Money Marketing reports that T. Bailey is planning to launch a fund of funds early next year which will invest exclusively in passive products (ETFs and trackers), but which will be actively managed. The fund will have a total expense ratio (TER) among the lowest in the market in the fund of funds industry. According to Philippa Gee, head of marketing and communication at T. Bailey, the new range represents an attractive solution for independent financial advisers (IFA) who want to privilege passive investment but recognise the necessity of active asset allocation.
After months of rumours, British Airways on Monday revealed the extent of shortfalls for its pension funds, APS (the older fund) and NAPS (the new fund): the combined total is GBP3.7bn, or EUR4bn, Cinco Días reports. The shortfall is reported to measure GBP1bn for APS, and GBP2.7bn for NAPS. The Spanish airline Iberia, which is in the process of merging with the British firm, has said that this amount was taken into account in its estimates.
In November, Austrian funds saw net redemptions of EUR447.5m, compared with net subscriptions of EUR206.7m in October, bringing net outflows since the beginning of the year to EUR690.7m. Assets nonetheless came out to a total of EUR137.5bn, compared with a total of EUR135.4bn at the end of October, the sector association VÖIG reports. Since their low point in March of this year (EUR121.3bn), assets under management have increased by 11.87%; the increase since the end of December totals 7.7%. However, in April and May 2008, assets stood at a total of EUR152bn.
The European Central Bank (ECB) has for the first time published new harmonised European statistics for UCITS mutual funds domiciled in the Euro zone. “Compared with the quarterly statistics published previously, these new statistics provide fully harmonised, exhaustive, detailed and rapidly available information, on a monthly basis,” the ECB says in a statement. In third quarter 2009, the Euro zone UCITS investment fund sector grew by 10.6% compared with second quarter, from EUR4.3trn to EUR4.7trn. This development was largely a result of measurable increases in the value of assets owned by UCITS funds, and to a lesser extent, of large-scale net subscriptions to UCITS funds (net inflows related to transactions). Assets invested in shares in non-money-market UCITS funds in the Euro zone totalled EUR4.73trn as of the end of September 2009, up from EUR4.277trn in June 2009. In the same period, assets invested in shares in money market UCITS funds in the Euro zone totalled EUR1.256trn, up from EUR1.272trn.
L’allemand Union Investment Real Estate (UIRE, groupe Union investment, banques populaires) a annoncé l’acquisition de deux nouveaux actifs. Il s’agit d’une part du projet de centre commercial «K» (33.290 mètres carrés et 20 appartements) situé à Courtrai (Belgique) et destiné au fonds immobilier offert au public UniImmo: Europa, de l’autre du complexe de bureaux Rund Vier (21.000 mètres carrés) de Vienne (Autriche) qui sera affecté au portefeuille du UniImmo: Deutschland. Dans les deux cas, les parties sont convenues de ne pas divulguer le montant de la transaction.
After a total of USD205.54bn at the end of October, assets in ETFs in Europe set a new record at the end of November at USD216.78bn, an increase of 52% over the end of 2008. BlackRock states in the most recent edition of its monthly bulletin that as of 30 November, there were 812 ETF funds on sale from 32 providers, listed 2,315 times on 18 stock exchanges. According to Lipper FMI, net inflows to ETFs based in Europe in the first nine months of the year totalled USD28.6bn, while inflows to all other types of mutual funds totalled USD177.7bn. With 168 ETF funds and USD83.02bn in assets, iShares remains the top European ETF provider, ahead of Lyxor Asset Management (Société Générale), with 123 funds and USD44.68bn, and db x-trackers (Deutsche Bank), with 116 products and USD36.42bn. These three issuers together account for a 75.7% share of the total market.
L'état-major de Hauck & Aufhäuser Asset Management GmbH HAAM), filiale de Hauck & Aufhäuser Privatbankiers, comptera bientôt un nouveau membre, responsable des produits de performance absolue : Eckhard Cornehl, qui exerce actuellement les mêmes fonctions chez le suisse Zulauf Asset Management à Zoug rejoindra au 1er janvier 2010 les deux autres directeurs généraux, Jörg Scholl et Claus Weber. Le nouvel arrivant sera chargé de développer l’activité performance absolue tant pour les fonds offerts au public que pour les produits destinés à la clientèle institutionnelle.
