Since the beginning of the year, ETPs worldwide have seen inflows of USD85.3bn, of which USD19.2bn were in May, compared with USD0.6bn in April, equivalent to an increase of 18% compared with USD724bn in the first five months of 2011, the BlackRock Institute reports.Assets as of the end of May totalled USD1.6186trn, USD94.1bn more than at the end of December, as market appreciation and forex effects have contributed USD8.8bn to this increase.In Europe, where there were 1,936 ETPs, net subscriptions in January-May represented USD5.3bn, and assets as of the end of May totalled UISD297bn. By comparison, the number of ETPs in the United States was “only” 1,465, but with assets of USD1.137trn, and net inflows of USD63bn in the first five months of this year.
As of the end of May, the European markets of NYSE Euronext included 686 listings of 590 ETFs from 16 providers, compared with 695 listings of 597 ETFs from the same 16 issuers previously.Average daily trading volumes in May totalled EUR267.3m, compared with EUR297.1m in April. The May total is 34.4% lower than the corresponding month of last year. Total on-book trades, however, rose 3.9% compared with EUR5.6bn in April.Block trades totalled EUR842.1m last month, compared with EUR819.9m in April and EUR840.9m in March. They represented 14.3% of the total trading volume for ETFS, compared with 12.7% the previous months.The median spread in May totalled 31.15 basis points, compared with 29.58 basis points in April.
Samantha Ho, the star manager of the Invesco Perpetual Hong Kong & China Fund (GBP175m) and the Invesco PRC Equity fund (GBP896m), has left Invesco Hong Kong, Investment Week reports.She is replaced by Mike Shiao, manager of the Invesco Greater China Equity Fund (GBP450m), an offshore fund whose co-manager is Lorraine Kuo. The latter will assist him also in the management of Hong Kong & China fund.Joseph Tang, co-manager of the PRC Equity Fund, will become lead manager of the Irish-registered product.
Fortelus, the London-based hedge fund which made millions for clients by anticipating the fall in the British banking sector in 2008, is liquidating a part of its flagship fund due to pressure from investors, the Financial Times reports. In a letter sent on Thursday, a copy of which has been seen by the newspaper, Fortelus states that it will be splitting its main fund, with USD1bn in assets, into two types of share classes, in order to meet redemption demands.
UK-based Sarasin & Partners on 7 June announced the launch of the Sarasin Global Equity and Sarasin Global Diversified funds of funds. The products have a sales license for the United Kingdom under the OEIC non-UCITS retail scheme (NURS). They are managed by Sam Jeffries, with the assistance of Oliver Tucker as co-manager, and of Lucy Empson and David Vickers. The funds will include 15 to 25 holdings each.Characteristics Name: Sarasin Global Equity Fund of Funds A AccISIN code: GB00B7CLW252Benchmark index: 50% MSCI All Countries World, 50% MSCI All Countries (GBP Hedged)Management commission: 1.50%Name: Sarasin Global Diversified Fund of Funds A AccISIN code: GB00B6114G73Benchmark index: 40% ML Sterling Broad Market Index, 25% MSCI All Countries World LC GBP, 25% MSCI All Countries World Daily (NTR), 10% UK cash LIBOR 3 months TRManagement commission: 1.50%
The asset management firm Tobam, in which Amundi has recently bought a stake of slightly over 17%, on 7 June announced the launch of a new fund: the Anti-Benchmark Pacific ex-Japan equity fund (UCITS IV). The fund is being initiated by Seven Investment Management.The Anti_benchmark Pacific ex-Japan Equity fund aims to maximise diversification by applying the patented Anti-Benchmark process to the entire investment universe, represented by the MSCI Pacific ex-Japan index.By maximising diversification in the Pacific ex-Japan region, an investment universe with many and complex risk factors, the fund aims to deliver a premium to investors on real risks available on the market. The fund aims to outperform the cap-size weighted MSCI Pacific ex-Japan index by about 4% to 6% per year, over a market cycle, while significantly reducing volatility (about 3%). The fund applies direct optimisatino to maximise diversification globally, by eliminating geographical, sectoral and style biases which may be an element of more traditional allocation methods such as weighting by cap size. Yves Choueifaty, chairman of Tobam, says: “Foreign investors rightly see in Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Hong Kong as sources of diversification. However, the regional caps-zei weighted index is strongly biased, with major concentrations in a small number of sectors. By applying the Anti-Benchmark process to this investment universe, Tobam offers its clients exposure which is both diversifying and diversified.”The new fund comes as an addition to the Anti-Benchmark range from Tobam, which is now composed of 13 flagship funds covering regional and international equities, as well as commodities, and follows the launch of the Anti-Benchmark Emerging Markets Equity fund in June 2011, with assets of USD150m as of the beginning of May.Main characteristicsName: TOBAM Anti-Benchmark Pacific ex-Japan Equity FundLegal format: French-registered, UCITS IV-compliant FCP fundBenchmark index: MSCI Daily TR Net Pacific ex-Japan USDISIN code: FR0011259225Management fee: 1.00%Liquidity: Daily
The new China Fund Association (CFA), which includes managers of funds in China (see Newsmanagers of 6 June), has elected Sun Jie, former director of fund supervision at the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) as its president. Its three vice presidents will be Fan Yonghong (former CEO of China AMC), Han Kang (deputy head of the CSRC office in Shanghai), and Cao Dianyi (former head of the CSRC office in Heilongjiang). Z-Ben Advisors states that the CFA already has over 100 members, but that for the moment, it excludes private equity funds, financial advisers and hedge funds operating via trust platforms.
A lawsuit files on 6 June by Irving Picard, the court-appointed trustee responsible for recuperating money for victims of the fraud orchestrated by Bernard Madoff from financial institutions, including the Geneva-based bank Lombard Odier, reveals that the executives of these institutions are not taking long to react. Although the liquidator is seeking USD180m from the Swiss firm, Lombard Odier & Cie categorically refuses the demand.In a statement dated 7 June, the private bank states that “the sums sought by the trustee concern redemptions which are said to have been received by Lombard Odier & Cie as depository bank on behalf of clients who sold shares in Madoff feeder funds, including Fairfield Sentry, Fairfield Sigma and Kingate Global.Lombard Odier & Cie did not recommend any funds managed by the Bernard Madoff investment company, nor feeder funds which supplied these, as part of its investment policy,” the firm adds. “Investments in funds exposed to Madoff were made at the initiative of clients concerned, or of managers external to Lombard Odier & Cie. In this context, the role of the bank is limited to that of depository in charge for client assets.Lombard Odier & Cie states that it will use all legal means at its disposal to oppose Picard’s demand.
To strengthen its intermediation services operation, the Swiss firm Mirabaud has signed a commercial partnership with the independent analyst New Street Research (NSR), which will result in the creation of a joint venture, Mirabaud New Street (MNS), by Mirabaud United Kingdom and the British firm. NSR employs 18 analysts and provides insitutional investors with information about equities and high yield products.Through this partnership, Mirabaud clients will have access to an expanded research product, while giving NSR access to Mirabaud’s equity trading platform. The research will be distributed under the name of Mirabaud New Street. NSR specialises in the telecoms and healthcare sectors.
Royal London Asset Management on 7 June announced the appointment of Ian Furtado as business development manager, effective immediately. He will be in charge of promoting Royal London products to major clients, managers, brokers, private banks, funds of funds and multi-managers. Furtado previously worked at Lion Trust Asset Management.
The Scottish firm SVM Asset Management has selected State Street Corporation as its provider for a full range of fund administration services on assets of USD750m. In fact, the Edinburgh-based management firm has retained State Street for global custody, investment accounting and administration and depository services for all of its activities in the United Kingdom.International Financial Data Services (IFDS), a 50/50 joint venture from State Street and DST Systems, has been selected by SVM to provide record-keeping and transfer agency services, alongside call centres for investors and advisers, for the British open-ended and closed fund ranges.
