La collecte nette du Livret A a été de 0,29 milliard d’euros et celle du LDD de 0,14 milliard d’euros au mois de mai contre respectivement 3,05 milliards d’euros et 1,56 milliard d’euros au mois d’avril, selon les chiffres communiqués par la Caisse des dépôts. A 0,43 milliard d’euros, la collecte nette des deux produits se retrouve à son plus bas niveau depuis depuis le mois de septembre (0,19 milliard d’euros). Depuis le début de l’année, la collecte nette s'élève à 21,09 milliards d’euros, soit près de deux fois plus par rapport aux cinq premiers mois de 2012 (12 milliards d’euros). L’encours des deux produits a atteint 363,7 milliards d’euros contre 363,3 milliards d’euros au mois de mai, l’encours du Livret A étant de 264,9 milliards d’euros et celui du LDD de 98,8 milliards d’euros. Dans ce contexte, le taux de rémunération du Livret A, qui avait déjà été abaissé de 2,25 % à 1,75 % le 1er février dernier, pourrait reculer à nouveau en août prochain si l’inflation reste modérée. Une baisse qui devrait satisfaire l’agence Standard & Poor’s, dont une étude juge désormais le Livret A pénalisant pour le secteur bancaire français.
Dans un entretien au quotidien Qatar Tribune repris par L’Agefi, l’ambassadeur du Qatar en France, Mohamed Jaham al Kuwari, a indiqué que l'émirat entend investir dix milliards d’euros en France. Ces investissements concerneraient des «institutions françaises majeures». Toujours selon L’Agefi, la chaîne télévisée Al Djazira rapporte par ailleurs que l'émir du Qatar, Cheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al Thani, doit rencontrer aujourd’hui les membres de la famille royale et les principaux responsables politiques du pays concernant une éventuelle abdication au profit de son fils, le prince héritier Cheikh Tamim.
Sander Levy et Alok Singh, qui ont coopéré il y a huit ans à la création du réassureur Validus Holdings aux Bermudes, se sont à présent associés à l’ancien CEO de la société de logiciels New Mountain, Kevin Parker, pour créer un capital-investisseur spécialiste des «buy-outs», Bridge Growth Partners LLC, rapporte the Wall Street Journal. Selon les proches du dossier, ils visent une levée de fonds d’un milliard de dollars et comptent se focaliser uniquement sur les services financiers et les technologies.
La holding d’investissement Salvepar, détenue à 92% par le groupe Tikehau a annoncé ce lundi 24 juin la cession à CM-CIC Capital Finance de sa participation à hauteur de 12% dans le groupe Courtepaille pour la somme de 9 M€. Salvepar bénéficiera d’un possible complément de prix valable jusqu’à fin 2018 en cas de cession de ces actions par CM-CIC Capital Finance avant cette date, précise un communiqué.Le closing de l’opération devrait intervenir fin juin.
S’il commercialisait déjà ses produits au travers de placement privés en Espagne, le gestionnaire britannique Balton Strategic Partnership a désormais officiellement abordé le marché espagnol en faisant enregistrer par la CNMV sa sicav luxembourgeoise Melchior Selected Trust, qui compte cinq compartiments et affiche un encours de 540 millions d’euros, rapporte Funds People.C’est le sixième gestionnaire étranger à débarquer en Espagne depuis le début de l’année, après J. Chahine Capital, Ellipsis AM, Oaks Field Partners, LarrainVial et Wellington Management.