Every hedge fund will leave the European Union if proposals to clamp down on the sector’s remuneration policies are adopted, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, a leading law firm, has said, according to the Financial Times Fund Managament. Hedge funds are much more mobile than banks.
Only 21% of executives in the European asset management industry say future regulatory reforms will prevent Madoff-type fraud, according to a survey conducted by PwC, cited by Financial Times Fund Management.
An initial public offering for Gartmore Group will ultimately be held at a price of 220 pence per 0.5 penny ordinary share. The offering will involve a total of 154.54 million shares, of which 127.3 million will be newly-issued and 27.3 million existing shares. UBS will serve as stabilising manager for the offering, and will have a greenshoe option of 23.18 million shares. The operation is expected to generate about GBP340m, excluding the greenshoe option. Initially, Gartmore had hoped to raise about GBP440m.
Les Echos reports that the British financial products intermediary Tulett Prebon has informed its teams that it will assist employees to avoid the recently-introduced tax on bonuses. Terry Smith, head of the world’s second-largest intermediary, has said the firm will seek to facilitate, as far as possible, a transfer of partners who would like to leave the United Kingdom for other offices of the firm throughout the world where taxation is more favourable. Switzerland would appear to be a leading destination.
Hermes Fund Managers, owned by the BT Pension Scheme, has purchased a majority interest in Sourcecap International, a London-based investment business specialising in managing high-alpha European equity portfolios for institutional clients, run by Andrew Parry and James Rutherford. The new business will be called Hermes Sourcecap. This acquisition provides Hermes with the expertise to develop further a specialist investment partnership focused on a core European equities capability, with Hermes owning the majority share and its partners and employees having a stake in the long-term profitability and enterprise value of the business. The CalPERS Manager Development Program II will retain its existing stake in the company through Legato Capital Management Ventures LLC. The BT Pension Scheme will be making an investment of GBP200 million into a segregated account and a UCIT III vehicle which will replicate the European Alpha product. This investment will bring the total assets under management of Hermes Sourcecap to USD1.1 billion. Hermes has GBP25.7bn under management.
The Lyxor Global Hedge Fund index gained 1.1% in November, bringing its performance since the beginning of the year to 5.5%, according to Hedge Week. Long-short equity managers generally earned honourable returns, as variable bias turned in gains of 0.7%, following losses of 1.70% in October. Statistical arbitrage and market neutral strategies continued to post negative results, of 0.6% and 0.5%, respectively. Special situations strategies finished the month with significant gains of 2.6%.
Although 2009 was already a record year for investments in commodities (USD60bn, 60% more than in 2008), institutional investors are planning to further increase their allocation to this asset class next year, according to the results of a survey of participants at the fifth annual commodities conference in the United States, held by Barclays Capital. Three quarters of respondents expect the average performance of commodities to be 10% or less in the next five years. However, though diversification remains the main reason for allocation to commodities, 60% of executives surveyed, more than twice as many as last year, say absolute returns represent the principal reason for their investment in this asset class. According to Barclays Cap, this suggests that investors are becoming increasingly sophisticated, and they will demand more developed outperformance strategies from their providers. Lastly, 40% of respondents say they will prefer active external managers. The instruments which have gained the most ground since last year are structured products and long/short index-linked strategies, while investors are less interested in long-only strategies.
Asian Investor reports that the new chairman and managing director of BlackRock for the Asia-Pacific region, Rohit Bhagat, is not planning to prioritize growth in size for the firm in Asia. Instead, the aim is to make use of the entity’s already large size to offer custom products and investment ideas to clients who are developing in different regulatory environments. This does not mean getting involved in mass production, even though the most apparent consequence of the acquisition of Barclays Global Investors (BGI) is a large scale that could provide some advantages, says Bhagat. The new dimensions of the business could help to make it stand out in terms of product range. In addition to a diversification in expertise and a larger capacity for exchange of information, the internationalisation of clients’ corporate activities demands a coordination of services in multiple jurisdictions. Additionally, economies of scale may be possible for some trading, research and compliance platforms. As of the end of September, assets under management for clients headquartered in the Asia-Pacific region totalled USD244.9bn, making BlackRock the largest international asset management firm in the region.
