L’Edhec-Risk Institute vient de lancer Edhec-Risk Indices& Benchmarks, sa première «spin off», rapporte Les Echos. Noël Amenc, son directeur, explique dans un entretien au quotidien que l’Edhec souhaite ainsi être «un des apporteurs d’idées et de nouvelles techniques pour les fournisseurs d’indices, les investisseurs et les gérants d’actifs». Avec cette initiative, l’Edhec comble un manque dans l’industrie française. La place financière de Paris France n’a pas eu de «stratégie forte» dans le secteur des indices dominé par des sociétés anglo-saxonnes. «Nous serons donc le seul français à participer à cette compétition mondiale avec un positionnement original et une volonté d’innovation quantitative qui reflète bien la compétence de la recherche financière de notre pays», souligne Noël Amenc.
Selon La Tribune, les salariés de Nyse Technologies, filiale informatique de Nyse Euronext sont appelés par la CGT et la CFDT à un «débrayage» ce lundi, entre 8 et 10 heures devant les locaux d’Euronext à Paris. En cause, la baisse continue des effectifs et les craintes d’un nouvel affaiblissement lié à la fusion avec Deutsche Börse.
UFFI Real Estate Asset Management (UFFI REAM), la société spécialisée dans la gestion de produits d’investissements immobiliers a annoncé, vendredi 4 mars, l’acquisition d’un immeuble de bureaux à Bordeaux pour le compte de ses SCPI. Le bien acquis auprès de la société Thalium, baptisé « ANDROMEDE », est un immeuble de bureaux d’une surface de 8 575 m² qui bénéficie de la certification HQE. Il sera livré en décembre 2010 et sera loué à Logica France dans le cadre d’un bail d’une durée ferme de 6 ans.
Viveiris Reim, la société de gestion de portefeuille, spécialiste de la gestion d’actifs immobiliers vient de signer un accord avec CPC - Conseil & Investissement, la filiale de la société Solabios, spécialisée dans la création de concepts d’investissement en lien avec le développement des énergies renouvelables. Cet accord porte sur la commercialisation notamment auprès des conseillers en gestion de patrimoine de l’OPCI «grand public» Viveris Immo Environnement axé sur l’immobilier durable. «Solabios apportera ses compétences techniques dans le domaine des énergies durables afin d’équiper, lorsque cela sera possible, les toitures des immeubles acquis par l’OPCI de centrales de production photovoltaïque. Ces toitures seront alors données à bail de longue durée par l’OPCI à des exploitants industriels chargés de produire de l’électricité grâce aux panneaux photovoltaïques et de la revendre à EDF ou à tout autre opérateur», précise un communiqué.
A l’heure où des révolutions bouleversent le Moyen-Orient et l’Afrique du Nord, ING Investment Management fait la promotion de son fonds actions concentré sur ces régions. Fadi Al Saïd, responsable des investissements dans les pays d’Afrique du Nord et du Moyen-Orient d’ING Investment Management, explique au Temps dans quelle mesure les changements en cours améliorent les perspectives économiques. Pour le gérant, les risques sont minimes du fait que le fonds n’a jamais été investi dans des sociétés liées à des dictateurs ou à leurs familles. Par ailleurs, Fadi Al Saïd pense que la probabilité d’assister à des nationalisations est très faible. «C’est un bon moment pour investir au Moyen-Orient. La population souhaite un changement de système et la région dispose des ressources nécessaires à son bien-être», souligne-t-il. Dans le portefeuille, les principaux investissements sont en Arabie saoudite, aux Emirats arabes unis, en Egypte, au Qatar et au Koweït.
Three years after its near-collapse, Polygon Capital, one of the biggest hedge fund victims of the financial crisis, is offering investors 72 per cent of the par value of their holdings in cash to withdraw from their remaining positions in its flagship fund, Global Opportunities, according to the Financial Times.This will put an end to the wind-down process started after the fund’s 48 per cent loss in 2008.The firm told investors at the end of last year that it would shut its Global Opportunities fund and transfer the remaining illiquid assets into a new separate fund, but an exit price for those who did not wish to participate was not set at the time.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The CNMV on 4 February registered the Henderson Credit Alpha Fund a sub-fund of its British Sicav Henderson Strategic Funds, for sale in Spain by Allfunds Bank.On the same date, the Spanish reguilator registered three sub-funds of the Irish Sicav JPMorgan Structured Funds, the Alternative Series Multi Strategy 10 Fund, Alternative Series Multi Strategy 5 Fund, and the JPMorgan Mansart Investments Strathmore Fund. The funds will also be available in Spain from Allfunds Bank.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 4 March, Santander notified the CNMV that, along with other entities of the group (Banif, Banesto and Openbank), it had redeemend all shares in the real estate fund Banif Inmobiliario submitted for redemption by investors seeking to exit from the fund as of 1 March.This corresponded to EUR2.326bn, or 93.01% of the assets in the fund (EUR2.50073bn). Due to the depreciation of assets in the portfolio, the Spanish press reports, Santander saved EUR600m compared with the amount it would have had to pay out as of February 2009, when redemptions were frozen for two years.The fund is now 96.62% held by the Santander group. The next liquidity window is set for 1 to 16 October 2011.