Le conseil d’administration de Mediobanca a présenté le 21 juin le plan 2014-2016 du groupe, dont l’objectif est de générer en 2016 un rendement des fonds propres de 10-11 %. Il prévoit notamment de simplifier les structures en se focalisant sur trois piliers, la banque d’investissement, la banque du particulier et la gestion de fortune.Pour ce dernier pôle, Mediobanca compte investir en ressources humaines (entre autres en private equity, private debt et crédits non performing) ainsi qu’en technologies pour développer des activités plus margées et moins consommatrices de capital, notamment avec le lancement de Mediobanca Alternative Asset Management (MAAM). L’objectif assigné à la gestion de fortune consiste à générer 15 % des recettes bancaires du groupe en 2016.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to an annual study by the consultant Mckinsey, no less than 15% of European private banks had operating losses in 2012, Les Echos reports. Only 2% to 3% of banks were in this situation before the financial crisis, and the percentage has been increasing each year. However, overall, the 110 banks examined by the agency have returned to their pre-crisis profit levels, and 25% of them have even surpassed them. Total assets under management have recovered by 8% in one year. But this increase in assets is more due to improved markets in 2012 than to inflows, which have increased only modestly.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Ahead of a meeting of the Federal Reserve, investors do not appear worried. They bought fewer bonds and invested more in US, Japanese and European equity funds. However, their defiance with respect to emerging market funds remains tenacious, and outflows totalled more than USD3bn in the week to 19 June, a level not seen for nearly two years, according to statistics released by EPFR Global.Despite their circumspection with respect to most of the major emerging markets, such as China Brazil, Russia and South Africa, investors retain a marked appetite for smaller markets, which are riskier but also more dynamic. Funds dedicated to frontier markets have been posting inflows since mid-March and have also attracted more than USD2.5bn since the beginning of this year.Overall, equity funds have posted a net inflow of USD4.81bn in the week to 19 June, while bond funds have seen redemptions totalling USD7.48bn. Money market fund have seen outflows of over USD25bn in the week to 19 June, the highest level since the third week of February.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The former heavyweight in private banking at Wegelin, Konrad Hummler, is returning to the industry. Hummler, whose investment columns were always highly popular, has founded the M1 AG company, domiciled in St. Gall, which offers investment advisory services.Hummler, with three partners, is launching a paper or electronic publication, “Bergsicht,” which will be released at least six times per year, and which will resemble the investment columns of the Wegelin period.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to Finews, Cesar Gueikian, former head of special situations at UBS, has founded an asset management firm entitled Melody Capital Partners. His partners are Andres Scaminaci and Omar Jaffrey, also formerly of UBS. The three specialists are launching a fund to invest in guaranteed credit in the United States and Western Europe. They are hoping to raise more than EUR500m.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Although it had already been selling its products as private investments in Spain, the British asset management firm Balton Strategic Partnership has now officially entered the Spanish market, with the registration of its Luxembourg Sicav, Melchior Selected Trust, with the CNMV. The Sicav has five sub-funds and assets of EUR540m, Funds People reports.The firm becomes the sixth foreign asset management firm to enter Spain since the beginning of the year, following J. Chahine Capital, Ellipsis AM, Oaks Field Patenrs, LarrainVial and Wellington Management.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The German sustainable investment advising firm versiko has announced the launch of a unit-linked retirement savings plan, ökoViola, whose portfolio will be invested exclusively in shares in the ökovision Classic fund, launched by the firm’s Luxembourg affiliate ökoworld, while the insurance portion of the policy is contracted to Continentale.versiko says that the formula allows subscribers to be sure that their savings will be invested ethically, with the exclusion of weapons, nuclear technology, chlorine chemistry, and child labour.As of 31 May, the ökovision Classic fund had assets of EUR361.8m for C shares (LU0061928585) and EUR15.8m for A shares (LU0551476806).
