brazilian investment bank BTG Pactual, Finance Asia reports. A consortium of international investors, including GIC, CIC, a Canadian pension fund, ADIC and the private equity investment group JC Flowers, made major contributions to the USD1.8bn capital increase, representing an 18.65% stake. BTG Pactual will use the proceeds from the operation to develop its core professions: investment banking, asset management and wealth management.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Businesses accompanied by French private equity actors “have shown resistance to a particularly complicated environment,” according to the 2010 edition of a study undertaken by the French private equity association AFIC and Ernst & Young, which surveyed 1,658 businesses, 1,219 of them SMBs. The businesses concerned managed to limit losses of revenues and staff. The study shows a decline in French earnings (-5.9% between 2008 and 2009), well as a moderate decline in French staff (-1.8%). These results compare with a fall in earnings for businesses of the CAC 40 (-6.8%) in the same period. The decline in staff was also more markets for businesses of the CAC 40 (-2.8%) and for all businesses of the French private sector (-2.0%). These results, however, reveal contrasted developments depending on the stage of development, size and sector of the businesses concerned. Businesses in a venture capital phase held out particularly well in the difficult environment of this period. Staff also remained stable (-0.2%), while earnings fell by only 2.6%. Businesses in a transmission phase lost 9.2% of earnings, but limited staff reductions to 2.9%. Businesses in a creation or post-creation phase, which were more sensitive to the crisis, adjusted their costs rapidly: staff fell by 8% between 2008 and 2009, while earnings fell by 7.1%. A detailed analysis of results, however, finds that among the 100 largest businesses ranked by revenues, nearly 60% of layoffs and 50% of decline in earnings were at the 25 publicly traded businesses which responded to the survey. The other 75 businesses in the top 100, however, held out well through the crisis. While retaining stable staff levels (+0.2%), these businesses prepared for their exit from the crisis. Though the construction sector appears to be the hardest-hit by the economic environment, the medical and biotech sectors, as well as IT, show the best results. The energy sector has even seen an increase in staff (+6.3%) and earnings (+1.3%). Hervé Schricke, president of AFIC, says “investors have shown their role as long-term companions, supporting businesses in their portfolios. They have reinjected their own equity when the businesses needed it: no less than 64% of investments in 2009 were reinvestments. The recently-published study also reveals a need for stable financing for innovation, as the development cycle may be affected more violently by unfavourable conjunctures.”
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The alternative management group Carlyle has announced that it has acquired a 55% stake in the hedge fund Claren Road Asset Management, for an undisclosed amount. Claren Road Asset Management has USD4.5bn in assets under management. The transaction includes a cash payment, a stake in Carlyle and complementary payments based on performance.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The socially responsible investment specialist firm SAM on 8 December announced that it has appointed Michael Baldinger as CEO from 1 January 2011. Since last year, Baldinger had been head for Global Clients & Marketing and a member of the executive board at SAM. While serving in his new role, he will also continue with his previous responsibilities until a successor can be appointed.Baldinger succeeds Sander van Eijkern, who left the firm in February due to differences of opinion over strategy.The new CEO will be responsible for strategy and development of SAM’s activities, and will explore a potential deepening of the firm’s cooperation with its parent company, Robeco.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Groupe BCV (Swiss cantonal bank of Vaud) on 8 December announced that it has acquired the Banque Franck Galland & Cie S.A. for an undisclosed amount from the Groupe Johnson Financial, and merged it with the Banque Piguet & Cie S.A., an affiliate of the BCV group. The new entity, Banque Piguet Galland & Cie S.A., will be primarily oriented to the Swiss market, and will be among the largest actors in private banking in French-speaking Switzerland. With assets under management of about GHF8bn, the new Banque Piguet Galland & Cie S.A. will be among the foremost actors in wealth management in French-speaking Switzerland. It will offer proximity services to high net worth clients in French-speaking Switzerland, with the objective of significantly increasing its assets under management in the mid-term. The Banque Piguet Galland & Cie S.A. will be present in Geneva, Lausanne, Lugano, Neuchâtel, Nyon and Yverdon-les-Bains. Its administrative offices will be located in Geneva and Yverdon-les-Bains, where its headquarters will also be located. The clients of the two merged partners will retain their managers and benefit from extended services (increased competence in the area of financial and credit analysis).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Australian firm Macquarie will launch a fourth European fund with several billion euros in assets to invest in infrastructure in a few months, Reuters reports. According to a source cited by the agency, “The group will raise a first round of capital privately, and will announce the creation of the fund once this round is raised, most likely in spring.”