Richard Wohanka is no longer heading asset management at Union Bancaire Privée (UBP), Newsmanagers understands. The Geneva-based bank had no comment on the reports. But according to its website, Wohanka is no longer a member of the executive board at the firm. He has, however, retained a role as adviser for Asia, according to information obtained by Newsmanagers.Guy de Picotto, CEO of the bank, and Eftyschia La Fischer, head of Trading & Treasury, are reported to have taken over the asset management unit at UBP, according to its website.Wohanka joined the Geneva-based bank in late 2009, after serving as CEO of Fortis Investments.The news comes at a time when the bank has recently laid off 30 employees, according to an article in the local newspaper La Tribune de Genève, published earlier this week.Separately, UBP is studying several options to take on some of the clients of the Swiss activities of the Spanish Banco Santander. The reports, which appeared on Monday in the Spanish online newspaper El Confidential, were confirmed to Newsmanagers on Thursday by the Geneva-based firm.The acquisition is a part of a strategy to “strengthen the bank’s position in private management, through the acquisition of the Swiss activities of ABN Amro Bank last year,” a spokesperson for the bank says.
Jeffrey Burch, former co-head of credit at Investec Asset Management, and a former trader at Millennium Management, has joined the private banking division of Goldman Sachs, Financial News has learned.
The British firm Standard Life Investments (SLI) has announced three recruitments for its distribution team in Boston, including Jack Boyce as managing director and head of US distribution. Boyce will work directly with Colin Clark, director of the global client group, and Bill Perry, CEO of Standard Life Investments USA. He was previously in New York, as managing director and co-head of global distribution at Pinebridge. The other two new recruitments are John Grubauskas (ex BlackRock), who joins the firm as senior vice president, client services, and Deborah Drachman (ex Citadel Asset Management), who becomes vice president, consultant relations.
BNY Mellon has announced the appointment of E. Todd Bridell as CEO of its affiliate Urdang Capital Management, dedicated to public and private real estate investment. Urdang, who had previously been president and chief investment officer, will be based in Plymouth. Urdang currently managers USD7.5bn in assets.
José Cuervo was recruited by Santander Asset Management in July 2011, and since then, he has created a Latin American equity management team whose objective is to serve institutional clients, and to win management mandates, Funds People reports.The new team aims to combine the global capacities of Santander AM with the local presence of analysts. Currently, it has two managers, one analyst and one support position in Madrid, and three country co-ordinators, one in Brazil, one in Mexico, and one for the Andean countries. They will soon be joined by a product specialist.The team will independently manage the five Latin American equity funds from Santander AM, whose assets total USD283m.Funds People reports that assets at Santander AM in Latin America total about EUR70bn, out of a total of EUR141.84bn.
The Hong-Kong based boutique Value Partners has launched a UCITS version of its flagship Greater China hedge fund, Citywire reports. The Value Partners Absolute Greater China Classic fund will be managed by the firm’s co-CIOs, Cheah Cheng-Hye and Louis So.
Pour renforcer ses services d’intermédiation, le suisse Mirabaud a conclu un partenariat commercial avec la société d’analyse indépendante New Street Resarch (NSR), ce qui se traduit par la création de la coentreprise, Mirabaud New Street (MNS), entre Mirabaud Royaume-Uni et la société britannique. NSR emploie 18 analystes et fournit aux investisseurs institutionnels des informations sur les actions et les produits à haut rendement.Grâce à ce partenariat, les clients de Mirabaud pourront se prévaloir d’un produit d’analyse étendu tandis que NSR bénéficiera d’un accès à la plate forme de négoce d’actions de Mirabaud. L’analyse sera commercialisée sous le label MNS. NSR est spécialiste des secteurs des télécommunications et de la santé.
Royal London Asset Management a annoncé le 7 juin la nomination d’Ian Furtado en qualité de business development manager avec effet immédiat. Il sera responsable de la promotion des produits de Royal London auprès de grands clients, gérants, courtiers, banques privées, fonds de fonds et multi-gérants.Ian Furtado travaillait précédemment chez Lion Trust Asset Management.
L'écossais SVM Asset Management a sélectionné State Street Corporation comme fournisseur de toute une gamme de services d’administration de fonds pour des encours de 750 millions de dollars. En fait, le gestionnaire d’Edimbourg confie à State Street la conservation mondiale, la comptabilité des investissements ainsi que les services d’administration et de dépositaire pour toutes ses activités au Royaume-Uni.Pour sa part, International Financial Data Services (IFDS), une coentreprise à 50/50 de State Street et DST Systems, a été sélectionnée par SVM pour lui fournir des solutions d’archivage (record keeping) et d’agent de transfert, parallèlement à centre d’appels pour les investisseurs et les conseillers, pour la gamme britannique de fonds ouverts et fermés.