As Société Générale implied on 4 December, the day it dismissed him and simultaneously announced the acquisition of MetWest by TCW, Jeffrey Gundlach has founded his own asset management firm in Los Angeles. The firm is entitled DoubleLine LLC, and Oaktree Capital Management LP will take a majority stake in the venture. Oaktree will also provide logistical support for the startup of DoubleLine. The new firm is directed by the former CIO of TCW (who is also the largest shareholder), and a longstanding colleague, Philip Barach. A statement says the firm will employ “more than 30 former employees” of TCW; DoubleLine adds that this number will be likely to increase. Gundlach also says that the cooperation with Oaktree promises to be a fruitful one, as DoubleLine will specialise in core fixed income and mortgage-backed strategies, while its partner is more oriented to active bond management and alternative investments.
Gartmore Group, which is newly floated, is under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission, Financial News can reveal. «The SEC is investigating short selling undertaken by Gartmore Investment Limited, on behalf of a fund, in advance of a public offer of a New York Stock Exchange-listed security», according to Gartmore’s prospectus.
From January 1, 2010, the real estate activities of the Swiss alternative management firm Partners Group will become independent of the private capital department, and will instead become a division in its own right, led by Pam Alsterlind in San Francisco, and Claude Angéloz in Zug. Alsterlind will also join the executive board of the firm. Stephan Schäli will remain head of private equity and a member of the executive board. Meanwhile, Kurt Brichler, who was previously chief financial officer (CFO), will become head of a new operations division, whose head offices will be located in Zug and Singapore. Lastly, Partners Group has announced that its beta alternative strategies division will be spun off. The team led by Lars Jaeger will own a significant stake in the new entity. The Swiss asset management firm has also announced that its senior vice presidents Roland Käslin, head finance, and Denis O’Malley, head Guernsey, have been appointed as managing directors.
With a corporate bond issuer in the United States defaulting every ten days in 2009, the total number of corporate defaults worldwide now stands at 260, the highest number since statistics began in 1981, according to the most recent figures from Standard & Poor’s (Global Corporate Default Update, 11 December 2009). The previous record of 229 defaults was set in 2001, during the last recession. The agency observes that this year’s total of 260 represents more than twice the number of defaults in all of 2008. A breakdown by region reveals that the United States lead for defaults, with 188, far outstripping Europe (20 defaults) and emerging markets (36). In the next twelve months, Standard & Poor’s predicts a default rate of 6.9% for corporate issuers in the speculative category, compared with a default rate of 10.8% in September 2009. The agency points out that a heavy fall in financing costs, the recovery of bond markets, and lower volatility are all factors that may lead to a decline in refinancing costs, even for less well-rated issuers.
Les Echos reports that many private equity firms are now up for sale. The asset management firm SG Capital Europe, which handles the private equity investments of Société Générale, has been taken over by its team, while AGF Private Equity has been put up for sale by Allianz. Barclays is preparing to spin off Barclays Private Equity, and the Natixis group is in the process of reorienting its private equity group towards management for external clients. New prudential requirements for banks and insurers have given new impetus to a trend which has been long underway.
La banque d’affaires internationale Nomura a annoncé le 14 décembre son admission au sein de ICE Clear Europe, en tant que membre chargé d’assurer la compensation sur les CDS. Nomura est à ce jour la seule institution financière d’origine asiatique membre de l’institution. Depuis le lancement de ses services de compensation en juillet 2009, ICE Clear Europe a compensé pour plus de 1.140 millairds de dollars de CDS en valeur notionnelle.
Le spécialiste du trading et de l’investissement en ligne Saxo banque a annoncé le 14 décembre le lancement d’un nouveau produit CFD, basé sur le prix d’ECX EUA des émissions de carbone. Les investisseurs pourront désormais acheter acheter ou vendre des tonnes métriques de CO2 via la plate-forme de trading Saxo Trader.Saxo Banque, qui propose déjà de nombreux CFD sur matières premières, va continuer d'étoffer sa gamme dans les prochaines semaines avec le gasoil, le platine, le bétail vivant, les graines de colza et le jus d’orange.