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Handelsblatt reports that assets under management by the contrarian fund Mainstay Marketfield Fund now total USD9.5bn, compared with USD1.7bn as of the end of May 2012. The product is managed by an amateur poet, Michael Aronstein, and a doctor of philosophy, Michael Shaoul.The strategy is simple: invest against the grain. The managers currently consider German, Italian and Irish equities to be attractive, they see banks recovering and they stress that refinancing costs are almost 0%.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The US bank Morgan Stanley on 21 June announced that it is planning to exercise its buy option for the remaining 35% it does not already control in its joint venture with its rival Citigroup, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Wealth Management (MSSB).The transaction is expected to be completed by 28 June or a date soon thereafter, at a price which had previously been set at USD4.7bn in cash, a statement says. Once controlled entirely by Morgan Stanley, the entity will become known as Morgan Stanley Wealth Management.The operation will conclude a very long story which has long complicated relations between Morgan Stanley and Citi. Morgan Stanley Smith Barney was created in 2009, from the merger of financial product retail distribution activities at Morgan Stanley and activities at Citigroup which had been operating under the name Smith Barney.Morgan Stanley had made complete integration a priority, but the project ran into a series of divergences between the partners with respect to the value of the business. The two banks in September agreed on a total valuation of USD13.5bn. Morgan Stanley, which then held 51% of MSSB, exercised an initial buy option for an additional 14%. The remaining 35% were expected to be acquired by the end of June 2015.James Gorman, chairman and CEO of Morgan Stanley, claims in a statement that the operation represents “a historic day” for his group. “It’s the culmination of several years of effort to transform our business model into something that offers the best returns to shareholders and more stability on volatile markets,” he said.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Sander Levy and Alok Singh, who cooperated eight years ago in the creation of the reinsurer Validus Holdings in Bermuda, have now teamed up with the former CEO of the software firm New Mountain, Kevin Parker, to create a private equity firm specialised in buyouts, Bridge Growth Partners LLC, the Wall Street Journal reports. According to sources familiar with the matter, they are aiming to raise funds totalling USD1bn, and are planning to focus exclusively on financial services and technology.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Gilles Darde has joined Convictions Asset Managemnet as head of distribution and marketing, according to his Linked-In profile. He had previously served as head of sales for external distribution at Aviva Investors. He has also worked at Fortis Investments.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Swiss firm Mirabaud Asset Management has recruited Nicolas Crémieux as part of its team dedicated to convertible bonds based in Paris, as a senior analyst-manager, Newsmanagers has learned. Crémieux joins from Dexia Asset Management, where he was a senior manager in charge of international convertible bonds.His arrival, slated for the end of August, will coincide with the launch of a global convertible bond fund in autumn. The product already exists in the form of an internal portfolio. It will be released in a UCITS format.The new product will join the existing Mirabaud Convertible Bonds Europe fund, which invests in European convertible bonds, launched in October 2011, and managed by Renaud Martin, head of convertible bonds since that time.The recruitments, which provide reinforcements to the expertise of Mirabaud AM in convertible bonds, follow several other recruitments to the management team. More will be announced in the weeks to come, particularly in Paris.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Dreyfus Corporation, a company of the BNY Mellon group, has launched an actively-managed mutual fund, the Drefus Opportunistic Emerging Markets Debt Fund.The fund aims to invest in all categories of emerging market debt, including debt denominated in hard currencies and debt denominated in local currencies issued by government and corporate issuers.The fund is managed by Alexander Kozhemiakin, managing director for emerging market strategies and senior portfolio manager in charge of management for all emerging market debt portfolios at Standish, as well as Javier Murcio, portfolio manager and senior government debt analyst.Assets under management at Dreyfus Corporation total about USD294bn.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Most CFOs say they are optimistic about their ability to develop their activities and to acquire new clients in 2013, according to the most recent quarterly survey by Russell Investments of US chief financial officers (Financial Professional Outlook).In the present year, 48% of respondants say that they hope to win over more than 10 clients, while 30% of them are aiming for 7 to 10 clients. Last year, 86% of advisers managed to take on more clients than they lost, while 48% of them took on 10 or more new clients.As a corollary of this optimism, 32% of the advisers say that clients expect capital markets to perform well in the next three years, a level not seen since March 2011. Three quarters of CFOs are themselves optimistic about the evolution of the markets.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The redemption index calculated by the hedge fund administrator SS&C GlobeOp in June rose to 3.88%, from 3.77% in May, Reuters reports.Hedge funds participated in strong gains on the stock market since last summer, but many investors have been disappointed to find that hedge funds are unable to compete with the returns on equity markets.Since the beginning of this year, hedge funds have posted returns of 3.95%, according to Hedge Fund Research, compared with gains of nearly 13% for the S&P 500 index.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Pimco Total Return fund from Bill Gross (USD285bn) has been one of the bond funds worst affected by the selloff in bonds which has affected the asset class since the Federal Reserve announced that it would begin reducing the scale of its quantitative easing programme, Investment Week reports. According to Bloomberg, the Pimco flagship fund has lost 1.6% since 8-20 June. It has lost 2.8% YTD.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Resource Real Estate, an affiliate of Resource America, has launched a new real estate fund, the Resource Real Estate Diversified Income Fund, Wealth Adviser reports.The fund, which will be managed by Scott Crowe, aims for long-term appreciation and offers low correlation to the equity markets for investors who wish to diversify their allocation. The fund also offers quarterly liquidity.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The US firm Invesco PowerShares Capital Management on 20 June announced the launch of the PowerShares Global Short Term High Yield Bond Portfolio, which has been admitted to trading on NYSE Arca under the ticker PGHY.The fund charges 0.35% and replicates the DB Global Short Maturity High Yield Bond Index. The portfolio is invested in short-term, high yield debt denominated in US dollars, issued worldwide by government, municipal and corporate borrowers.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Countries which refuse automatic exchange of information for tax purposes will be added to a list of uncooperative states by France from 2016, due to an amendment passed by the government. The date of application for the changes would thus be later than the US automatic information exchange (FATCA) agreement, which is schedued for September 2015.“Such an approach has the advantage that it is dynamic and allows France to concentrate on the genuine challenges of offering incentives in a context marked by a strong engagement to promoting tax transparency,” the government claims in an explanation of its amendment to a proposed law to combat tax fraud, passed on Thursday evening.The countries of the G8 early last week pledged to automatically exchange inforamtion, which is considered a deadly weapon in the war on tax havens, the “new global standard” to combat these flows.
