The alternative management firm Gottex Fund Management on Thursday evening announced the recruitment in Boston of Debra Tothman as managing director, head of North American sales & marketing. She was previously head of business development at SCS Financial, where she contributed to the commercial development of the fund of hedge funds range. Gottex has also recruited Mark Ostergaard as marketing director in London. He will be in charge of developing and assisting North American clients. He was previously in charge of relations with Scandinavian establishments at London & Capital.
Jefferies has announced the recruitment of several people in the past few weeks, who will join the team dedicated to fixed income products in the Asia-Pacific region. Shiran Dias and Sailesh K. Jha have been appointed as managing directors, and will aim to establish commercial relations with private banks, central banks and hedge funds in the region. Jun-ichi Kasakura and Philip Wen will serve as senior vice presidents.
In the fiscal year to 31 March, Macquarie Group Limited has posted net profits of AUD1.05bn, which represents a 21% increase over 2008-2009. Assets under management have increased by a total of 34% to AUD326bn, largely due to the acquisition of the American asset management firm Delaware Investments, which brought in USD125bn in assets. The Macquarie Funds Group contributed AUD95m, or 4% of total operating profits, compared with AUD45m and 6% in the previous period. For the division, assets increased to AUD209.9bn as of the end of March, from AUD49.7bn twelve months previously, thanks to the addition of Delaware (AUD151bn), and to net subscriptions to institutional products and AUD9.1bn in positive market effects. The annual report states that Macquarie is continuing to study potential strategic acquisitions in the area of investment funds, particularly on the largest financial markets.
On the basis of figures from the Bank of Italy, Franco Citterio, director of the association of bankers in the Swiss canton of Ticino (ATB), says that Italians at the end of February “legalised” EUR85bn in undeclared assets deposited abroad, of which EUR60bn came from Switzerland, largely from Ticino, the Neue Zürcher Zeitung reports. But of this total, only EUR25bn actually returned to Italy. Many banks, such as the Banca della Svizzera Italiana (BSI) and Banca del Sempione, for example, were able to recuperate a large amount of the funds which were eligible for this tax amnesty, either through Italian affiliates, or through “legal repatriation.” Eventually, the fiscal amnesty offered by the Italian finance minister, Guilio Tremonti, did not achieve its other objective which was to draw assets out of the Swiss financial centre in Lugano.
According to Les Echos, war, terrorism, and elections sometimes cause disturbances to the markets. Between 1974 and 2004, there were 112 conflicts (including wars, coups and others), of which 84 were national and 28 international, which affected the financial markets. Only 1 out of 5 of these had a significant effect (positive or negative) on global equities (MSCI World index), according to a study by two economists at the Federal Reserve in Saint Louis; 11.2% of these conflicts had a negative impact on the global stock markets, while 6.7% had a positive effect. The least affected markets (negatively) are the United Kingdom, France, Japan, and the United States. Wall Street is also the market which gains least often (12.4% of the time) on conflicts.
Les Echos reports that a survey undertaken in mid-April by MultiRatings of 50 professional treasurers who manage assets of over EUR200bn finds that “long term money market” funds are returning in force to the allocations of French institutional investors. Within the new classifications of money market funds, the “long terme” category includes diversified funds with volatility of less than 2%. These funds have less risk and aim to outperform the Eonia rate through various strategies. Most institutional investors surveyed were planning to increase (45%) or maintain (41%) their allocation to these products. Only a minority (14%) were planning to reduce the weight of these funds in their future allocations.
From 1 May, Thomas Mueller has taken over as chief financial officer of Banque Sarasin (Rabobank group), replacing Matthias Hassels, “who has decided to leave the firm after 12 years there, to take on a new professional challenge.” Mueller, who for the past three years had been CFO and Chief Risk Officer at Swiss Life, will be in charge of investor relations, corporate development, and enterprise financing, and will oversee the Legal & Compliance, human resources, group finance, Controlling, Risk Office, credit and tax departments at the group. Mueller will report directly to Joachim H. Straehle, CEO of Banque Sarasin.
