The US affiliate of the German firm Evonik Industries, Evonik Degussa Corporation, has selected Prudential Retirement to manage all its corporate retirement savings plans. Prudential which was already one of the providers of defined-benefit solutions to Evonik Degussa Corp, will now administer all of Evonik Degussa’s programs, including defined-benefit and defined-contribution as well as other programs. These now represent more than USD650m, manages for about 11,000 active and retired employees.
Due to a recent modification of the regulations governing investment funds, which allow ETFs to have the status of Sicavs, Barclays Global Investors is now able to register its iShares products in Spain. Initially, Funds People reports, the manager will apply for licenses for twelve ETF products. The products replicate equities indices for developed markets, including the DJ Euro Stoxx 50, S&P 500, FTSE 100, MSCI Japan and MSCI World. Other products will replicate equities indices of emerging markets: FTSE BRIC 50, MSCI Latin America, FTSE/Xinhua China 25, MSCI AC Far East ex-Japan, MSCI Brazil, MSCI Eastern Europe 10/40, and MSCI Emerging Markets. The funds will be sub-funds of the iShares Public Limited Company and iShares II Public Limited Company Sicav vehicles.
The most ethical investors in Europe are the Belgians, the French and the Swiss, measured by the percentage of assets in responsible investing screened funds (which take a positive investment approach such as best in class) relative to the size of the national fund industry, Lipper states. However, the proportions remain low, at 6%, 2%, and 2%, respectively. In terms of sales activity this year, France and Switzerland were joined by the United Kingdom this year, while Belgium slipped marginally into the red. At the bottom end of the rankings, the worst countries in Europe in terms of socially responsible funds were Spain and Italy, with less than 0.5% of assets in RI screened funds. And there, the situation is only getting worse, as the two countries have withdrawn more assets than they have invested from socially responsible funds, Lipper reports. In total, nearly EUR5bn have been invested since the beginning of the year in socially responsible investment funds, 65% more than in all of 2008, Lipper states. The level of assets in these funds has increased by more than 25% to EUR48.8bn this year. More than EUR1.4bn have been placed in 47 new funds, while there is a total of 671 such funds. The largest European providers of socially responsible funds by assets are KBC, Allianz, BNP Paribas, Natixis and Dexia.
In September, flows to European funds totalled EUR2bn, according to the most recent Fund Flash from Lipper FMI. This weak result is partly due to outflows of EUR21bn from money market funds in France. Excluding money market funds, inflows totalled EUR31bn, half of which went to equities funds (EUR14bn). The asset management firm with the strongest net inflows in September both for all asset classes combined and for equities alone was Deutsche/DWS.
The Luxembourg-based provider of services to the investment fund market announced on 12 November that it has opened an office in Paris with Christian Mavides at its head. The opening of the Paris office follows the recent acquisition of La Cote Bleue, which is located in the historic Palais de la Bourse, the former stock market building in the heart of Paris at Brongniart palace. Christian Mavides, former director of financial advertising at BFM Radio and head of the financial, banking and insurance sectors, will be in charge of development for French clients and management of relations with existing clients. “The opening of a Paris office fits wholly within Kneip’s enlargement strategy, as it seeks to bring support to clients in France, where the investment fund industry is currently experiencing strong growth,” says a statement. In addition to its new Paris office, Kneip is also present in London and Switzerland, and is planning to open a location in Germany in early 2010.
On Thursday, the FBI estimated that the Ponzi type pyramid fraud scheme operated by lawyer Scott W. Rothstein probably ran to over USD1bn, the Wall Street Journal reports. On Monday, the US government filed a civil case against the high-profile Florida lawyer, accusing him of selling investors participations in fictitious legal settlements, promising double-digit returns. The fraud began in 2005, and only came to light in October, when investors complained of not having been paid. The FBI says the investigation will take time, and criminal charges are not expected to be filed for several more weeks.
