Le directeur général du London Stock Exchange, Xavier Rolet, a engagé les grandes manœuvres pour faire évoluer la direction de l’opérateur boursier. Ce dernier serait notamment selon le quotidien, qui cite des personnes proches du dossier, en quête d’un nouveau patron pour MilleniumIT, sa division technologique en forte croissance. Le dirigeant actuel, Tony Weeresinghe, devrait s’occuper du développement international du groupe.
Le gestionnaire d’actifs américain a fait part du recrutement de l’ancien président de la Banque Nationale Suisse. Philipp Hildebrand sera basé à Londres, sous la responsabilité directe du PDG du groupe, Laurence Fink. Il aura en charge la gestion des relations avec les plus importants clients institutionnels en Europe, au Moyen-Orient, en Afrique, et en Asie-Pacifique.
Joseph Yam, ancien responsable de l’autorité monétaire de Hong Kong, a jeté un pavé dans la mare hier en remettant en cause l’arrimage de la monnaie locale au dollar américain au profit du renminbi. «Rien n’est définitif ni sacro-saint» s’est-il justifié. Une éventualité instantanément écartée par son successeur, Norman Chan, et par le secrétaire aux finances, John Tsang, qui ont rappelé que le gouvernement n’a pas l’intention de changer son arrimage au dollar.
Dans un entretien accordé à Bloomberg, le responsable de la gestion au sein du fonds souverain de Singapour, Tan Chong Lee, se dit prêt à prendre part à des opérations d’envergure, particulièrement en Europe où la crise actuelle est synonyme d’émergence d’opportunités. Temasek pourrait ainsi financer des sociétés désireuses de grandir dans des marchés de croissance comme l’Asie ou l’Amérique Latine ou en quête de croissance externe.
Le Fonds européen de stabilité financière (FESF) a placé mardi 1,5 milliard d’euros d’obligations arrivant à maturité en 2037. Le spread à l’émission ressort à 130 points de base au-dessus du taux midswap. BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank et JPMorgan ont codirigé l’opération. Les fonds levés seront utilisés pour le financement des programmes d’assistance au x Etats membres.
La directrice générale du Fonds monétaire international (FMI) a appelé dans le cadre du sommet Rio+20 les responsables européens à franchir «des étapes décisives» pour se libérer de la crise. «Il nous faut une stratégie qui soit bonne pour la stabilité et la croissance, la stabilité induisant la croissance et la croissance assurant la stabilité», a-telle martelé.
Certains pays membres de l’Opep ont exhorté l’Arabie saoudite à freiner la production pour endiguer une chute des prix qui a vu le baril de brut perdre 30 dollars depuis mars. «Lors de la réunion, nous appellerons très fermement les pays qui surproduisent à réduire», a déclaré le ministre vénézuélien du Pétrole Rafael Ramirez. Riyad a porté sa production à 10 millions de barils par jour (bpj), du jamais vu depuis des décennies.
Le soulagement initial qui a salué l’accord européen intervenu samedi s’est rapidement dissipé, les intervenants s’interrogeant sur les capacités de l’Espagne à pouvoir encore se financer sur le marché. Le rendement du 10 ans espagnol gagnait 32 points de base à 6,85%, dépassant le pic de novembre 2011 qui était de 6,8%. Fitch a abaissé ce mardi la note de 18 banques espagnoles à la suite du déclassement de la note souveraine du pays.
«Je pense que nous sommes dans une position difficile pour les trois, quatre ou cinq prochains mois», a déclaré Lloyd Blankfein, le patron de Goldman Sachs, sur l’antenne de MSNBC. «Il y a beaucoup d’incertitude», a-t-il ajouté, en particulier sur l’impact que pourrait avoir le résultat des élections américaines sur la fiscalité des dirigeants d’entreprises.
