Mirabaud renforce ses équipes parisiennes avec la nomination de Caroline Duret, Directeur, Gérant Privé. Caroline Duret, 46 ans, a mené la plus grande partie de sa carrière professionnelle dans le monde des médias et du sport, avant de mettre à profit cette expérience au service de la gestion privée. Elle était depuis 2001 chez UBS où elle a exercé pendant huit ans la fonction de directeur en gestion de fortune du département sports, entertainment, médias et new entrepreneurs.
Selon La Tribune, en deux mois, environ 20% des besoins de financement annuels des économies de l’Euroland ont déjà été satisfaits et, selon Calyon, les états devraient encore émettre 72 milliards d’euros d'émissions de dettes à moyen et long terme durant ce mois de mars.Toutefois, «la période pourrait être particulièrement sensible pour les pays dont la dette n’est pas assez liquide», estime le quotidien selon lequel les investisseurs commencent à montrer des signes de fatigue comme le prouve notamment l’appétence modérée pour les dernières émissions de dette bancaire autrichienne.
Selon l’Agefi,La BCE et la BoE devraient annoncer une baisse respective de leurs de taux de 50 points de base, demain, lors de leurs réunions de politique monétaire. Du coup, la garde de la BCE reviendra à 1,5% et celle de la BoE à 0,5%. Par ailleurs, les deux banques centrales pourraient aussi indiquer quels " instruments non conventionnels» elles comptent utiliser pour soutenir le marché.
Euroclear a indiqué avoir conclu un partenariat avec dix grandes sociétés de gestion (AllianceBernstein, Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Invesco, JPMorgan Asset Management, Pictet Asset Management, Pioneer Investments, Robeco Asset Management, Schroders Investment Management, Société Générale Asset Management etVirmont SARL, l’ancienne Alken Asset Management) pour promouvoir par des mesures incitatives l’automatisation de leurs transactions par les 50 % de distributeurs qui n’utilisent pas encore la plate-forme de traitement et de règlement STP FundSettle d’Euroclear. Un traitement entièrement automatisé des transactions sur les fonds permettrait au secteur de la gestion d’actifs d'économiser environ 300 millions d’euros par an, estime Euroclear. Toutes les activités d’asset servicing et de conservation seront gratuites pour les distributeurs qui donneront suite à la nouvelle offre FundSettle. Les distributeurs de fonds utilisant le service automatisé STP de FundSettle paient 75 cents par transaction pour le routage et le règlement d’un ordre d’achat ou de vente, contre une commission moyenne de 7 euros. De plus, les distributeurs peuvent rationaliser leur back-office en utilisant un point d’accès unique à FundSettle et en réduisant leur niveau de risque grâce à l’automatisation.
Les notes long terme de Gas Natural et d’Unión Fenosa ont été abaissées par Moody’s à Baa1 contre A3, tout en les maintenant sous surveillance avec implication négative ; S&P et Fitch Ratings ont eux aussi récemment abaissé la note de Gas Naturel. A court terme, les notes Moody’s restent à Prime 2.La dégradation est expliquée par l’acquisition des 35,4 % de Fenosa détenus par ACS par Gas Natural ainsi que par l’OPA que ce dernier doit lancer sur le reliquat de la compagnie d'électricité. Cela va augmenter «substantiellement» l’endettement de Gas natural par rapport aux 5,1 milliards d’euros de fin décembre, alors que le passif actuel d’unión Fenosa est déjà de l’ordre de 6,7 milliards d’euros. La dette du groupe fusionné, après la transaction, atteindre en effet quelque 26 milliards d’euros.