From May 5th, GLG Partners will close its newcits UK Alpha Select to new subscriptions, since this vehicle has already reached the USD300m (GBP195m) mark it had been assigned at the time of the launch, on February 19th. The fund is et UCITS III compliant version of the long/short equity market neutral fund managed by John White.
The Association of European Development Finance Institutions, a group of 15 government bodies investing in emerging markets, wrote to the EU to criticise its plans to regulate hedge funds and private equity, says the Financial Times. The move highlights growing opposition to the EU’s planned regulations from private equity groups based in Africa, Asia and Latin America, which are worried about being cut off from European investors, who provide at least a quarter of their funding.
The European Commission has decided to follow the recommendations of the Committee of European Securities Regulators (CESR) and introduce a proposed directive in October on short-selling, the Börsen-Zeitung reports. The bill will be specific to the issue of short-selling, as the European Commission concluded that it would be counter-productive to integrate rules on this subject into the new version of the market abuse directive.
José Antonio Méndez, an equities analyst and portfolio manager at Banque Rothschild in Zurich, has been recruited by March Gestión (EUR1.5bn) as head of European funds and co-manager of the March Vini Catena fund, which invests in wine production and vineyards. March Gestión is an affiliate of Banca March.
Société Générale Securities Services (SGSS) on Friday, 30 April denied reports in the Spanish press last week that it the firm will be shutting down its securities custody services in Spain, which operate under the name Euro-VL. SGSS explains in its denial that in Spain it has previously offered two types of activities – custody, and fund administration – both of which have been available under the Euro-VL name. “In a financial context in Spain which is continuing to deteriorate, leading to a decline in assets under administration in the asset management industry, SGSS has decided to refocus its Spanish activities on its core profession of custody,” a statement from the firm says, adding that of the 32 employees the firm has in Spain, only 2 will be affected by the refocusing of activities, which which will take place by the end of this year.
From the month of July, ETFs based on Korean assets will be taxed at a more attractive rate than ETFs with foreign underlying assets, which will be required to pay a tax of 15.4%, Asian Investor reports. Bae Jae-Kyu, chief investment officer for ETF activities at Samsung AM, says the tax will damage the development of ETF funds in Korea.
Elliott Associates has confirmed that 18 more funds have joined the first 17 plaintiffs in a lawsuit against Porsche for share price manipulation, and the demands for damages and interest now exceed USD2bn, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. The funds accuse Porsche of knowingly misleading investors and lying about its true intentions concerning Volkswagen. At the end of October 2008, the firm cornered the market for shares in Volkswagen, whose share price at one point topped EUR1,000.
As of the end of March, assets under management in Austrian investment funds represented EUR142.1bn, compared with EUR138.6bn as of the end of February, and EUR136.7bn as of 31 December, according to statistics from the VÖIG association. In one year, total assets increased by EUR20.8bn, or 17.1% to a total which measures in between the levels observed in August and September 2008 (EUR144.3bn and EUR138.6bn, respectively).
On Thursday, ProShares launched four leveraged ETFs on the NYSE Arca platform, which aim to double the daily performance of foreign indices which are already available as underlying assets for ETF products, with leverage of 2, but inverse. The products are the ETF Ultra MSCI Europe, Ultra MSCI Pacific ex-Japan, Ultra MSCI Brazil and Ultra Mexico Investable Market. Management fees are 0.95%. The ProShares range now includes 19 long and short leveraged ETFs.
RREEF, the real estate fund management affiliate of Deutsche Bank, has repositioned its open-ended real estate fund grundbesitz invest, which is now known as grundbesitz Europa, with EUR2.6bn in assets, while the grundbesitz Global now has EUR615m, and has had the largest volume of net subscriptions in the category since the beginning of this year, Handelsblatt reports. Georg Allendorf, CEO of RREEF, expects investments this year of EUR500m for the open-ended real estate fund operation, and another EUR500m for the institutional real estate fund division, with the objective of becoming one of the top five management firms in the latter category. The competition is not idle, however: IVG, the top firm in the sector, is making a major effort to recruit new clients, while iii, the number two provider, is refocusing on institutional funds as its open-ended fund operations have gone awry. The number three asset management firm, Hansainvest, is planning to raise EUR300-400m by the launch of up to four new institutional real estate funds by the end of the year.