L’Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME) et l’European Financial Services Round Table (EFR) ont lancé aujourd’hui un label européen pour les titrisations de bonne qualité. Baptisé PCS pour prime collateralised securities, ce projet constitue une tentative de l’industrie bancaire pour rétablir la confiance des investisseurs dans la titrisation et relancer ce compartiment. Le premier label doit être décerné à la fin de l’année.
Les doutes qui persistent sur les détails du plan et les craintes d’un emballement de la dette publique espagnole auront été les plus forts. En fin de matinée, le rendement des obligations espagnoles à 10 ans progressait de 16 points de base, à 6,689%, tout près du record de 6,71% atteint fin mai et non loin de la barre de 7% qui a contraint l’Irlande et le Portugal à se tourner vers une aide internationale. Dans la foulée, à 6,14%, le rendement des obligations italiennes à dix ans s’installe également au-dessus de la barre de 6% . L’aide financière de 100 milliards d’euros aux banques espagnoles n’est qu’un élément de la notation du pays, a déclaré mardi le directeur général des notes souveraines chez Fitch Ratings, Ed Parker à Reuters. Il estime que le pays manquera de beaucoup ses objectifs en matière de déficit budgétaire aussi bien cette année qu’en 2013. Le prêt que la zone euro prépare, aura un taux d’intérêt de 3% et sera remboursable en 10 à 15 ans, affirme de son côté le journal ABC sans citer ses sources.
Le gouvernement suisse a relevé mardi ses prévisions de croissance pour 2012 en expliquant que la vigueur de la demande intérieure compensait l’effet négatif du cours élevé du franc suisse sur les exportations. Le secrétariat d’Etat à l'économie (Seco) prévoit désormais une croissance de 1,4% en 2012, contre une estimation de +0,8% fournie en mars dernier. L’estimation de l'évolution des prix à la consommation est confirmée à -0,4%.
La production manufacturière britannique a chuté de façon inattendue en avril, ravivant le risque d’une récession longue de l'économie du Royaume-Uni et accentuant la pression sur les responsables politiques pour prendre des mesure de soutien à la croissance. Selon les données de l’Office national de la statistique, la production du secteur manufacturier a reculé de 0,7%. Elle avait rebondi plus fortement que prévu le mois précédent, de 0,9%.
Le yen est modérément surévalué et une intervention est une option pour atténuer la volatilité, a déclaré un haut responsable du Fonds monétaire international (FMI), dans un rare signe de compréhension envers l’action du Japon pour tenter de limiter la hausse de sa monnaie. La devise nippone, considérée comme une valeur refuge, s’est appréciée alors que les investisseurs s’inquiètent de la crise de la dette en zone euro.
L’Inde a fait état mardi d’une quasi-stagnation en avril de sa production industrielle, ce qui confirme la fragilité de son économie après un avertissement sur la notation de la dette du pays et accroît la pression en faveur d’une baisse de ses taux directeurs. Standard & Poor’s a menacé lundi de dégrader la dette de l’Inde à la catégorie spéculative, qui se retrouverait ainsi le premier pays du groupe des «BRIC» à perdre son statut de pays en catégorie d’investissement.
Since 11 June, the XTF segment of the Xetra platform (Deutsche Börse) lists 986 ETFs, with the addition to trading of five new Irish-registered products from UBS Global Asset Management, four of which are baseed on the MSCI Canada and Japan indices (two each) and one on the FTSE 100. TER ranges from 0.28% to 0.50%.
The US firm Vanguard has received a sales license from BaFin to sell five ETFs in Germany (based on the FTSE 100, S&P 500, FTSE All World, FTSE Emerging Markets and gilts), which were admitted to trading on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) in late May. It is not yet known, however, if the issuer will apply to list these products on Deutsche Börse, Handelsblatt reportts. Tim Huver, product manager, has not yet indicated how Vanguard is planning to market the products in Germany. For the moment, the US asset management firm has no representative office in the country. Its strategy on the German market will be defined in the next four weeks.
