The Paris Europlace association, which promotes and develops the Paris financial market, has declared its opposition to the establishment of a tax on financial transactions if it is not applied throughout Europe. A tax which would specifically sanction the French financial sector would be inappropriate, the association claimed on Friday, 6 January, pointing out the limitations and risks of such an initiative.Though the law would aim to combat financial speculation, its overly broad application would affect transactions made by private investors, businesses and institutional investors, and would cause significant risk distortions. Its cost would also penalise French banks, asset management firms and insurers, and toughen borrowing conditions for businesses throughout the French economy. It would also lead to substantial losses for the Paris financial industry, and that would come in addition to the already high cost of new financial regulations being put in place (Based 3, Solvency 2), a statement from Paris Europlace claims.The association of financial sector businesses and their retail and business clients claims that they would be at a disadvantage of the plans are put into action. If the law were applied only in France, it would inevitably lead to “a delocalisation of the activities concerned at banks, insurance companies and asset management firms, in favour of the major global financial centres, and would consequently reduce control of financing conditions in our economy and the role of the Paris market in the European and global economies,” the association claims.
Iridian Asset Management has closed its largest hedge fund, the Iridian Opportunity fund, following a decline in assets and disappointing returns in 2010 and 2011. The fund lost 8,90% between January and October of last year, Absolute Return Alpha reports. The global equity hedge fund was launched in 2005 by former managers from Arnold and S. Bleichroeder Advisors.
Returns on funds in euros are expected to fall again, Les Echos reports. The average rate paid out in 2011 is expected to be about 3%, compared with 3.4% in 2010 and 3.7% in 2009. The return rate, a historic barometer of the market, will be released tomorrow by Afer, the French association of savings investors. The profession is not expecting much in the way of inflows in 2012.
On 6 January, Source announced that the Nomura Voltage Mid-Term Source ETF has been admitted to trading on the XTF segment of the German Xetra electronic trading platform (Deutsche Bank). The fund is an Irish, German-registered product (DE000A1JQQZ6), and the listing comes in addition to the version of the product already available in US dollars on the London market (VOLTLN). It allows investors to invest in euros and provides them simple and rapid access to an instrument exposed to volatility.The ETF, which charges fees of 0.30%, replicates the Nomura Voltage Strategy Mid-term 30-day USD TR index. It applies a tactical approach to volatility, which allows investors to profit from volatility peaks, while reducing the costs associated with permanent long positions on volatility. Assets in the fund, launched in April 2011, total over USD165m.
Van Eck is adding to its investment team. The US asset management firm has recruited Imaro Casanova as a senior analyst specialised in gold. She joins the team responsible for the International Investors Gold Fund, Global Hard Assets Fund and Van Eck VP Global Hard Assets Fund, among others. In total, the three mutual funds have USD6.6bn in assets.The team dedicated to hard assets now includes 12 people. Casanova joined Van Eck from McNicoll Lewis & Vlak, where she had been a senior analyst in equities research, specialised in the mining sector.
The chairman of BNP Paribas, Baudoin Prot, on 6 January announced on BFM that results at BNP Paribas would be down significantly despite a profitable fourth quarter. “Fourth quarter will clearly bring a profitable result,” said Prot, but added that for the fiscal year as a whole, results would be “noticeably down” compared with 2010. Dividends are also expected to be reduced, as will bonuses for management and market operators at BNP Paribas.
The US asset management firm Putnam Investments, an affiliate of Power Corporation of Canada, has announced that due to market volatility, it will be laying off 78 employees in the Boston region, equivalent to 4.4% of its 1,767 employees. The Boston Globe reports that this is the fourth wave of layoffs since Robert “Bob” Reynolds became CEO in July 2008. Since then, the firm has recruited 500 people and laid off 489.The new layoffs will primarily affect operations and not investment professionals.As of the end of December, assets at Putnam were down to USD117bn, compared with USD121bn one year earlier.
According to information obtained by Newsmanagers, Thibault de Vitry quit Axa Investment Managers (Axa IM) on 31 December. The asset management firm confirmed to Newsmanagers that de Vitry, who had since 2007 served as Global Head of Investment Solutions, and had been head of asset liability management and multi-asset investment activities as well as AXA funds of hedge funds, had left the firm. Other sources report that the firm is seeking a replacement for de Vitry to be recruited from another asset management firm. Until his replacement arrives, a transitional committee has been established. Before joining Axa IM in 1998, de Vitry held a series of positions as managing director of quantitative and structured investments, global head of operations at AXA IM, global head of insurance investment, COO of securities investment management, and finally global head of insurance investment at AXA IM.
The German investment firm Union Investment Real Estate has sold the office property Aile Sud (7,315 square metres) in Boulogne-Billancourt, for an undisclosed sum, to TF1. UIRE bought the property in 1999 for the open-ended real estate fund UniImmo: Europa. The asset management firm states that the property, which is leased directly to TF1, has generated significant returns for the fund during those twelve years.Karl-Joseph Hermanns-Engel, a member of the board of directors at UIRE, says that the transaction is a sign of the firm’s continued active asset management policy in France, where the objective is now to sell properties acquired in the first investment phase between 1999 and 2004, which no longer are in line with current strategy.In 2011, UIRE resold French properties with gains for a net of about EUR450m. The proceeds of these sales will be reinvested in Paris and in French regional markets in the next 12 to 15 months.