China Construction Bank, the second-largest Chinese bank in terms of the size of its portfolio of loans, will soon launch the largest capital increase ever undertaken in Asia, according to La Tribune. The total amount raised will be CNY75bn (USD11bn), through share offerings in Shanghai and Hong Kong.
China Construction Bank, la deuxième banque chinoise par la taille de son portefeuille de prêts, devrait bientôt lancer la plus grande augmentation de capital jamais réalisée en Asie selon la Tribune. Le montant levé serait de 75 milliards de yuans (11 milliards de dollars) en émettant des actions à Shanghai et Hong Kong.
Le 6 mai, la société de gestion UBS-SDIC lancera son premier fonds QDII (le 16ème depuis le lancement du programme et le 6ème depuis le début de l’année). Ce sera un fonds d’actions de pays émergents du monde entier (Global Emerging Market Equity Fund) avec comme indice de référence le MSCI Emerging Market et une allocation minimum de 60 % aux actions dont la moitié d’actions de pays émergents. Les conservateurs seront ICBC pour la Chine et Standard Chartered pour l'étranger.Selon Z-Ben Advisors, ce fonds sera coté sur la Bourse de Shenzen, ce qui permettra au gestionnaire de drainer des capitaux aussi bien au travers du réseau bancaire que par le biais des courtiers. Pour chacune de ces filières, le plafond a été fixé à 2 milliards de yuans.Le nouveau produit, qui avait reçu son agrément de commercialisation à la mi-décembre, sera géré par Lu Rongqjang, qui est déjà aux commandes du CSI 300 Index Classified Fund.
Il Sole – 24 Ore has published a list of the Italian bond and money market funds most exposed to Greek debt. The top three, in terms of total exposure of the portfolio, are Amundi Funds Euro Select Bond (19.25%), Novara Aquilone Sicav – BT Euro R (13.58%), and Fondersel Reddito (10.08%).
On 6 May, the management firm UBS-SDIC will launch its first QDII fund (the 16th since the launch of the program, and the 6th since the beginning of this year). The product will be the Global Emerging Market Equity Fund, which will be based on the MSCI Emerging Market index as its benchmark, and which will allocate at least 60% of its assets to equities, half of them in emerging markets. The custodians will be ICBC for China, and Standard Chartered in other countries. Z-Ben Advisors reports that the fund will be listed on the Shenzhen stock exchange, which will allow the management firm to attract capital through the banking network as well as through brokers. For each of these sources, investment is limited to CNY2bn. The new product, which received its sales license in mid-December, will be managed by Lu Rongqjanfg, who is already manager of the CSI 300 Index Classified Fund.
Pour le premier trimestre, le Santander a déclaré un bénéfice net de 2,21 milliards d’euros contre 2,1 milliards pour janvier-mars 2009, le coefficient d’exploitation après amortissements s’améliorant à 41,5 % contre 43 %.L’encours total des fonds et sociétés de gestion du groupe ressortait au 31 mars à 110,8 milliards (+ 24,3 % sur un an et + 6 % sur fin décembre), dont 40,27 milliards (+ 1,9 %) pour l’Espagne et 54,45 milliards (+43,8 %) pour l’Amérique latine. Les actifs des fonds de pension représentaient pour leur part 11,21 milliards (+ 6,1 %), dont 9,83 milliards (+ 6 %) en Espagne.Le bénéfice net de l’activité fonds d’investissement a augmenté de 12,6 % à 18 millions tandis que celui des fonds de pension a chuté de 40 % à 3 millions.