In May, equity funds on sale in Sweden for the second consecutive month have recorded net outflows, totalling SEK9.7bn, or EUR1.09bn, according to the most recent statistics from Fondbolagens Förening, the Swedish investment fund association. Outflows form equities profited bond and money market funds, which posted net inflows of SEK4bn (EUR0.45bn) and SEK4.6bn (EUR0.52bn), respectively. Balanced funds, meanwhile, have seen inflows of SEK1.1bn (EUR0.12bn). These inflows, however, were not enough to compensate for overall redemptions, as funds on sale in Sweden saw outflows of SEK0.7bn (EUR0.08bn). As of the end of May, Swedish funds managed a total of SEK1.892trn (EUR213bn), of which SEK998bn (EUR112.4bn) were in equity funds.
About 10% of the total wealth of high net worth retail investors are held in the form of precious metals, according to a study published on 11 June in Geneva in the Barclays Wealth Insights series. This figure is 18% for high net worth invetors in the United Arab Emirates.In Brazil, China and Singapore, precious objects represent an average of one sixth of total wealth, while the percentage is lower in Switzerland (6%), the United Kingdom (7%) and India (3%). For its survey, the bank spoke to 2000 high net worth retail clients worldwide. One third of them have confirmed that they currently have a larger range of precious objects than five years ago.Despite growing public interest in collectible objects and record prices at auctions, the report finds that investors are more likely to buy assets for sentimental than financial reasons. 62% of precious objects owned by respondents worldwide were bought for pleasure, compared with 60% in Switzerland, as much as 79% in Monaco and 75% in the United Arab Emirates.Greg Davies, head of the department dedicated to behavioural finance at Barclays, remarks that “it is a good idea to be prudent before considering assets as a direct alternative to traditional asset classes, given that they carry numerous risks, ranging from insurance and maintenance costs to the subjective nature of markets.”
With Global Markets Intelligence (GMI), S&P Capital IQ has created an advisory operation which provides asset managers with risk-based, non-discretionary services for equity and fixed portfolio strategies, asset allocation and fund review. Currently, GMI advises assets totalling USD18bn. The new service is distributed by S&P Investment Advisory Services in the United States, and by McGraw Hill Research Europe Ltd in the United Kingdom and Western Europe, relying on the proprietary resources of S&P Captial IQ in data, analysis and research. The characteristic of GMI is that its methodologies integrate risk mitigation as a core element, and not as a separate overlay, a statement released on 11 June states.
The combined forces of disappointing employment data in the US and another week of no clear policy consensus in Europe, along with the fear that Chinese economic growth is slowing faster than previously thought, rattled global markets and encouraged investors to stay on course with the current bond buying spree while continuing to dump equities.In the week ending June 6 EPFR global tracked fixed income funds absorbed another USD3.4 billion of inflows, their 31st consecutive weekly inflow and extending YTD total inflows to about USD190 billion, a pace that is set to break the full year inflow record set in 2010.Investors were retreating from the perceived higher risk of equities as they made net withdrawals of USD7.6 billion from Equity Funds during the week, the second strongest weekly outflow this year.Meanwhile, money market Funds attracted nearly USD9 billion of net inflows, but it was only European based investors feeling the love for this cash equivalent and ultra-low yielding fund vehicle, pumping in nearly USD13 billion of net inflows while US domiciled Money Market Funds saw another week of substantial withdrawals. So far this year Europe domiciled funds have taken in about USD38 billion of net inflows while the US domiciled funds have seen USD107 billion of redemptions.
The Boston-based Putnam Investmnts (USD124bn in assets as of the end of April) has announced the opening of a representative office in Beijing, which will be directed by Michael Luo, formerly of Invesco Great Wall, where he helped to set up a fixed income team, has he had previously done at China Investment Corporation. Luo will report directly to Joseph T. Phoenix, head of global institutional management.The Beijing office will be in charge of establishing and managing relationships with government and private institutions in China. Luo will also be responsible for developing Putnam’s long-term strategy in the country.