Schroders on 3 March announced the launch of the Schroder UK Core Fund, the first in a series of actively-managed products, designed to provide clients with an alternative to passive management, at a low price, with lower risk and higher transparency.The fund, which will invest in UK equities, will aim to outperform the benchmark index, the FTSE All Share, by 1% per year after commissions.Main CharacteristicsAnnual management commission: 0.35%Total TER: 0.40%Front-end fee: nonePerformance commission: noneMinimal investment: GBP1,000
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } MAM Funds is preparing to launch an income trust to invest in all cap sizes, but dedicated more particularly to UK small and midcaps. The Diverse Income Trust will be listed on the London Stock Exchange in April, and will aim to raise GBP50m through an issue of shares at 50 pence each. The trust will aim for annualised dividend returns of 4%, based on quarterly distribution. The fund will be managed by Gervais Williams, who has recently joined MAM Funds, and who is the former head of small caps from Gartmore, where he managed the Gartmore Irish Growth trust, the Fledgling trust and the Growth Opportunities fund. Management commission is set at 1%.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Since the beginning of March, Phil Steiner, who was head of sales for German-speaking Switzerland and Geneva for SAM Sustainable Asset Management (Robeco group), after creating SAM USA in New York, has joined Nordea Investment Funds Switzerland, as sales director in charge of retail and institutional clients for German-speaking Switzerland.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 7 February, Julius Baer Group announced that it will propose a dividend at its general shareholders’ meeting on 7 April of CHF0.60 per share for 2010, up from CHF0.40 in 2009.The board of directors will also propose to buy back shares for a maximum of CHF500m; the shares would then be cancelled.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In corporate acquisitions, directors who expect to receive generous packages on departure, known famously as “golden parachutes,” are prepared to sell their businesses at a lower price, which costs shareholders millions of dollars, according to a study by the Cass Business School in London and LeBow College of Business in Philadelphia. The study, led by Dr. Anh Tran at Cass Business School (City University, London) and professors Eliezer Fich and Ralph Walking at LeBow College of Business (Drezel University, Philadelphia), takes into account more than 850 acquisitions announced in the United States between 1999 and 2007. The authors weighed the size of the golden parachute against all other indemnities the chairman and CEO stood to receive in case of merger, including potential loss of income. It also found that a 10% increase in the size of the parachute compared with other indemnities results in a 5% decrease in acquisition premiums above the market share price, which represents an average loss of USD249m for a typical acquisition.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Mizuho Corporate Bank will soon acquire 95% of capital in Eurekahedge, a data provider specialised in research into hedge funds, Hedgeweek reports. The acquisition of a controlling stake will allow Mizuho to increase its cooperation with the firm, which is already ongoing. Mizuho founded an affiliate in October 2010 dedicated to alternative management, Mizuho Global Alternative Investments, which has developed a partnership with Eurekahedge.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The alternative management firm D.E. Shaw last year dispatched Julius Gaudio, one of the six members of its executive board, to Hong Kong, to meet more frequently with local clients, and brought on board Qin Xiao, former chairman of China Merchants Bank, as a member of its China advirosy board, the Wall Street Journal reports, adding that Asian high net worth investors are being actively pursued by hedge funds.GLG Partners has also sent Andrew Thatcher to Hong Kong, where Soros Fund Management, Viking Global Investors and Paulson & Co have also set up rep offices.But it is becoming difficult to retain talent, as the more high-visibility managers are tending to go independent: Liang Meng, a partner at D.E. Shaw, and Carl Huttenlocher, who has left Highbridge (JPMorgan AM) have done so.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Initial public offerings have started strong in 2011. According to a report on outlooks for IPOs published by Ernst & Young (“Global IPO trends report 2011,”) offerings have totalled USD25.3bn in the first two months of the year, with 193 operations. The cause of this increase is a considerable backlog of many initial offerings delayed since the beginning of the financial crisis, as well as privatisations, sales of multinational groups, and the needs of companies in the natural resources, infrastructure and IT sectors. In China, IPOs in Shanghai and Shenzhen have totalled USD10.5bn (of which USD6.5bn were in Shenzhen), in nearly 60 operations. In Hong Kong, IPOs may top USD50bn this year, Ernst & Young estimates. “In an illustration of the rising confidence of investors in valuations and a growing appetite for risk, IPOs are expected to increase in a wide variety of sectors and geographical regions, not only in BRIC countries, but also in other emerging markets, such as South-East Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America,” says Franck Sebag, a partner specialised in strategic gorwth markets at Ernst & Young. In the United States, there were 26 operations in the first two months of the year, which raised USD9bn. As of the end of February 2011, plans for about 150 IPOs are set to raise about USD42bn. In Europe, 26 IPOs in the first two months of the year have raised USD1.8bn. Despite a slow start to the year, Ernst & Young finds that there are many IPOs planned for the year in Europe, particularly in eastern Europe (Poland, Czech Republic and Russia).