With the Dow Jones Global Commodity Equity 100 Index, the first product in a new family of indices, Dow Jones Indexes has unveiled an instrument to measure the performance of equities in companies which are active in exploration for or production of commodities which are both scarce and renewable. The sectors represented in the index are agriculture, energy, industrial metals, precious metals, and water.The new index includes four sub-indices:•Dow Jones Global Equity Agriculture Index;•Dow Jones Global Equity Energy Index;•Dow Jones Global Equity Scarcity Index, and•Dow Jones Islamic Market Global Equity Commodity Index.
In the wake of the financial crisis, a growing number of institutional investors, especially pension funds and sovereign funds, are investing directly in hedge funds, according to an international survey undertaken by Citi Prime Finance, covering a sample of 60 major investors, representing over USD1.7trn in assets, and hedge fund managers with USD186bn in assets under management (“Global Pension and Sovereign Wealth Fund Investment in Hedge Funds: The Growth and Impact of Direct Investing,” June 2011). This development may be working to the disadvantage of traditional funds of funds. Contrary to the received idea that funds allocated directly go mostly to the major hedge fund managers, the survey finds that smaller hedge funds, with total assets of USD1bn to USD5bn, saw the most net growth in 2010. Hedge funds in this range are the favourites of allocators; the range may go as low as USD500m in developed countries, and USD250m in emerging markets. However, hedge funds with assets of USD250m to USD500m pose problems of size for direct allocators, who often have legal or discretionary limitations, and whose allocations may not exceed 10% to 25% of the total assets in a hedge fund. In terms of the size problem, there are also a growing number of obstacles to overcome in order to serve the institutional market. Being selected for a list by a consultant is no longer as easy, as consultants tend to favour larger managers, with assets under management of over USD5bn.
Following a brief but spectacular rise in May, to 104.3 from 97.3 in the previous two months, the global institutional investor confidence index from State Street Global Markets fell to 99.2 in June. The sharpest decline was in North American institutional investor morale, which fell to 100.4 from 106.2 in May. Asian investors also showed less appetite for risk, with the index down to 93.2 from 96.9.State Street expresses surprise, however, at the 8.5 pt rise in the index for Europe, to 87.9. Cumulatively since March, the European index has risen 21 points, but from a very low starting point. “At 87.9 points, the index still shows aversion to risk, and sales of equities are continuing, but European institutions have slowed the pace of their equities selloffs, perhaps recognizing the fact that recent price movements have created more attractive valuations in some sectors,” says Paul O’Connell, one of the designers of the State Street index.
Since the beginning of this year, assets under administration by BNY Mellon Fund Servicing (Ireland) Ltd have increased 8%, and the increase since 1 January 2010 is 50.16%, for a total of over USD500bn. The increase is largely due to increasing demand on the part of investors for ETFs and money market funds, the group says, but it is of course also related to the acquisition of PNC Global Investment Servicing in July 2010, which allowed the firm to double its assets under administration in hedge funds in Europe.
The European bond trading platform MTS announced on Tuesday, 28 June that it has granted an exclusive license to DB x-trackers to create ETFs replicating its Italian government bond indices. The DB x-trackers ETFs will be based on three MTS Italy ex-Bank of Italy indices, a statement says: MTS Italy BTP ex-Bank of Italy, MTS Italy BOT ex-Bank of Italy, and MTS Italy Aggregate ex-Bank of Italy.
With a volume of USD220m as of 28 June, the Low Duration US High Yield Bond Fund (LU0602537069), a sub-fund of the Luxembourg Sicav Nordea 1, has received sales licenses for Germany, Austria and Switzerland. So far, it is the second fund whose management Nordea has outsourced to MacKay Shields, following the US High Yield Bond Fund (USD1.4bn as of the end of May), which was launched in 2008. As its name indicates, it is a fund which invests in US high yield bonds with short duration; it is managed by Dan Roberts, manager of the US High Yield Bond Fund. The product allows investors to reduce the sensitivity of a portfolio to an environment of rising interest rates and widening spreads. In addition, the management team may make limited use of short positions on Treasury futures, in order to manage duration. Average duration will be under 1 year, but may for short periods of time rise as far as 2 years at most.The fund will also be available in a share class hedged for currency risks (LU0602536764) aimed at institutional investors (minimal subscription EUR75,000).
The flagship fund Amundi Oblig Internationales [FR0010032573 (I-class shares) and FR0010156604 (P-class shares)] have received a sales license for Germany. The product, launched on 28 February 1980 and managed by Cédric Morisseau with a team of 25 people in the Global Bond & Currency Team based in London, has assets of over EUR1.5bn.Hubert Dänner, CEO of Amundi Germany, says that the first contacts with clients have been encouraging, in that many investors are seeking a bond fund which, like the Oblig Internationales, combines the advantages of active management and a wide variety of sources of performance. In addition, the fund has an attractive and very long-term track record.