On Thursday, the Sarasin group announced the launch of an Islamic wealth management range, including the full spectrum of private banking products and services compatible with Sharia law. This includes inheritance and wealth transmission planning, financing, and wealth management, as well as money market investments and structured products based on wakala, murabaha, and maraya. Sarasin’s compliance with the precepts of Sharia law will be guaranteed by an independent committee of specialists.
Independent asset management firm Weston Capital Management LLC has announced the creation of a joint venture with the Swiss asset management firm Harcourt Investment Consulting, to form a hedge fund incubator. The joint venture will bring together Weston CM’s expertise in hedge funds in the early stages of development and in marketing, with Harcourt’s abilities in manager selection, due diligence, and risk management. The goal is to create a fund with USD250m in assets.Harcourt and WR Group Holdings have also agreed to combine their managed accounts platforms. The Swiss firm, specialised in alternative investment solutions for institutional investors, will allow access to its managed accounts platform and will provide exclusive due diligence services to funds of the WR Group platform. It will also provide analysis and portfolio construction services.The objective is to create a single platform to serve institutional investors with products from 50 managers; this will be increased to 75 managers in first quarter 2010. Currently, the platform from WR Group includes 30 managers, with assets of USD200m, while Harcourt has 15 managers and USD150m.
Hans Rademaker, currently head of fiduciary management at Kempen Capital Management, will join the Dutch management firm Robeco (EUR127bn in assets as of the end of September) on 1 February 2010, as head of mainstream investments, a position which was left vacant on 1 December 2008 with the departure of Jean-Louis Laurens, who has since become head of Rothschild & Cie Gestion, a position he has held since 1 September.Mainstream investments at Robeco are divided between five locations in Rotterdam, Paris, Boston, New York, and Hong Kong.
The German press has been invited by Credit Suisse to a breakfast press conference on 17 November, where it will present its range of ETF products under the Xmtch brand name, which has recently been enlarged (see article in Newsmanagers of 6 July). The Swiss management firm is planning to list the products on the XTF segment of the Xetra electronic trading platorm from Deutsche Börse. Credit Suisse is also planning to list the Xmtch products, which have previously been available only in Switzerland, in other European countries beyond Germany.
Clive Capital, the world’s largest commodity hedge fund, is shutting its doors to new investors just two years after its launch, says the Financial Times. People familiar with Clive said the fund wanted to stay nimble in relatively small commodity markets. The fund has swelled to USD3.5bn in assets.
The management firm GLG Partners is planning to launch five absolute performance funds on the British market, according to Money Marketing, which will become part of its range of 12 UCITS III-compliant funds domiciled in Dublin. They include four emerging markets funds - emerging markets credit opportunity, equity, fixed income and currencies - and a pan-European long/short alpha fund.
On Thursday, ETF Securities (ETFS) announced the launch of four “long” ETF products based on cocoa, lead, pewter and platinum, which are listed on the London Stock Exchange. The new products bring the number of producs in the ETFS range of ETC products to 148. Its commodities platform now has over USD16bn in assets, triple their levels twelve months ago.
The German firm Deka Immobilien has bought the 40,000 square-metre Gemini office building in Prague, for its open-ended real estate fund Deka-ImmobilienEuropa (EUR10bn). The acquisition price is about EUR110m. The vendor is the Austrian Sparkassen Immobilien AG.
The CNMV has issued its first authorisation to group together orders for investment funds and pension funds to Fonditel, Expansión reports. The manager of investment funds and of the Telefónica pension fund (EUR363m in assets as of the end of October) will be the first Spanish asset management firm to be allowed to make combined transactions for both the former and the latter, a practice which was previously considered irregular, as it was considered necessary to maintain a strict separation (Chinese walls) between pension fund and investment fund activities, in order to avoid conflicts of interest in asset allocation. Luis Peña, CEO of Fonditel, explained to Expansión that this aspect is overseen by an external risk manager.