Deutsche Bank in mid-June unveiled its new division, Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management (DeAWM), including the 23 asset management, wealth management and market activity brands. After serving as managing director and global head of RREEF Real Estate, Pierre Cherki, who is head of the new alternative/real asset management profession, discusses the size of his unit, its composition and its plans, now that it has a sales team 40 times larger than previously.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Financial advisers and wealth managers may in the future avail themselves of an addition to the product range from the consultant Mercer, which is now offering High Volume Research (HVR) and High Volume Monitoring (HVM) services, to address all potential questions raised by the funds in which their clients invest.HVR is a concise, high level tool (as opposed to complete research reports on managers), aimed at wealth managers, to help them to identify issues which may concern funds in which they may invest their clients’ money. For its part, HVM is a regular monitoring service, with which Mercer aims to identify concrete changes in a fund which may have an impact on the end result for clients.HVR and HVM allow investment advisers and wealth managers access to a quality of service which had previously been reserved for institutional investors and pension funds.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } UK-based Schroders wants to grow and is not hiding it. “We have GBP580m in cash,” its executive vice president, Massimo Tosato, tells Les Echos. This money “could be used both for acquisitions of local companies for international development and fo investments in organic growth,” he continues.Growth is proving more timid in Europe, its favourite market, and Schroders is turning to Asia and the United States.In the latter country, which can be hyper-competitive and closed off to foreigners, it is expecting to double in size in the next five years. As of 31 March 2013, assets under management in the United States already totalled GBP42bn, of which GBP7bn were at STW, a bond asset management firm acquired in December.
Hermes Real Estate Investment Management Limited (HREIML), with over GBP5.8 billion assets under management, has announced the appointment of Marcus Palmer as head of real estate debt. Based at the company’s headquarters in London, he will report into Ben Sanderson, Director of International Investment, HREIML. He will be responsible for managing the real estate debt programme. Prior to joining HREIML, Marcus was a Partner at Chalkhill Partners LLP.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The British firm Polar Capital has recruited two investment professionals, Deane Donnigan and David Pinniger, who will serve in the healthcare unit at the asset management firm, Fundweb reports.Donnigan previously worked at Axa Framlington, while Pinniger has for more than 12 years worked in the healthcare sector.Polar Capital offers two healthcare strategies: the Polar Capital Healthcare Opportunities fund (GBP478.4m), and the Polar Capital Global Healthcare Growth and Income trust (GBP152.6m).
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Private investors continued to buy equities in the six months to the end of May, according to statistics released by Capita Registrars in its Private Investor Watch.Investors in the United Kingdom added GBP2.3bn to their portfolios, bringing their total assets to GBP222.2bn, the equivalent in value of 11% of the British equity market.Since the beginning of the rising market cycle in 2009, investors have added GBP6.1bn to their equity assets, of which BP3.6bn have been in the past 12 months.Between December 2012 and May 2013 investors traded about GBP45bn in equities, the most active period in the past two years.However, investors did not anticipate the fall on the market which began in June, and therefore did not take profits. They even continued to invest until the end of May. As of 18 June, they had lost GBP11.5bn, and their assets were down to GBP210.7bn.