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } For the week to 2 March, political turbulence in oil-producing countries led investors to make further adjustments to their outlooks for inflation, interest rates, and global economic growth. According to the most recent statistics from EPFR Global, energy funds took on high subscriptions for the second consecutive week, while bond funds did better than equities funds, and emerging markets funds saw large redemptions, putting outflows since the beginning of the year at over USD21bn. Overall, bond funds have absorbed a net total of USD2.09bn, while equities funds have seen redemptions totalling USD407m. Outflows form money market funds totalled only USD2.02bn, while Japanese and European funds have seen modest inflows. Developed markets equities funds attracted further capital, putting inflows since the beginning of the year at over USD52bn, despite redemptions from Japanese and European equities funds. In sectoral terms, a desire to hedge against a weak US dollar and benefit from rising commodity prices favoured energy and commodities funds. These two categories absorbed 85% of the USD12.9bn which went to sectoral funds.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } At a time when revolutions are rocking the Middle East and North Africa, ING Investment Management is promoting its equities funds concentrated on these regions.Fadi Al Saïd, director of investments for the countries of North Africa and the Middle East at ING Investment Management, explains to Le Temps to what extent the changes now taking place will improve economic outlooks. The manager argues that risks are minimal, due to the fact that the fund had never invested in companies related to dictators or their families.Al Saïd also estimates that the likelihood of nationalisations is very low. “It is a good time to invest in the Middle East. The population wants a change in the system, and the region has the necessary resources to provide for itself,” he says.The major investments in the portfolio are in Asudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Qatar and Kuwait.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Social Security Office (SSO) of Thailand, which is seeking to increase its international exposure, has launched a call for tenders for a global mandate on USD600m in assets, Asian Investor reports. The call for offers is divided into three lots of USD200m each, the first of which is dedicated to equities, the second to bonds, and the third to real estate. The current allocation to international investment is about 3.5%, most of it in international bonds. The government pension fund is also working to increase its international exposure with the assistance of Towers Watson.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The top management of UniCredit and Intesa Sanpaolo will meet in the next few days to discuss a potential merger between their respective asset management units, Pioneer and Eurizon, Plus, the money supplement of Il Sole – 24 Ore, reports. Synergies arising from the operation are reported to have been quantified by McKinsey. Together, Pioneer and Eurizon would control 30% of the Italian asset management market, the weekly newsmagazine writes. The two asset management affiliates may be transferred to a new firm via an exchange of shares; Intesa Sanpaolo would control a majority in the new firm.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to a study by Commerzbank Wealth Management, in partnership with TNS Infratest, high net worth clients have an above-average commitment to social causes. Since the financial crisis in recent years, the inclination of these clients to make donations has increased, the study finds. Out of 100 high net worth clients (with at least EUR1m), about 71% support social projects, and most have a social (41%) or charitable (35%) agenda. Despite the financial crisis, or perhaps as a result of the financial crisis, 91% of millionaires state that they have donated as much or more to charitable causes in the past two years as before. 96% of respondents say that they are planning to maintain their donations at the same level or increase them in 2011.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The online stock market specialist Saxo Bank, which on 3 March reported that its net profits tripled in 2010 to EUR86.4m, has posted a strong increase in its asset management activities. Assets under management at the bank, managed by Saxo Asset Management, have increased from about EUR2.5bn to over EUR4.18bn as of 31 December 2010. The cause of the development is the large growth of assets for the Danish asset management firms Sirius, acquired in late 2008, Capital Four Management, which was taken over 100% in October 2009, and Global Evolution, which has been 51% controlled by Saxo Bank since the same date.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Northern Trust on 3 March announced that it has won a USD3.5bn mandate from the fund of hedge fund manager Stenham Asset Management. Northern Trust will provide custody, fund administration, and forex management services.
