LGT Capital Management has added to its range of funds with three new “Dynamic Shield” strategies, including a bond fund, an equities fund, and a multi-asset class fund. The objective of the new funds is to participate in upward trends, while limiting potential losses in downward movements. LGT offers three variants, according to the risk profile of investors. The three new funds, the LGT Fixed Income Dynamic Shield, LDE Multi Asset Dynamic Shield and LGT Equity Dynamic Shield, are all available in three currencies each: Swiss franc, euro and US dollar. LGT Fixed Income Dynamic Shield (CHF) B LI0121391937 LGT Fixed Income Dynamic Shield (EUR) B LI0008231933 LGT Fixed Income Dynamic Shield (USD) B LI0121391945 LGT Multi Asset Dynamic Shield (CHF) B LI0121391994 LGT Multi Asset Dynamic Shield (EUR) B LI0121391986 LGT Multi Asset Dynamic Shield (USD) B LI0121392000 LGT Equity Dynamic Shield (CHF) B LI0121392133 LGT Equity Dynamic Shield (EUR) B LI0121392125 LGT Equity Dynamic Shield (USD) B LI0121392158
The US management firm Vanguard became the top vendor of European retail SRI funds in January, according to the most recent statistics compiled by Lipper FMI on behalf of Responsible Investor. Overall, the “RI screened” fund sector, which includes funds filtered for ESG (environmental, social and governance) criteria, saw outflows of EUR742m in January, following subscriptions of EUR623.8m in December. The most popular fund was the SRI European Stock fund from Vanguard, which attracted EUR225.4m, followed by the Court Terme ISR fund from Macif, which took in EUR115.5m, and the LO Funds-Generation Global (EUR66m). However, “RI Extended” funds, which include funds which practice exclusion, normative funds, climate change funds and microfinance funds, saw a net inflow of EUR1.48bn, following EUR841.3m in December.
The British Schroders group has launched its fifth UCITS-compliant mutual fund based on an alternative strategy, Citywire reports. The Schroder Gaia CQS Credit Fund, available on the group’s Gaia platform, is an unconstrained long/short credit strategy, which will be managed by an external team at CQS, which manages EUR10bn. Gavin Ralston, international head of products, says “the long/short credit strategy is an underrepresented strategy in the UCITS universe.” The fund will invest in the investment grade and high yield segments in Europe and the United States.
According to preliminary estimates from VDOS Stochastics, pending figures from the Inverco association of management firms, assets in Spanish funds increased by EUR777m in March, despite a negative market effect of EUR227m. For the first time in a long time, the sector has seen net subscriptions higher than EUR1bn, with EUR1.004bn, following EUR74m in February, the first positive result in 16 months.
Some Spanish managers have recently been deciding to launch bond funds, Funds People reports. One such firm is Inverseguros, which is launching the Segurfondo Renta Fija Flexible fund of funds, with a performance commission of 9%, aimed primarily at institutional investors. Management commission is set at 0.5%.
Natixis Asset Management announced on Thursday, 31 March that it has launched the Natixis Euro High Income Fund, a Luxembourg-registered fund which will aim to profit from the potential performance of high yield bonds. The selection of issues is undertaken by Philippe Berthelot and Vincent Marioni, the two co-managers of the fund. As a complement to the bottom-up approach used for the portfolio, the management team has set internal maximal criteria per sector and issuer, in order to insure good diversification of the portfolio. Since its creation in November 2010, the portfolio of the Natixis Euro High Income Fund has been composed of 60 to 80 positions, with total assets of EUR104m as of 25 March 2011. Characteristics of the fund ISIN code: LU0556616935 (I shares)/ LU0556617156 (R shares)/ LU0556617313 (S shares)/ LU0556617586 (RE shares) Management and operating fees: 1% / 1.65% / 0.75% / 2% maximum Maximal front-end fee when shares are not purchased by a mutual fund: 3% / 3% / 3% / None Front-end fees when shares are purchased by a mutual fund: 0 / 0 / 0 / 0 Maximal exit fee: no Smallest fractional unit of shares: one one-hundredth Minimal subscription: EUR100,000 / EUR1,000 / EUR15m / EUR250 Net asset value per share at launch: EUR100 Daily valuation
Schroders France has released the European Small & Mid Cap Value sub-fund of its Luxembourg Sicav Schroder ISF for sale. The product, launched on 30 November 2010, replicates a Swiss fund created in 2003 and acquired by the British management firm in 2008. The manager of the new sub-fund is the same as for the Swiss fund: Caspar Benz, who will now be assisted by Daniel Lenz. The philosophy is also the same. The only difference, aside from the country of domicile, is that the Luxembourg sub-fund has a cash allocation limited to 10%, where it is 33% for the Swiss product, and liquidity is daily and not monthly. The co-managers insist, however, that this will not lead to major divergences in the composition of the portfolios (the objective excluding cash is to limit the differences to 5%). The European Small & Mid Cap Value invests, as its name indicates, in European small and midcaps, i.e. shares in companies whose capitalisation ranges from EUR500m to EUR10bn. “Caspar Benz and Daniel Lenz will seek out businesses which distribute dividends over the long term. The managers may this exclude the growth segment from their investment universe, but at the same time they ensure some protection of capital.” Assets in the sub-fund total EUR81m, while the Swiss fund has EUR274m. With the Luxembourg product, Schroders hopes to boost assets for the strategy, up to a limit of EUR1.5bn.