According to financial industry sources, investors have been hesitant to acquire shares in the closed real estate fund DWS Access Deutsche Bank Türme, to which Deutsche Bank sold its freshly renovated twin tower headquarters in Frankfurt in March for EUR600m, Handelsblatt reports. Clients are not concerned that returns will be on the weak side, at only 5% per year, because the tenant is financially solid, the lease is very long-term and the properties are of high quality.
UBS on 27 June announced that it has listed the new MSCI Agriculture SF swap-based ETFs in Swiss francs, euros and US dollars, and the MSCI Emerging Markets swap-based ETF in US dollars, on the SIX Swiss Exchange. The objective of the MSCI Agriculture SF swap-based ETF is to reproduce the performance of the UBS Bloomberg CMCI Agriculture Total Return index. The fund synthetically replicates the performance of the index by investing in a swap. UBS says that all of the fund’s exposure to swap counterparties are 105% covered with collateral which is eligible for OPCVM mutual funds. The objective of the MSCI Emerging Markets swap-based ETF is to reproduce the absolute net performance of the MSCI Emerging Markets index.
The JP Morgan group on 27 June announced that it has been selected by Pimco to distribute five ETFs from Pimco, which are registered in the United States, on the Mexican stock exchange. The five ETFs concerned are the PIMCO 1-5 Year U.S. TIPS Index Fund (STPZ), PIMCO Broad U.S. TIPS Index Fund (TIPZ), PIMCO 15+ Year U.S. TIPS Index Fund (LTPZ), PIMCO 1-3 Year U.S. Treasury Index Fund (TUZ) and PIMCO Investment Grade Corporate Bond Index Fund (CORP).
The current second in command at Credit Suisse Geneva will be joining UBS on 1 July this year, Agefi Switzerland reports. Jean-François Demierre has been appointed as head of the Private Wealth Management (PWM) segment and the Executives & Entrepreneurs (E&E) desk. He will thus be leaving his position as assistant to the head of the onshore private banking entity of Credit Suisse in Geneva, where he has been for over seven years, and his position as head of the centre of expertise including real estate financing and Wealth Planning activities.
The US group Invesco announced on 27 June that it has recruited Fredrick Cygnaeus as head of wholesale distribution for Scandinavia. Cygnaeus, who will be based in Invesco’s new offices in Stockholm, will begin on 16 August this year. Before joining Invesco, Cygnaeus spent nine years at Fidelity as head of retail and institutional clients for Scandinavia.
At a time when retirements are presenting a major challenge, the European asset management industry is cruelly inefficient, James Broderick, CEO of J.P. Morgan Asset Management Europe, has said at the first plenary session of the Fund Forum International, being held this Tuesday to Thursday in Monaco. Broderick claims that there are too many management firms and too many funds in Europe. “We need to find a way to reduce the number of management firms and funds,” he opined.One of the solutions, says Broderick, may be to introduce regulations which would require management firms to undertake an audit of their funds when they fail to respect certain criteria for size, profitability and performance.Currently, the obstacles to a reduction in the number of funds are largely fiscal, says Elizabeth Corley, CEO of Allianz Global Advisors Europe. She also points out that most small funds are managed by small management firms. Another factor holding back mergers of these funds is that funds must approve such moves in shareholder votes.Concerning concentration of management firms themselves, the process is being held back by the fact that the sector does not require much in the way of owners’ equity. “Thus, the cost for a bank or insurer of retaining a management firm is very low,” explains Corley. The price paid for a management firm is low, as the market values the assets and not the firm in and of itself. “The less you are obliged to do it, the less you will be inclined to sell,” Corley says. In addition to that, there are political pressures in some countries which want to retain their national champions.When asked about this issue by Newsmanagers, Martin Gilbert, CEO of Aberdeen Asset Management, responds that the funds now on offer are too abundant, while only a small portion of the funds on sale attract subscriptions. As to whether there are too many management firms, Gilbert responds that there are many firms which are poorly managed, at any rate, as they have very low operating margins.
Lisa O’Connor, who had been associate director, UK institutional sales at Russell Investments, has been recruited as European head of consultant relations for Axa IM, in the team which now includes five people led by Tim Gardener, global head of consultant relations. Gardener says that the team is now complete, and is organised by global regions: North America, Europe, and Asia. O’Connor will aim to develop and maintain relations with consultants throughout Europe.