European hedge funds will be confronted with more severe restrictions in terms of pay scales than banks, under last-minute changes to the draft directive on alternative management (AIFM). The most recent version of the bill, obtained by the Financial Times, now includes a three-page appendix of provisions restricting pay policies.
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has removed Liechtenstein from its “grey list” of countries which refuse to exchange tax information. The OECD is still monitoring 28 countries which, in many cases, have engaged to comply with OECD standards for tax information sharing, but have not yet done so in practice.
The market for over-the-counter derivative products grew by 10% in the first six months of the year compared with the previous half, to a total of nearly USD604.6trn, the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) has announced in its most recent semiannual report. The markets for derivative instruments based on fixed income, currencies, and equities all grew in the period under review, while assets in contracts based on commodities stabilised. The CDS market continued to contract, losing 14% to USD36trn, following a 27% contraction in the second half of 2008.
At the request of the Financial Services Authority (FSA), the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) is investigating Dynamic Decision Fund Management, an alternative asset management firm based in the Cayman Islands, which managed GBP500m, Handelsblatt reports. The FSA and the SFO have both been flooded with complaints from subscribers about investment practices at Dynamic Decision. Investigators are focusing on the Dynamic Decisions Growth Premium Master Fund, the firm’s main hedge fund, which was closed last year after suffering heavy losses.
The chairman of the board of trustees at CalPERS, Rob Feckner, has called on his colleagues on the board to militate for strengthened legislation to regulate the activities of placement agents or organizations which use their services, in order to make them subject to the same ethical and reporting standards which apply to lobbying groups. CalPERS says in a statement that Feckner has sent a letter to this effect to the 13 members of the board of trustees, following recent events in which placement agents attempted to unduly influence the California pension fund’s investment decisions.
The Global Classic, Global Dynamic, Global Challenge, Global Balance, Global Discovery and Stable Value sub-funds of the Luxembourg Sicav BG Umbrella Fund will be liquidated on 1 January 2010, as a result of the Madoff scandal. Subscribers will be able to redeem their investments at this time, LRI Invest announces.
ING va travailler sur une introduction en Bourse de son activité assurances en début d’année prochaine, même si le groupe néerlandais n’a pas exclu de trouver un acquéreur pour les actifs de tout ou partie la division, rapporte le Financial Times.
La Deutsche Bank a annoncé que Boris Liedtke a été nommé CEO des activités de Deutsche Asset Management (DeAM) - 646 milliards de dollars d’encours fin juin pour l’Asie-Pacifique hors Japon. Basé à Singapour, il sera subordonné à Mark cullen, Global COO de Deutsche Asset Management, qui assurait également l’intérim de patron de DeAM pour l’Asie-Pacifique.Boris Liedtke a passé en Asie (Hong-Kong et Singapour) huit des quinze années depuis son entrée dans le groupe Deutsche Bank. En dernier lieu, il a été COO dans l’ensemble DeAM/DWS Investments à Francfort et à new York.
En octobre, les fonds commercialises en Suède ont enregistré leur plus forte collecte mensuelle avec 17 milliards de couronnes suédoises, soit 1,6 milliard d’euros, selon les dernières statistiques de l’association suédoise des fonds d’investissement (Fondbolagens Förening), qui note également qu’il s’agit du onzième mois positif consécutif pour le secteur.L’industrie a été portée par les fonds actions, qui enregistrent des souscriptions nettes de 12 milliards d’euros sur le mois. Les fonds diversifiés engrangent 2,8 milliards. Les fonds obligataires et monétaires affichent eux aussi une collecte record de respectivement 1,7 milliard et 0,6 milliard de couronnes. Les hedge funds n’ont en revanche rien fait sur le mois.Depuis le début de l’année, les fonds suédois ont enregistré des entrées nettes de près de 87 milliards d’euros, dont 79 milliards pour les fonds actions. Seule la catégorie des fonds monétaires est dans le rouge, avec des rachats nets de 24 milliards de couronnes.