DJE Investment a annoncé que le fonds de performance absolue de droit luxembourgeois Carat Global One (CGO) sera rouvert auxc souscriptions et aux rachats à compter du 17 décembre 2009, alors qu’il avait été fermé le 16 décembre 2008 lorsqu’il s'était avéré que l’un des fonds du portefeuille, Thema Fund, était investi chez Madoff et qu’aucune valeur liquidative ne pouvait être calculée. Au 30 septembre, l’encours du CGO se limitait à 7,5 millions d’euros.
Le fonds Chine que doit lancer Anthony Bolton au premier trimestre 2010, probablement en mars, pourrait être un fonds fermé, indique Money Marketing.Anthony Bolton est en train de peser le pour et le contre d’une structure fermée par rapport à un fonds OPCVM III. Un fonds fermé permet de limiter la capacité du fonds mais une structure Ucits III présente l’avantage d'être intéressante pour un investisseur hors Royaume-Uni. Fidelity devrait arrêter sa décision courant janvier.
AXA et l’assureur australien AMP ont annoncé, le 11 décembre 2009, avoir conjointement proposé leur meilleure et dernière offre au comité des administrateurs indépendants du gestionnaire de fortune AXA Asia Pacific Holdings. Le prix proposé par AXA et AMP aux actionnaires minoritaires d’AXA APH a été augmenté et s’élève à 6,221 dollars australiens par action, soit une prime de 53% par rapport au cours de clôture d’AXA APH du 5 novembre 2009 et une amélioration de 16 % parrapport à l’offre initiale du 6 novembre."Les actionnaires minoritaires d’AXA APH se voient offrir 1,92 dollar australien par action en numéraire et 0,6896 action AMP pour chaque action AXA APH. La composante en numéraire a été augmentée de 0,54 dollar australien par action, AMP contribuant pour 0,10 dollar australien et AXA pour 0,44 dollar australie, précise un communiqué d’Axa. En conséquence, la part en numéraire représente 31% du prix proposé et est à présent fixée en dollars australiens, éliminant ainsi toute incertitude sur les cours de change pour les actionnaires minoritaires d’AXA APH».Cette offre reste valable jusqu’au 21 décembre 2009. En cas de succès de la transaction, AMP acquerrait les actions AXA APH détenues par AXA pour un montant de 6,9 milliards de dollars australiens en numéraire et AXA acquerrait auprès d’AMP 100% des activités asiatiques d’AXA APH pour un montant de 9,1 milliards de dollars australiens en numéraire, avec l’objectif de renforcer sa position sur les marchés de forte croissance.
Jusqu'à la fin de l’année, Santander Asset Management récompense les clients qui lui apportent des liquidités au travers du réseau de banque en ligne Openbank et du Banesto.Dans le premier cas, le gestionnaire rémunère à 3,5 % les souscriptions du fonds Santander Acciones Euro ou 3 % pour celles concernant le Mixto Renta Fija 90/10 pour des montants compris entre 3.000 et 200.000 euros. Il faut cependant s’engager à laisser l’argent pendant au moins 12 mois dans les fonds.Pour ce qui est du Banesto, Santander AM promet une bonification de 1 % de la souscription dans les fonds diversifiés, avec un prime maximale de 1.500 euros.
Le profil des clients a changé car la crise a accentué le côté conservateur des consommateurs de produits bancaires et les banques le savent bien, note Expansión. C’est la raison pour laquelle la majorité des banques et caisses d'épargne se sont lancées dans la traditionnelle bataille de fin d’année pour attirer les investisseurs sur les fonds de pension avec des produits garantis. C’est par exemple le cas du Santander, de La Caixa, de Caja Madrid, d’IberCaja et du Banco Popular. Tous les établissements offrent aussi des cadeaux en cas de transfert à leurs plans en provenance d’autres établissements.A fin septembre, l’encours des plans d'épargne retraite individuels ressortait à 51,04 milliards d’euros, soit 4 % de hausse en neuf mois et 2,3 % en douze mois, et le nombre de comptes a progressé de 0,6 % à près de 8,58 millions.
Depuis le début de l’année, selon VDOS Stochastics, l’encours des fonds de pension espagnols s’est accru de 2,1 milliards ou de 4,34 % pour atteindre 50,4 milliards d’euros fin novembre, rapporte Funds People. Les deux fonds ayant enregistré les plus fortes entrées sont le Plancaixa Ambicion et le Bancajapensón Fijo, avec des apports respectifs de 204 millions et de 183 millions d’euros.