Fortelus, le hedge fund londonien qui a gagné des millions pour les clients en anticipant correctement la chute des cours des banques britanniques en 2008, liquide une partie de son fonds vedette suite à la pression des investisseurs, rapporte le Financial Times. Dans une lettre envoyée jeudi, dont une copie a été lue par le journal, Fortelus indique qu’il va scinder son fonds principal de 1 milliard de dollars dans deux types de parts de classes afin de faire face aux demandes de remboursements.
Lebritannique Sarasin & Partners a annoncé le 7 juin le lancement des fonds de fonds Sarasin Global Equity et Sarasin Global Diversified, des produits qui disposent d’un agrément de commercialisation pour le Royaume-Uni et qui ont le statut d’OEIC non-Ucits retail scheme (NURS). Ils sont gérés par l’associé Sam Jeffries assisté d’Oliver Tucker comme co-gérant, ainsi que de Lucy Empson et David Vickers. Les fonds compteront entre 15 et 25 lignes chacun.Caractéristiques :Dénomination: Sarasin Global Equity Fund of Funds A AccCode Isin: GB00B7CLW252Indice de référence: 50% MSCI All Countries World, 50% MSCI All Countries (GBP Hedged)Commission de gestion: 1,50 %Dénomination: Sarasin Global Diversified Fund of Funds A AccCode Isin: GB00B6114G73Indice de référence: 40% ML Sterling Broad Market Index, 25% MSCI All Countries World LC GBP, 25% MSCI All Countries World Daily (NTR), 10% UK cash LIBOR 3 months TRCommission de gestion: 1,50 %
José Cuervo a été recruté en juillet 2011 par Santander Asset Management et il a constitué depuis lors une équipe de gestion actions latino-américaines dont l’objectif est de servir la clientèle institutionnelle et de remporter des mandats de gestion, rapporte Funds People.La nouvelle équipe vise à combiner les capacités mondiales de Santander AM avec la présence d’analystes sur place. Actuellement, elle compte deux gérants un analyste et un «fonction support» à Madrid ainsi que trois «coordonnateurs» pays, un au Brésil, un au Mexique et un pour les pays andins. Bientôt, ils seront rejoints par un spécialiste produits.L'équipe va gérer de manière indépendante les cinq fonds d’actions latino-américains de Santander AM, dont l’encours représente 283 millions de dollars.Funds People rappelle que l’encours de Santander AM en Amérique latine représente environ 70 milliards d’euros, sur un total de 141,84 milliards.
La boutique basée à Hong Kong Value Partners a lancé une version Ucits de son hedge fund phare Grande Chine, rapporte Citywire. Le fonds Value Partners Absolute Greater China Classic sera géré par les co-directeurs des investissements de la société, Cheah Cheng-Hye et Louis So.
Gérante vedette duInvesco Perpetual Hong Kong & China Fund (175 millions de livres) et du Invesco PRC Equity Fund (896 millions de livres), Samantha Ho a quitté Invesco Hong Kong, rapporte Investment Week.Elle est remplacée par Mike Shiao, le gérant du Invesco Greater China Equity Fund (450 millions de livres), un fonds offshore dont Lorraine Kuo, la co-gérante, va l’assister pour la gestion du fonds Hong-Kong et Chine.Joseph Tang, co-gérant du PRC Equity Fund, prend la responsabilité de ce produit de droit irlandais.
Jeffrey Burch, un ancien co-responsable crédit d’Investec Asset Management et ex-trader de Milliennium Management, a rejoint la division banque privée de Goldman Sachs, a appris Financial News.
Le britannique Standard Life Investments (SLI) a annoncé trois recrutements pour son équipe de distribution à Boston, notamment avec l’embauche de Jack Boyce comme managing director, head of US distribution. Ce dernier travaillera directement avec Colin Clark, director du global client group, et Bill Perry, CEO de Standard Life Investments USA. Il était précédemment à New York comme managing director et co-head of global distribution chez Pinebridge.Les deux autres nouvelles recrues sont John Grubauskas (ex BlackRock) qui rejoint comme senior vice-president, client services, et Deborah Drachman (ex Citadel Asset Management), qui devient vice president, consultants relations.