La perte de confiance des investisseurs a été importante pour les hedge funds en 2008, note l’Agefi, les promesses de rendements absolus n’ayant pas été tenues pour beaucoup d’entre eux. Mais la roue tourne. 73 % des investisseurs institutionnels interrogés par le consultant Preqin se disent satisfaits des performances enregistrées en 2009. Cela étant, la performance a perdu cette année son statut de principal critère de sélection des hedge funds, au bénéfice de la transparence et de la réputation du fonds.
A l'échelon mondial, les actifs gérés dans des ETF ont marqué un nouveau record de 941,85 milliards de dollars fin octobre, soit 0,9 % de plus que les 933 milliards de fin septembre, rapporte Barclays Global Investors (BGI) dans son dernier bulletin mensuel. Depuis le début de l’année, l’encours a ainsi gonflé de 32,5 % alors que l’indice MSCI monde gagnait 20,2 % en dollars. A fin août, d’après Strategic Insight, les souscriptions nettes ont porté sur 76,8 milliards de dollars.On recensait fin octobre 1.859 ETF émis par 97 fournisseurs et cotés au total 3.327 fois sur 40 Bourses. Le nombre d’ETF s’est accrue de 16,8 %, avec 336 lancements et 73 fermetures. On recense actuellement des projets de lancement pour 805 nouveaux ETF.BGI précise aussi que sa marque iShares est restée le premier opérateur mondial avec 405 ETF et des encours de 455,72 milliards fin octobre, ce qui représente une part de marché de 48,4 %. Les numéro deux et trois demeurent State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) avec 106 produits et 137,08 milliards de dollars pour le premier et 40 produits/80,76 milliards pour le second. Cela correspond à des parts de marchés respectives de 14,6 % et 8,6 %.
L’indice Hennessee des hedge funds a marqué pour octobre sa première baisse après sept mois de hausse. Il affiche une perte de 0,50 % qui ramène la performance moyenne pour les dix premiers mois de l’année à 20,12 %. L’indice Barclay des hedge funds est pour sa part en repli de 0,17 % pour octobre, sur un échantillon de 1.1177 fonds ayant publié leurs résultats au 11 novembre. Sur janvier-octobre, la performance moyenne s’inscrit à 19,80 %, malgré une perte de 15,02 % pour les 6 fonds equity short bias et de 0,77 % pour les 35 fonds equity market neutral. Pour octobre 9 stratégies sur 17 sont dans le rouge, la plus forte baisse (1,94 %) correspondant à l’equity long bias.Sur octobre, la meilleure performance est enregistrée par les distressed securities (2,96 %) tandis que depuis le début de l’année le score le plus élevé est celui de l’arbitrage de convertibles (48,71 %), qui est également le meilleur chez Hennessee, avec une performance de 40,74 %, et chez Credit Suisse/Tremont avec 45,64 %.
Alors que la période est propice à la commercialisation de fonds ouvrant droit à réduction d'impôts , Newsmanagers a interrogé Guillaume de Trogoff, directeur Commercial de A Plus Finance, une société de gestion spécialisée dans la gestion de ces OPCVM qui investissent sur des titres non cotés ou cotés sur le marché non réglementé. Selon lui, la crise est à l'origine de nombreuses opportunités. Pour autant, la gestion de ces fonds n'en est pas moins complexe.
Selon Cinco Días, CVC Capital Partners, Magnum, le fonds d’infrastructures de Morgan Stanley et l’australien Macquarie sont chacun candidats à l’acquisition de 500.000 clients que Gas Natural s’est engagé vis-à-vis de la Commission nationale de la concurrence à vendre d’ici à la fin de l’année.
Selon Funds People, Myriam Luque, qui était directrice de la distribution pour les marchés mondiaux, a été nommée directeur général de la plate-forme de multigestion du BBVA, Quality Funds. Elle remplace Juan Pablo Jimeno (nommé en juillet), qui devient patron de la gestion d’actifs traditionnels de BBVA Asset Management.