The UK asset management firm Threadneedle (GBP67.7bn as of the end of 2010) has announced that it has assembled a team dedicated to development and distribution of absolute return products, led by Kris Haber, global head of absolute return strategies, who joined the firm in 2009.John Mackin joins Threadneedle as head of North American sales, and will be in charge of development of sales of absolute return products in North America, in addition to traditional products.Christian Trixl, head of distribution in Switzerland, is now in charge of European sales for absolute return products. He is assisted by George Szemere, an investment specialist for equities and bond absolute return products.Stéphane Jeannin will now focus on his role as an investment specialist for absolute return strategies; he was previously senior equity investment specialist.Adrian Mackaay, head of strategic analysis, will be in charge of directing development activities for absolute return strategies and distribution in North America. The range of absolute return products includes commodities (unregulated), the macro emerging markets strategy (unregulated and UCITS III), credit (UCITS III), bonds (UCITS III), European equities (unregulated), European small caps (UCITS III), US equities (UCITS III), and UK equities (UCITS III).
The French additional retirement establishment for public sector employees (ERAFP) on Thursday, 31 March announced that it has awarded 6 active financial management mandates as part of a renewal of is Euro zone publicly-traded mid and large cap equities mandates, and a diversification of its small and mid-sized business publicly-traded equities allocation. The managers selected for index-based management will be required to replicate the SRI Best in Class index, developed by Erafp with the support of Edhec. With the call for proposals, Erafp sought to put in place complementary management strategies, while reducing its exposure to traditional market indices, whose weighting is related directly to the share prices of businesses, a statement says. For the No. 1 Euro zone small and mid-sied businesses publicly traded equities – index-based management (diversification of assets) allocation, the EUR45m initial mandate was awarded to BNP Paribas Asset Management. A stand-by mandate was awarded to State Global Advisors France. For the No. 2 Euro zone publicly-traded mid to large caps equities – index-based management (renewal of mandate) allocation, the EUR300m initial mandate was awarded to Amundi. BNP Paribas Asset Management and AXA Investment Managers Paris are the stand-by managers for the allocation. For the No. 3 Euro zone publicly-traded mid to large caps equities – active benchmarked management (renewal of mandate) allocation, management will be an active SRI approach benchmarked against the MSCI EMU benchmark index. The total initial allocation to this mandate will be about EUR500m. The mandates were awarded to AXA Investment Managers and BNP Paribas Asset Management, with stand-by mandates for Amundi and Allianz Global Investors France. For the No. 4 Euro zone publicly-traded mid to large caps equities – non-benchmarked management (renewal of mandate) allocation, from an SRI investment universe defined and provided by ERAFP, Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management and Rothschild & Cie Gestion won the main contracts on the allocation of an initial EUR500m. Tobam and AXA Investment Managers Paris have been appointed as stand-by managers for the mandate.
John Hancock Financial on 30 March unveiled the results of its first quarterly survey of investment choices by retail clients. In first quarter 2011, the investor sentiment index came in at +22, a good result, largely due to investors’ optimism about equities. A majority of investors estimate that the time is right to invest in equities (59%), equities mutual funds (55%), or diversified mutual funds (54%).
In a notification to the Spanish regulator, the UK hedge fund management firm Otus Capital Management (EUR350m in assets) announced that it will invest EUR2.5m in the acquisition of nearly 6.33 million shares from Service Point, equivalent to 17% of the shares created in a capital increase at the Spanish reprography company.
Banque Julius Baer & Co. SA a annoncé le 31 mars la nomination de Bernhard Hodler en qualité de nouveau chief operating officer (COO) du groupe et de la banque à partir du 1er avril. Cette nouvelle fonction de directeur général de l’exploitation permettra de renforcer l’organisation et la transformation du modèle d’affaires de Julius Baer, ce qui facilitera l’application de sa stratégie de croissance, explique le groupe dans un communiqué. Bernhard Hodler est l’actuel chief risk officer du groupe. Il travaille au sein de Julius Baer depuis 1998. Il a fait ses armes auparavant chez SBS et Credit Suisse, en grande partie dans la gestion des risques. En tant que COO, Bernhard Hodler sera responsable de l’attribution des moyens nécessaires à un alignement supplémentaire de Banque Julius Baer avec le paysage en transformation du private banking. Il sera responsable des opérations globales aussi bien que du contrôle et de la prévention des risques. En conséquence, les domaines du risque, legal & compliance, IT & ainsi que les opérations et services partagés seront sous sa responsabilité directe.