Jean-Pierre Grimaud, chief investment officer at Swiss Life France, in charge of the administrative and financial department, the securities investment department and the real estate department at Swiss Life France, and also chairman of Swiss Life Asset Management (France) since 2007, as well as Swiss Life Immobilier and of the supervisory board at Viveris Reim, on 1 December became director of a new special unit dedicated to third-party asset management (TPAM). The structure, which will report to the management of the Swiss Life group, will aim “to assist Swiss Life in its ambitions in Switzerland, France, Germany and Luxembourg,” the group says in a statement.Thierry Van Rossum, chief operating officer (COO) at Swiss Life France since 2008, succeeds Grimaud as chief investment officer (CIO). Van Rossum had previously been chief financial officer (CFO) at Swiss Life Belgium from 2002 to 2008.Cécile Mérine succeeds Van Rossum as chief operating officer, and will retain her responsibilities as director of marketing and product development, a position she has held since 2008 at Swiss Life France, where she began in 2002.
The alternative asset management firm Black Diamond Capital Management (BDCM), with assets under management totalling over USD10bn, has appointed Kenneth Rubin as senior managing director and hedge fund portfolio manager. Rubin will be responsible for the hedge fund platform, alongside Stephen Deckoff, a partner at BDCM.
A slowdown in ETF trading continued in December on the European markets of NYSE Euronext, which posted an average of 7,734 on-book trades per day and a volume of EUR268.7m per day, compared with 10,965 trades and EUR405.8m the previous month. For the year as a whole, transaction volumes have fallen 43.2%. December was the month last year when activities were at their lowest.Block trading of shares in December declined to EUR930.5m, from EUR974.9m in November, but rose compared with a total of EUR47.5m in December 2010.The average spread in December averaged 36.6 basis points, compared with 40 in November. It had been 36.3% in October, 38.83% in September, and 28.5% in August.The number of new funds launched increased for 2011 as a whole to 157 (of which 129 were primary listing and 28 were secondary listings), from 133 in 2010 (111 and 22, respectively).NYSE Euronext states that the four major underlying indices for ETFs traded on European markets last year were the CAC40 (28%), Euro Stoxx 50 (24%), the CAC40 Leverage (13%), and the Dax (6%).
Legal & General Investment Management is expected to announce the launch of its first ETF this Monday, in partnership with Source, according to reports in Financial Times Fund Management. The new product will be a commodity ETF. It will track a composite of four commodity indices from Barclays Capital, Citi, JPMorgan and UBS.
Stenham Asset Management has launched a new Global Macro fund of hedge funds – Stenham Helix. The investment manager has been invested in Global Macro hedge funds since the 1980s and its flagship macro fund of hedge funds, Stenham Trading, has achieved an annualised return of +9.07% since inception compared to the HFRX Macro Index which has posted a return of 6.51% and the MSCI World Equity Index which was 4.13% over the same period.The Stenham Helix fund aims to invest in similar types of macro managers but to assemble a portfolio where the liquidity provided by the underlying managers allows Stenham to offer monthly liquidity with 35 days’ notice. The fund will consist of a concentrated portfolio of around 15 managers with a target return of Libor +5% to 6% and low volatility. The minimum investment is US$ 25,000 with no lock up period. The Stenham Helix fund has launched with USD 36 million and is available in USD, GBP and EUR share classes.Stenham has over USD 1.1 billion invested in Global Macro hedge funds and has USD 2.7 billion invested in hedge fund strategies overall.
An increase in taxation on savings in Spain will make investments in the form of shares in investment funds more competitive, since the subscriber will deal with the tax office only when selling off the investment. In addition, the investor will remain able to modify the investment profile without paying taxes, as trades between funds retain a tax exemption, Cinco Días reports.These advantages will prove more important if the higher taxes on savings are truly limited to two years, as announced.Cinco Días reports that the investment fund sector has suffered considerably due to the crisis, with assets now back to their 1996 levels.
Cian Walsh, an emerging markets bond manager, has left BlueBay, where he had spent seven years, according to reports in Citywire Global. Walsh has gone to Norway, where he has joined DNB Markets, in a position as a broker in the currencies, fixed income and commodities team.
The Luxembourg-based firm Axxion, a specialist in fund administration (Master KAG), on 6 January announced that it has created a specialised affiliate which will internalise fund valuation, navAXX SA. This arrangement will allow the firm to offer custom products.The new affiliate began its operations at the beginning of the year, calculating the net asset value of 70 funds, and Axxion predicts that the number of funds it currently administers will reach 150 by the end of first half.The IT partner for navAXX is Diamos AG.
Citant un haut responsable du régulateur boursier chinois, le Shanghai Securities News assure que les pouvoirs publics entendent lutter contre la spéculation lors des introductions en Bourse. Assistant du président de la CSRC (China Securities Regulatory Commission), Zhu Congjiu, assure au quotidien que Pékin souhaite notamment accroître la part réservée aux institutionnels.
Malgré une inflation attendue au-delà de 2,1% en décembre, le taux du Livret A pourrait rester à 2,25% le 1er février. Le gouverneur de la Banque de France, Christian Noyer, doit invoquer des «circonstances exceptionnelles» afin de déroger à la formule de calcul du taux: «ça ne servirait à rien que le taux augmente légèrement pour rebaisser immédiatement ensuite», l’inflation devant reculer dans les six prochains mois. Reste à savoir si Bercy, seul décisionnaire, assumera un statu quo à quelques mois des élections.