Abante Asesores has recently presented its new fund of high-performance managers, Smart-ISH (see Newsmanagers of 7 June). The management firm has now announced the names of the first 16 «artist’s» funds and Sicavs selected for the portfolio (which may include up to 20 positions).In decreasing order of weight, they are:- Belgravia Beta Sicav, by Carlos Cerezo- Bestinver Internacional, by Francisco García Paramés, Álvaro Guzmán and Fernando Bernad- Ibercaja Alpha, by Alberto Espelosín- Koala Capital Sicav, by Marc Garrigasait- Ángulo Verde Sicav, by Alejandro Muñoz and Guillermo Nieto- Elcano Inversiones Financieras, by JJ Fernández and Marc Batlle- Cartesio Y, by Juan Antonio Bertrán, Cayetano Cornet and Álvaro Martínez- Arenberg Asset Management Sicav, by Pablo González- Valor Absoluto Sicav, by Luis Bononato and Olivier Tinguely- Equilibria Investments, by Carlos Arenillas- BPA Fondo Ibérico Acciones, by Gonzalo Lardiés- Espinosa Partners, by Jaime Espinosa and Íñigo Espinosa - Gesconsult Renta Variable Flexible, by Alfonso de Gregorio- Mutuafondo Bolsa, by Ricardo Cañete- Solventis Eos Sicav, by Christian Torres- Toro Capital Sicav, by Javier Bohórquez and Jorge Cruz
Barclays Spain is offering the Pension Plus 2, a retirement savings plan from CNP Barclays Vida y Pensiones which guarantees initial capital and returns of 16% after five years, or 3.01% of TEG, until 19 July, Funds People reports. Subscriptions may be closed once assets reach EUR30m.
State Street Corporation on 27 June announced that Brandes Investment Partners has asked it to extend its services (custody, accounting, financial reporting, tax, securities lending, etc.) to its pooled funds, totalling CAD1bn in assets.
Pour ses thèmes de travail 2011, la MNT a tenu compte de Solvency 2 car tous ses investissements sont impactés par la nouvelle règlementation. Catherine Devillard, directeur général adjoint - moyens finance & gestion, précise : « Nous allons procéder à une diminution du poste actions car il est désormais très chargé en termes de pénalité en fonds propres ». Pourtant si la mutuelle intègre la poche actions dans sa réflexion sur la nouvelle règlementation, elle admet cependant, différer la réduction de ce poste. « Hormis une ligne spécifique, nous avons conservé les actions que nous avions en portefeuille, poursuit Catherine Devillard. Nous faisons très attention au poids des actions dans nos investissements puisqu’ils sont choqués à des taux très élevés et nécessitent des fonds propres importants en face ». Compte tenu des marchés financiers tant obligataires qu’actions, la MNT est, à l’instar des autres mutuelles, un peu dans l’expectative car pour le moment, arbitrer sur les poches actions signifierait sortir en moins value. « Le poste OPCVM actions représente aujourd’hui 6% de notre portefeuille, analyse Catherine Devillard. Le reste est composé d’obligataires et de produits structurés indexés sur l’Eurostoxx qui représentent 15% de notre portefeuille mais qui sont, eux aussi, très consommateurs en fonds propres ». Pour la suite, la mutuelle va devoir arbitrer toute l’allocation d’actifs entre les actions, les obligations et les OPCVM en sachant que ces derniers ne rapportent plus rien. D’ailleurs Catherine Devillard conclut : « Certains acteurs nous proposent des produits qui ne sont pas indexés sur des actions car dans nos produits structurés nous n’avons pas que des actions et nous attendons des acteurs, un indicateur qui serait le plus fiable possible sur le SCR ». Quelques chiffres clés au 31 décembre 2010: Un excédent de 13,3 millions d’euros. Ses fonds propres s'élèvent à 215 millions d’euros et le taux de couverture de l’exigence de solvabilité est de 247%.
80 % des détenteurs de la dette grecque arrivant à échéance d’ici à juillet 2014 devraient répondre présent pour que les propositions françaises soient efficaces.
Le véhicule d’investissement du gouvernement mis en place par la ville de Shanghai destiné à financer la construction d’infrastructures et les investissements immobiliers, pourrait ne pas être mesure d’honorer ses échéances de dette de ce mois-ci et demander une extension, indique le Hong Kong Economic Journal qui ne cite pas ses sources.
Le gouverneur de la Réserve fédérale de Dallas, Richard Fisher, a indiqué lors d’un discours à la Chambre de Commerce de Dallas que la croissance du PIB américain au deuxième trimestre pourrait se monter à 4%.
Un juge américain du tribunal des faillites a estimé que les fonds nourriciers ayant perdu de l’argent dans le montage de Ponzi orchestré par Bernard Madoff ne pouvaient pas être considérés comme des clients de l’escroc américain. Ces fonds ne sont donc pas éligibles à une aide maximale de 500.000 dollars provenant d’un fonds fédéral destiné à aider les clients de courtiers en faillite.
L'économie britannique a progressé de 0,5% au premier trimestre. Ces chiffres, définitifs, montrent certes une révision en légère hausse (+0,1%) de la production dans le secteur de la construction, mais cet effet est réduit à néant par une révision à la baisse de la production industrielle (-0,1%). La consommation des ménages a quant à elle reculé de 0,6%, un reflux qui rappelle les pires heures de la récession.