Vu la crise financière, Munich Ré devient encore plus prudent ; le réassureur a renoncé mardi à son objectif d’un bénéfice par action de 18 euro pour 2010 et il s’est abstenu de toute prévision pour 2009, son président se bornant à estimer que le résultat ne sera pas dans le rouge, rapporte la Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Néanmoins, le directeur financier vise toujours un rendement de 15 % sur le capital à risque mais le rendement des capitaux investis sera nettement inférieur à 4,5 %. Et Munich Ré continue de racheter ses propres actions. Sinon, il investit en obligations et la part des actions dans son portefeuille est tombée à seulement 3,6 % fin 2008 contre 11,4 % fin juin. Si l’on compte les opérations de couverture, la part des actions est même réduite à 1,7 %. Il a quand même fallu passer pour 7 milliards d’euros de dépréciations d’actifs sur le portefeuille
La demande d’aides de l’Etat par les banques allemandes a augmenté en février de 31 milliards d’euros sur janvier pour atteindre 294 milliards d’euros, a indiqué mardi le Fonds de stabilisation des marchés financiers (SoFFin) qui est chargé de gérer les 480 milliards d’euros du plan de sauvetage. La Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung précise que 197 milliards ont été débloqués, dont 178 milliards pour garantir des emprunts, la seule Hypo Real Estate engloutissant 52 milliards d’euros. Pour les aides en fonds propres, seuls 19 milliards ont été distribués, dont 18,4 milliards pour la Commerzbank.
Le capital-investisseur Christopher Flowers, qui détient avec ses affidés environ 17 % de Hypo Real Estate (HRE), une banque qui a déjà reçu 100 milliards d’euros d’aides publiques, refuse d'être exproprié. Il veut rester actionnaire, même s’il est favorable à l’idée que l’Etat fédéral prenne la majorité. L’Américain indique dans une interview au Handelsblatt qu’il préférerait une solution «constructive». Mais, le cas échéant, il aura «naturellement» recours à la justice contre le Bund.
Le Commissaire européen Nellie Kroes a indiqué clairement à la WestLB qu’elle n’a ni l’intention ni la possibilité de lui accorder un second report pour la présentation de son plan d’assainissement, rapporte le Handelsblatt. Autrement dit, si la banque de Düsseldorf ne fournit pas un projet cohérent pour fin mars, elle sera obligée par Bruxelles de rembourser les aides publiques qui auraient alors été perçues illégalement.
Le marché à terme germano-suisse Eurex (Deutsche Börse et SWX) a annoncé mercredi qu’il a procédé en février à l’ouverture de son bureau de représentation à Hong-Kong. Cette antenne est dirigée par Paul Lo, qui a rejoint Eurex en juin 2007.
Selon les données de l’AFIC (Association Française des Investisseurs en Capital), 4,4 milliards d"euros ont été collectés entre 1997 et 2007 par 216 FCPI et 2,2 milliards d"euros ont été investis dans 800 entreprises innovantes.
Selon l’Agefi, citant l’Association française du capital-investissement (Afic) et Oseo, les FCPI ont collecté 4,4 milliards d’euros en 10 ans, plus 369 millions d’euros drainés en 2008 via trente FCPI et les 198 millions d’euros collectés via onze FCPI ISF. Aujourd’hui, les FCPI disposent encore de près de 2,8 milliards d’euros à investir dans les PME innovantes durant les prochaines années, précise le quotidien numérique en rappelant que, jusqu'à présent, les FCPI ont déjà investi 2,2 milliards dans 800 entreprises innovantes, pour l’essentiel françaises.
Renaissance Technologies (USD20bn in assets) on Tuesday announced the recruitment of Matthew H. Scanlan as president and CEO of its affiliate Renaissance Institutional Management. Scanlan was previously managing director and head of the Americas institutional business at Barclays Global Investors. He replaces Stephen Robert, who retired at the end of last year. Pensions & Investments reports that Scanlan will be replaced in the interim at BGI by William Chinery, managing director and head of client service for the group’s activities in the Americas.
The extraordinary audit of the Banif Inmobiliario fund from Santander Real Estate has resulted in a downward revision of the value of the portfolio of 7.5%, lower than market expectations, Expansión reports. The newspaper adds that 97% of subscribers to the fund have requested redemption of their shares. The Banif Inmobiliario will distribute redemptions (between 9 March and 5 May) to investors in a first group equivalent to 10.3% of the audited value of the fund. Santander will then deliver subsequent redemptions to investors in 10% stages as properties are sold off, as a function of the net asset value of the fund.