Banque Privée Edmond de Rothschild SA on 31 March announced that in 2010 it earned net profits of CHF149.9m, up 9.6% year on year. Net inflows totalled CHF6.5bn. Assets under management, however, were up only slightly, due to the negative impact of the weak US dollar and euro against the Swiss franc. As of the end of 2010, they totalled CHF92.7bn, compared with CHF92.2bn the previous year. The Geneva-based private bank says in a statement that it will continue its strategic development projects this year. In Hong Kong, a banking license is expected to be issued to the bank “in the next few weeks,” while the bank has recently received a banking license in Dubai. In Switzerland, it would also like to concretise a strategic project “in the area of domestic clients.”
UBS is losing the director of its ultra high net worth segment, Riccardo Petrachi, who on 1 October will be joining the Zurich-based private bank Rothschild Private Banking & Trust, Rothschild announced on 31 March in a statement. Petrachi will take responsibility for clients with wealth of over CHF25m (ultra high net worth clients) and family offices, Rothschild says in the statement released on Thursday.
Sub-prime and other categories of mortgage-backed bonds, which were one cause of the financial crisis, are regaining the affections of long-term investors, the most recent in a series of signs that the US credit markets are recovering from their hardest crash in a generation, the Wall Street Journal reports.Values for a representative sample of the sub-prime bond market have doubled, from 30% at the height of the crisis to about 60% currently. This shows that investors once again have the courage to take risks, because the economy is recovering.The attraction of the bonds backed by subprime mortgages is the high returns, at a time when the Fed has lowered the yields on the safest investments to all-time lows.
Nasdaq OMX and NYSE cancelled trades in 10 ETFs after their prices sank on Thursday morning, raising questions about measures adopted to protect investors against sharp market swings after last year’s “flash crash”, writes the Financial Times. Prices plummeted by as much as 98 per cent after a human error at Knight Capital Americas, a market maker.
BNY Mellon Asset Management has announced the appointment of Jack Malvey to the newly-created position of head market strategist. Malvey will also serve as director of the new BNY Mellon Center for Global Investment & Market Intelligence, where he will be responsible for a research team focused on economic and market trends.
Olivier Renard, who was head of the Paris office of DWS Investments, has left the Deutsche Bank group to pursue “other opportunities,” a statement says. He will be replaced by Philippe Goettmann, who has been appointed as head of sales for France and Monaco, from 1 April. Goettmann, a Frenchman, had been head of the distribution department at DWS in Belgium since 2007, and was also one of the top directors of distribution for DWS in Luxembourg. He was previously head of institutional sales at Evli Bank, from 2005 to 2006. He was also deputy director of the Business Development department at ING Luxembourg for four years (from 2001 to 2005), and was in charge of the legal service at Société Générale Bank & Trust in Luxembourg from 1996 to 2000. “Philippe Goettmann allowed us to accelerate our development on the Belgian market. I am certain that his international professional experience and his expert knowledge of client relationship management will allow us to achieve our ambitious objectives in France, one of our key markets in Europe,” Marnix van den Berge, head of distribution for northern Europe at DWS, says in a statement.
Dans le cadre du renouvellement des mandats «actions cotées de moyennes et grandes entreprises de la zone euro» et de la diversification de son allocation d’actifs «actions cotées de petites et moyennes entreprises», l’Etablissement de retraite additionnelle de la fonction publique (ERAFP) a annoncé l’attribution de 6 mandats actifs et 7 mandats en stand-by de gestion financière.
Les agences de notation ont prévenu la Commission européenne qu’elles risquaient de ne plus noter les pays à risque si l’exécutif européen s’en tient à son projet de les rendre responsables légalement de décisions jugées infondées, indique Reuters citant des sources professionnelles. C’est la dernière péripétie en date d’un conflit qui va s’intensifiant entre les agences et l’Union européenne.
La banque mutualiste a annoncé discuter avec trois fonds d’investissement d’une cession éventuelle de Foncia, le groupe de services immobiliers sur lequel elle a engagé une réflexion stratégique. BPCE, maison mère de Natixis, avait déjà indiqué avoir mandaté la banque Rothschild afin d'étudier toutes les options pour valoriser cette filiale dont la vente, selon certaines estimations, pourrait dépasser le milliard d’euros. «Cette cession n’est toujours pas certaine, une décision pourrait intervenir d’ici deux mois», a déclaré un porte-parole de la banque, refusant de donner les noms des fonds sélectionnés. Selon des sources interrogées par Reuters hier, il s’agirait de Charterhouse, Advent et BridgePoint. Des observateurs dans le milieu du capital investissement avaient indiqué durant la semaine que BridgePoint s'était montré très motivé par la reprise de cet actif.
La société de private equity serait selon le quotidien en négociations concernant la vente de la chaîne de cinéma Odeon & UCI, pour un montant compris entre 700 millions et un milliard de livres. Guy Hands aurait mandaté Bank of America Merrill Lynch pour organiser la mise en vente. Vue Entertainment serait sur les rangs.