Warren Buffett has recorded a big loss on an investment he made near the peak of the leveraged-buyout boom, according to The Wall Street Journal. Berkshire Hathaway recorded a USD1 billion fourth-quarter write-down on USD2.1 billion in «junk» bonds of the Texas power producer formerly known as TXU, which went private in a USD45 billion buyout in 2007.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } BNY Mellon Asset Management has announced the appointment of Gabriela Parcella as CEO of Mellon Capital & The Boston Company, while Bart Grenier becomes chairman and CEO of The Boston Company Asset Management. Parcella and Grenier also join the executive board at BNY Mellon Asset Management.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Pimco has announced recruitments for its equities team: Tim Bruenjes, senior vice president and equities trader, Vlad Clara, senior vice president and equities analyst, who will work to develop emerging markets equities strategies, Erwan Markson-Brown, senior vice president and equities analyst, Amit Mehta, senior vice president and equities analyst, Nate Velarde, senior vice president and equities analyst for the Pathfinder deep value strategy, Niall Hession, equities trader, and Eden Simmer, equities trader.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Janus Capital Group has announced the recruitment of George Maris as manager for its Worldwide fund. He will begin on 14 March, the management firm says. Maris previously managed mutual funds and institutional assets at Northern Trust.
Selon La Tribune, Harewood Asset Management (HAM), société de gestion (gestion structurée, systématique et alternative) de BNP Paribas logée dans le département BNP Paribas CIB, et le pôle des gestions Sigma (structuration, gestion indicielle, gestion active garantie, allocation des risques et overlay multi-stratégies) de BNP Paribas Asset Management (BNPP AM) qui est dans BNP Paribas Investment Partners (BNPP IP), fusionnent.Le rapprochement semble effectif. Ainsi, selon le quotidien, la page d’accueil du site internet de BNPP IP qui fait figurer Harewood dans sa liste de partenaires et sur les prospectus des produits d’Harewood, l’adresse est désormais 14, rue Bergère, Paris, siège de BNPP IP et BNPP AM. La nouvelle société de gestion est détenue à 100 % par BNPP AM et est dirigée par Gilles Guérin, ancien directeur général et vice-président du directoire de HDF Finance. Alexandre Mojaisky, l’actuel directeur général de Harewood AM «reste dans la maison», indique une source proche du dossier à La Tribune.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } La Tribune reports that Harewood Asset Management (HAM), an asset management firm (structured, systematic and alternative management) controlled by BNP Paribas, a part of BNP Paribas CIB, and the asset management unit Sigma (structured, index-based, guaranteed active management, risk allocation and multi-strategy overlay), from BNP Paribas Asset Management (BNPP AM), a part of BNP Paribas Investment Partners (BNPP IP), are to merge. The merger appears to be already in effect. The newspaper reports that on the homepage of the BNPP IP website that features Harewood in its list of partners and on product prospectuses, the address is now given as 14, rue Bergère, Paris, the headquarters of BNPP IP and BNPP AM. The new management firm is 100% controlled by BNPP AM, and is directed by Gilles Guérin, former CEO and vice-chairman of the board for HDF Finance. Alexandre Mojaisky, the current CEO of Harewood AM, “will remain at the firm,” a source familiar with the matter has told La Tribune.
Selon La Tribune, Harewood Asset Management (HAM), société de gestion (gestion structurée, systématique et alternative) de BNP Paribas logée dans le département BNP Paribas CIB, et le pôle des gestions Sigma (structuration, gestion indicielle, gestion active garantie, allocation des risques et overlay multi-stratégies) de BNP Paribas Asset Management (BNPP AM) qui est dans BNP Paribas Investment Partners (BNPP IP), fusionnent.Le rapprochement semble effectif. Ainsi, selon le quotidien, la page d’accueil du site internet de BNPP IP qui fait figurer Harewood dans sa liste de partenaires et sur les prospectus des produits d’Harewood, l’adresse est désormais 14, rue Bergère, Paris, siège de BNPP IP et BNPP AM. La nouvelle société de gestion est détenue à 100 % par BNPP AM et est dirigée par Gilles Guérin, ancien directeur général et vice-président du directoire de HDF Finance. Alexandre Mojaisky, l’actuel directeur général de Harewood AM «reste dans la maison», indique une source proche du dossier à La Tribune.