Henderson Global Investors, led since the end of last year by its former CIO, Andrew Formica, follows a policy of actively adapting its product range to market conditions. Recently, the British management firm announced that it will be closing two sub-funds of its Horizon Sicav, including the Pan European Property Equities Alpha Plus Fund (EUR0.8bn), which was tactically positioned to enter at the low point of the market and profit from a rebound in real estate properties, which the market will apparently not deliver in the next few months.Similarly, the Global Financials Fund sub-fund was launched in late 2007, and was tactically aligned to the bottom of the market, and oriented to the recovery of financial sector shares. The fund will be closed on 1 June. It was not intensively promoted, and its assets as of the end of January totalled EUR2m, says Patricial Kaveh, director of development for France, Geneva and Monaco.The Strategic Yield Fund (EUR4m), for its part, has been reoriented to Europe, whereas it was previously focused on global and United States investments. Its high yield positioning is not meeting market expectations; the fund will therefore be closed.This housekeeping in the product range will also bring reorientations. For example, the Henderson Horizon Pan European Alpha Plus will on 1 April become the Pan European Alpha. The management team has recently been changed, and ?Plus? was let go as part of cost-saving measures. The product, which was a multi-strategy fund, will become a ?fundamental? product. The long/short sub-fund (30 long positions, 10-20 short positions), delivering portable alpha in a UCITS-III compliant vehicle, will be highly flexible, says Kaveh.The London offices of Henderson have also announced the launch of an offshore Luxembourg version of its Industries of the Future fund, which is not yet licensed for sale in France. The product, managed by Tim Dieppe, is intended for European and Asian investors.
In asset management, total assets under management at Crédit Agricole came to EUR457.5bn as of 31 December 2008, compared with EUR525bn one year earlier. That puts them 12.9% lower than 12 months earlier; 8.5 points of this decline are due to falling valuations. ?Outflows in the period are limited to 4.4% of assets, thanks to strong inflows to money market products (+EUR18.3bn), guaranteed products (+EUR4.9bn), and employee savings, which partially compensate for disaffection from absolute performance and alternative products (-EUR26.8bn), and equities products (-EUR9.2bn),? the bank says in a statement. In total, net redemptions totalled EUR23bn for the year.The asset management unit will soon be merged with Société Générale.
After reorganizing its fixed-income management, Axa Investment Managers is now taking on ?qualitative? equities management. The management firm of the Axa group has recently concluded the merger of the Conviction Actions, Axa Framlington and Talents teams, which manage assets of EUR63bn, out of a total of EUR120bn in equities management overall; the remainder is at Axa Rosenberg, the quantitative equities management arm. The merger will involve the creation of a single brand name for qualitative equities management. The product range will be reorganized around two major areas: ?core? funds and ?specialised? funds (thematic funds, absolute return, etc). This means that some products will be merged, but others will also be created, when lacunae are identified, which will offer ?more complete and coherent? product range, says Nathalie Boullefort-Fulconis, global director of Axa IM Distribution. The new range will be unveiled in one month.Equities management represented 24% of assets at Axa IM at the end of 2008, which total EUR485bn, At the end of 2007 they represented 31% of total assets of EUR548bn.In addition to this project, begun in 2008, Axa IM has set three priorities in 2009, a year which will be ?more difficult than 2008, with the impact of the markets playing a major role,? says the firm’s CEO, Dominique Carrel-Billiard.One of these, unsurprisingly, will be cost reduction in a context of falling revenues. Among its other priorities, Axa IM is also planning to improve its risk management, with an investment of EUR9bn, and to work on client relations.In an environment in which acquisition opportunties are numerous, Axa IM says it is also ?always ready to make a small targeted acquisition? in areas where it is not already present. The firm has already considered 4 or 5 possible candidates which have been submitted to them since the beginning of the year.
Liongate Capital Management has announced the opening of its fund of hedge funds Liongate Commodities Fund to outside investors, Hedge Week reports. The product, which began in January 2008 with seed capital of USD40m, is now invested in 20 mid-sized hedge funds specialised in various commodities (precious metals, oil, sugar). In the 13 months to the end of January 2009, it has posted performance of 0.36% in US dollars, compared with a loss of 51.27% for the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index.
The Financial Services Authority (FSA) announced on Tuesday that it is moving up the date on which its new disclosure regime for contracts for difference (CFDs) will take effect to 1 June, rather than the previously announced date of 1 September. Under the new regime, CFDs and similar financial instruments in the same company will be required to be declared as equities, and will count towards the 3% declaration threshold. This will ensure that these instruments are not covertly used to influence the governance of businesses or to build up stakes in companies.