Amundi will in a few months launch ETFs in the United Kingdom, Olivier Paquier, ETF product specialist at Amundi, announced at the Edhec-Risk Instituional Days 2010 conference. The firm, which now has a range of about 100 ETFs, is thus far present in France, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, and Benelux. Now, “we are looking at what other markets we might enter in order to go global,” says Paquier. The UK is a part of this strategy.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The fund accounting system SimCorp Dimension is now operational at Oberbank, whose headquarters are located in Linz (Upper Austria district), the Danish firm SimCorp announced on 8 December. Dimension is the strategic platform for investment management for savings banks, fund administration, AFRS and compliance. Use of the previous platform, Sungard V3, has been completely discontinued. Legal reporting has also been optimised. End-of-year reporting and solvency reports are generated directly by SimCorp Dimension. The necessary fund data for reporting to the Austrian central bank (ÖNB) are submitted to the Austrian banking control authority (OeKB) via the integrated FundsXML interface.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On Wednesday, Irving Picard, the court-appointed trustee for Bernard L. Madoff Securities, filed a new round of lawsuits, seeking money from five grandchildren of Madoff, and seeking to recuperate USD1.4bn from seven banks, the Wall Street Journal reports. He accuses Citibank, Natixis, Fortis Prime Fund Solutions Bank (Ireland), ABN Amro Bank, BBVA, Nomura Bank International and Merrill Lynch International of failing to notice signs of fraud. He is also suing the administrators for Madoff in the United Kingdom for USD80m. Picard is under pressure to claw back money, as Federal law allows him to file lawsuits only until Saturday, the anniversary of Madoff’s arrest.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In November, assets in US pension funds fell less rapidly than liabilities, resulting in an average coverage rate of 80.5%, according to statistics from BNY Mellon Asset Management. This represents a slight improvement compared with October, when the coverage ratio averaged 80.3%.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Hennessee hedge fund index has posted returns of 0.32% in November, compared with 2.01% in October and 3.71% in September. Since the beginning of the year, the index has gained 7.12%. The best results in the first eleven months of the year were for the event-driven strategy, at 13.24%, followed by distressed (10.32%), convertibles arbitrage (9.01%), and emerging markets (8.62%). In November, however, convertibles arbitrage and emerging markets have lost 0.93% and 1.43%. Event-driven strategies, for their part, lost 0.30%.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In a notification published in La Tribune on 8 December 2010, Financière Van Eyck has announced the appointment of Christophe Bonasse as deputy director. He was previously director of the team in charge of development of associations and charities at Quilvest Banque Privée.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } After opening an office in Milan, the Swiss management firm Julius Baer has opened another in Rome, at via Ludovisi 35. The new investment advising and wealth management location is directed by Andrea Torlonia, who joins from Duemme SGR (Banca Esperia), where he was head of management for institutional clients. The announcement of the new opening was made on 9 December in Milan by Julius Baer SIM.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asian Investor reports that Northern Trust Global Investments, the asset management unit of the US group Northern Trust, has recruited Chen Ee-Fang as director of sales in Singapore, a newly-created position. Chen, who will concentrate her efforts on the development of activities in south-east Asia, previously worked at Martin Currie as director of development for Asia.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to a report by the consultant DTZ for third quarter, foreign investment funds have bought more than 56% of the real estate properties sold in Spain this year, Cotizalia reports. This percentage remains similar to that observed in 2008 and 2009. Many foreign institutional funds are planning to invest EUR100m each in Spain. At the end of third quarter 2010, the volume of sales on the Spanish tertiary market represented EUR1.18bn, compared with EUR489m in all of 2009.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The London Stock Exchange on 8 December announced that it has admitted the HSBC MSCI Turkey ETF fund, available in shares denominated in US dollars or pounds Sterling, to trading. The Irish-registered equities fund (IE00B5BRQB73), which relies on physical replication, charges 0.60%. It is the twelfth ETF from HSBC in Europe.