La société de gestion d’actifs Tobam, dans laquelle Amundi vient de prendre une participation d’un peu plus de 17%, a annoncé le 7 juin le lancement d’un nouveau fonds : l’Anti-Benchmark Pacific ex-Japan Equity Fund (UCITS IV). Le fonds est amorcé par Seven Investment Management.Le fonds Anti-Benchmark Pacific ex-Japan Equity vise à maximiser la diversification en appliquant le processus breveté Anti-Benchmark à l’ensemble de l’univers d’investissement, représenté par l’indice MSCI Pacific ex-Japan.En maximisant la diversification sur la région Pacifique hors-Japon – un univers d’investissement composé de facteurs de risque nombreux et complexes – le fonds cherche à délivrer aux investisseurs la prime de risque réellement disponible sur ce marché. Le fonds vise à surperformer l’indice capipondéré MSCI Pacific ex-Japan de l’ordre de 4 à 6% par an sur un cycle du marché, tout en réduisant significativement la volatilité (environ 30%).Le fonds applique une optimisation directe pour maximiser la diversification au niveau global, en éliminant les biais géographiques, sectoriels et de style qui peuvent être impliqués par une allocation plus traditionnelle comme la capi-pondération. Selon Yves Choueifaty, président de Tobam, « les investisseurs étrangers voient à juste titre l’Australie, la Nouvelle Zélande, Singapour, ou Hong Kong comme des sources de diversification. Cependant, l’indice capi-pondéré régional est fortement biaisé – avec d’importantes concentrations sur un petit nombre de secteurs. En appliquant l’Anti-Benchmark à cet univers d’investissement, Tobam offre à ses clients une exposition qui est à la fois diversifiante et diversifiée. » Principales caractéristiques:Dénomination : TOBAM Anti-Benchmark Pacific ex-Japan Equity FundCode ISIN : FR0011259225Frais de gestion : 1.00%Indice de référence : MSCI Daily TR Net Pacific ex-Japan USDLiquidité : Quotidienne
BNY Mellon annonce la nomination d’E. Todd Briddell au poste de CEO de sa filiale Urdang Capital Management, dédiée à l’investissement immobilier coté et non coté. L’intéressé, jusqu'à présent président et chief investment officer, sera basé à Plymouth . Urdang gère actuellement 7,3 milliards de dollars d’encours.
Marc Favard vient d'être nommé directeur général d’Amilton Asset Management et responsable des gestions du groupe. Le nouveau responsable est resté 21 ans chez Financière Meeschaert où il occupait dernièrement la fonction de président du directoire de Meeschaert Asset Management pour la gestion collective, ainsi que celle de responsable de la gestion privée sous mandat et du conseil boursier à la Financière Meeschaert. Marc Favard était également membre du directoire de Meeschaert Family Office."L’arrivée de Marc Favard répond à l’ambition du groupe Amilton d'être un acteur indépendant reconnu dans la gestion d’actifs en France», a précisé dans un communiqué Ilana Sayag, président directeur général de Amilton Asset Management. «Elle permet à la société de se doter des moyens nécessaires à la mise en œuvre de son plan de développement qui s’appuie à la fois sur une croissance organique maitrisée et sur le rapprochement avec d’autres sociétés de gestion partageant les mêmes valeurs et les mêmes exigences d’excellence au service de nos clients».A la mi-mars, Amilton Asset Management est devenu l’actionnaire majoritaire de Swan Capital Management. La société de gestion spécialisée dans la gestion sous mandat et les fonds actions a pris 58 % du capital de Swan CM, dont l’activité principale est la multigestion dédiée aux clients professionnels, notamment les conseillers en gestion de patrimoine (CGPI). Suite au rapprochement, Amilton AM gère actuellement 400 millions. Le groupe est présent sur le segment de la clientèle privée, des investisseurs institutionnels, des Family Office ainsi que des CGPI.