At the end of January, assets in funds domiciled in the United Kingdom totalled GBP354.2bn, compared with GBP361.1bn at the end of December, and GBP432.2bn twelve months previously, while total net subscriptions represented GBP1.85bn, compared with GBP1.92bn the previous month, and with net redemptions of GBP744.3m in January 2008, the Investment Management Association (IMA) reports. Of this total, retail net subscriptions represented EUR1.22bn, compared with EUR1.50bn in December, and net outflows of EUR561.3m.For funds domiciled abroad, assets as of 31 January totalled GBP15.2bn, compared with GBP16bn at the end of December and GBP16.2bn one year previously, while net subscriptions in January totalled GBP66.6m, compared with GBP180.6m the previous month, and net redemptions of GBP374.8m in January 2008. Richard Saunders, chief executive at the IMA, points out that subscriptions have been high in the past three months, particularly for bond funds in December and January.
Allianz Global Investors (AGI) has announced operating profits of EUR904m in 2008, compared with profits of EUR1.32bn in 2007 (-32%), while net profits have contracted by EUR101m, or 21.5%, to EUR369m, on assets down by EUR50bn or 5.2% to EUR920bn, while assets under management for third parties have fallen by EUR52bn, or 7.1%, to EUR673bn.
Euroclear has announced that it has signed a partnership with ten major management firms (AllianceBernstein, Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Invesco, JPMorgan Asset Management, Pictet Asset Management, Pioneer Investments, Robeco Asset Management, Schroders Investment Management, Société Générale Asset Management and Virmont SARL, formerly known as Alken Asset Management), to offer incentives to promote a transition to automatic transactions at the 50% of distributors who are not yet using the STP FundSettle transaction processing and settlement system from Euroclear. A wholly electronic transaction processing system for funds would save the asset management sector about EUR300m per year, Euroclear estimates.All asset servicing and custody activities will be free for new distributors who sign up for FundSettle. Fund distributors who use the STP FundService system from FundSettle pay EUR0.75 per transaction for routing and settlement of a buy or sell order, compared with an average commission of EUR7 by other means. In addition, distributors can rationalise their back-office by using FundSettle as a unique access point, and would reduce their risk levels through the automatisation of these processes.
US lawyers preparing the case against Bernard Madoff have detected possible conflicts of interest concerning his lawyer, Ira Sorkin, the Financial Times reports. In 1992, Sorkin represented an accountancy firm which had invested in Madoff. Sorkin’s father, now deceased, had a retirement savings account with Madoff.
2008 was a hard year for investors in clean energies, but the election of president Obama in the United States and his declared intention to facilitate the development of clean energies during his term in office have recently given a boost to ?Clean Tech.?Henderson Global Investors (HGI) nonetheless estimates, however, that it is still too soon to declare a recovery in the Clean Tech sector, and remains cautious in the short term. But there are opportunities to be had in clean energies, the management firm says. ?The largest companies, for example, have outperformed the market since October 2008, and come shares, such as the Japanese battery maker GS Yuasa, have posted record performances,? says Seb Beloe, director or SRI research. He points out that the sector still needs to surmount a number of difficulties, such as financing. There may be some improvement in 2009, ?particularly if negotiations succeed in producing an international agreement, but it remains likely that growth will not really return until 2010,? he says. This means 2009 will be an eventful year in Clean Tech, says HGI.
The LGT Bank of Liechtenstein has announced the recruitment for its private banking activities in Frankfurt of a team of five client advisors from Dresdner Bank, who have longstanding relationships with high net worth private clients in the Frankfurt-Mainz-Bad Homburg triangle, the Börsen-Zeitung reports. The team is led by Andreas Bluck, who becomes the number two ranking member of the LGT-Bank branch in Frankfurt.
The Börsen-Zeitung reports that, as a result of the turbulence on the financial markets, assets in the ETF from db x-trackers (Deutsche Bank) based on the Eonia have reached EUR6.3bn. The issuer says the product has become the largest ETF in Europe.