The board of directors at the banking group Valartis has appointed Vincenzo Di Pierri as CEO of Valartis Bank AG Switzerland. He succeeds Daniel Reptsis, who took over the position for the interim following the departure of Stefan Holzer in May, according to a statement published on 11 June by Valartis. Reptsis will concentrate on his role as chief financial and risk officer for the finance & risk and banking operations units.Di Pierri worked from 2003 to 2011 at Privat Bank Finter, as CEO. Currently, he is head of the Italian chamber of commerce for Switzerland (CCIS).Valartis, formerly a simple brokerage firm, has recently refocused on wealth management. Its assets under management total about CHF6.8bn.
The Gonet private bank has appointed Alex Jagmetti as head of its activities in Asia. Following the opening of the Gonet Asia Pte Ltd company in Singapore in November last year, the group has strengthened its involvement in Asia and is now entering a new phase in its development. Jagmetti has 10 years of experience in Asia, where he has served as Managing Director at HSBC and then at UBS, before becoming head of Asia-Pacific at Falcon Private Bank.
Andreas Kuschmann, head of investment consulting & product marketing for Europe at Invesco Asset Management, will be joining the managing board at Feri EuroRating Services, alongside Tobias Schmidt, chairman, and Matthias Klöpper.Kuschmann will be responsible for developing relationships with institutional and retail clients, and for enlarging the portfolio of products and services, particularly in the area of systematic selection of products and managers.
In only seven years, the French asset management boutique Comgest has built up assets under management in Germany of EUR2.5bn, which is a good result considering that Comgest invests exclusively in equities, while Germans are particularly circumspect about this asset class, the Börsen-Zeitung reports. The sales team led by Christoph Zitt is convincing because Comgest practices stock-picking for shares likely to be successful in the long term, without frequent modifications to the portfolio, and because there has been no change of fund managers for 25 years.In Düsseldorf, the five institutional sales staff at Comgest cover the German, Austrian, Swiss and Luxembourg markets.
Norbert Braems, chief economist at Sal. Oppenheim (Deutsche Bank group), has decided to leave his position on 1 July, while remaining as senior economic adviser to the private bank. His role will be held in the interim by Frank Hübner, head of the economics department.By January 2013 at the latest, his successor will be Martin Moryson, who has most recently been director of corporate advisory at HSH Nordbank, after serving as adviser to institutional investors at Feri Institutional Mangement, and as head of empirical research and econometric analysis for the German Council of the Wise.
Assets under management in the ETF sector in Europe in this year’s first quarter rose by 8.71% to EUR250.81bn, according to statistics from Lipper. For 2011 as a whole, assets under management rose 3.75%.In Q1 2012 equity ETFs saw inflows of over EUR3 billion in new assets under management, followed by EUR1.5 billion into bond funds and EUR770 million into commodity funds. Money market ETFs experienced outflows of over EUR90 million.In Q1 2012, 62 ETFs were launched - half in the equity space. 19 bond funds were launched in the first quarter, but these have gathered 63% of assets among new ETFs. Inflows to new ETFS totalled EUR490m in first quarter, of which EUR311m were for bond ETFs, and EUR102m for equity ETFs.Lipper reports that out of the 1,711 ETFs registered for sale in Europe, 241 funds may be on a so-called ETF “Death List”, in other words under review for profitability reasons by fund promoters. These funds are older than 3 years, but have less than €100 million in assets.
UK asset management firms are pushing major banks and businesses to reform their practices in the area of pay scales, the Financial Times reports. Fidelity Worldwide Investment, Standard Life Investments and Hermes Equity Ownership Services are encourging remuneration committees to model their long-term incentive plans on those rolled out by HSBC, which require the top 100 employees on the pay scale to hold onto the shares issued to them under long-term plans until they leave the bank.