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } A survey of about 400 German professional investors on their allocations to hedge funds finds that the usage rates vary widely among these vehicles, depending on the category of subscribers they serve. The 74-page study finds that among the 30 family offices surveyed by Man Investments and its distributor for Germany and Austria, apano GmbH, 53.3% already have hedge funds in their portfolios. For the 102 wholesale managers (funds of funds, wealth managers, private bankers and investment consultants), the percentage who use hedge funds falls to 26%. It comes to 21% for the 159 IFAs surveyed, and slightly under 11% for investments or securities advisers at banks. The authors of the study conclude that the major lesson of the survey is that the propensity of German institutional investors to invest depends on their degree of familiarity with and knowledge of hedge funds, as well as on the experience that they have had with products of this type. This explains the fact that the penetration rate is lowest among financial advisers at banks, who are considered insufficiently informed to be able to actively promote products of this type, and who are also the population for whom the risk involved in hedge funds appears to be highest. The fact that hedge funds are not more widely used in the portfolios of family offices and wholesalers, however, is attributed to product offerings which are still not sufficiently attractive. These two categories, however, invest considerably in UCITS III funds, while IFAs and bank advisers prefer funds of funds.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The hedge fund sector has posted net inflows of USD16bn in the month of October, according to statistics published by Trim Tabs Investment Research and BarclayHedge. This is the fourth consecutive month of inflows, on a scale not seen since November 2009. Hedge funds have also posted inflows of 1.95% for October and 7.10% for the four months since the slide in May and June. Distressed securities funds, in particular, attracted USD3.8bn, or 3.3% of assets, in October, while funds dedicated to emerging markets attracted USD2.2bn.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to reports in Das Investment, Franklin Templeton has announced to its distribution partners that from 1 March 2011, Norman Boersma will become the manager of the Templeton Growth Fund, and its European clone, Templeton Growth (Euro). Boersma joined Templeton in 1991. Until recently, he was director of Templeton Global Equity Group. Cindy Sweeting, who in late 2007 succeeded Murdo Murchison as head of the Growth Fund, will remain as head of the portfolio management team, but will be based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida; the move is the reason that she will be giving up management of the Growth Fund. Along with the new head of the global equity group, Gary Motyl, she will focus on the strategic orientation of portfolios and risk management processes.
Le gouvernement français a revu mercredi en hausse, à 17,4 milliards d’euros, les contrats «signés ou annoncés» pendant la visite en Inde de Nicolas Sarkozy, qui avait revendiqué lundi 15 milliards d’euros potentiels. Les négociations sur les plus importants de ces contrats, dont la fourniture de deux réacteurs EPR par Areva et la modernisation de 51 Mirage 2000 de l’armée de l’air indienne, ne sont pas terminées.
Le directeur général du Fonds monétaire international, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, a estimé mercredi que la situation en Europe restait difficile et que les effets de la crise financière étaient loin d'être terminés. «Le retard dans le renforcement de la supervision et dans la création de mécanismes efficaces de résolution des crises pourrait bien conduire à la prochaine crise», a-t-il déclaré.
Un pas décisif a été franchi mercredi en vue de créer un brevet européen avec la décision de la Commission européenne de lancer une «coopération renforcée» entre un groupe d’Etats plutôt que de rechercher l’unanimité après plusieurs décennies de négociations.
L'émission de titres obligataires européens ne permettrait pas un partage transparent du poids de la dette au sein des 16 pays formant la zone euro, a déclaré mercredi Nout Wellink, membre du conseil des gouverneurs de la Banque centrale européenne (BCE). «L’une des raisons qui fait que je suis très opposé à un tel projet est qu’il s’apparente à un transfert implicite d’argent vers d’autres pays», a-t-il déclaré devant des journalistes.
L’économie australienne a créé 54.600 emplois au mois de novembre par rapport au mois précédent, soit plus du double du chiffre anticipé par les analystes interrogés par Bloomberg de 20.000 emplois. Le taux de chômage est ainsi tombé en novembre à 5,2%, contre 5,4% en octobre, alors que la banque centrale a laissé ses taux directeurs inchangés cette semaine.
Le fonds souverain de Singapour, Government of Singapore Investment Corp, a annoncé avoir plus que doublé sa participation au capital de China International Capital Corp, profitant de la mise en vente des 34,3% que détenait Morgan Stanley dans la banque chinoise. Avec 16,35% du capital de CICC, GIC devient ainsi le deuxième plus gros actionnaire de la banque chinoise.
Estimant que l’économie du pays connaissait actuellement un ralentissement, la banque centrale de Corée du Sud a décidé aujourd’hui de laisser son taux de refinancement inchangé à 2,5%. Le marché obligataire craint des tensions sur les prix alors que l’inflation a atteint 3,3% en novembre.
Le chemin est semé d’embûches vers une convergence accrue des régulations entre l’Europe et les Etats-Unis. Les normes comptables ou les velléités d’extraterritorialité américaines constituent autant de défis, ont expliqué hier les intervenants à un séminaire organisé par L’Agefi.