Pour le compte de son fonds immobilier offert au public hausInvest europa (11 milliards d’euros), l’allemand Commerz Real a acheté pour environ 56 millions d’euros le complexe de bureaux Harmony Office Center (19.300 mètres carrés) situé à Varsovie. Cet actif est loué en totalité pour dix ans à la Bank Millenium.
Selon Financial News, Steve Lee, responsable du développement de l’activité institutionnelle de Pioneer Investments au Royaume-Uni, quitte la société pour rejoindre UBS Global Asset Management. Il s’agit du troisième départ en un mois de la division institutionnelle de la société de gestion. Cela refléterait la décision de Roger Yates, le nouveau directeur général de Pioneer, de réduire l’activité institutionnelle, commente FN.
Barclays Wealth vient d’annoncer la nomination de Urban Wilde au poste nouvellement créé de chief risk officer pour la région Asie-Pacifique.Urban Wilde, qui prendra ses fonctions le 2 août prochain, était précédemment chez UBS, où il occupait le poste de managing director des projets stratégiques. Il est rattaché au CRO mondial Mark Cooke et au chief executive pour l’Asie-Pacifique, Didier von Daeniken.
Clariden Leu vient de nommer Peter Buehler, un ancien d’UBS, au poste nouvellement créé de responsable de la clientèle européenne et des gérants de fonds extérieurs souhaitant investir à Singapour, rapporte Asian Investor.Peter Buehler, basé à Singapour, a pris ses fonctions le 1er juin dernier. Il est directement rattaché à Othmar Foffa, responsable de l’Europe du Sud.
The German management firm Commerz Real has acquired the office complex Harmony Office Center (19,300 square metres), in Warsaw, for about EUR56m, for its open-ended real estate fund hausInvest europa (EUR11bn). The property is wholly leased for 10 years to Bank Millenium.
On Friday, the CNMV registered the DWS Rentas Emergentes 2015 fund (ES0127337006, for A-class shares, and ES0127337014, for B-class shares), which was launched on 8 June by DWS Investments (Spain). The fund consists of 30 emerging markets bonds, with a maturity date set for 30 June 2015. The product will invest from 15 July in bonds with a remaining duration to maturity of 3 to 6 years, from issuers who are rated between B- and BBB+, most of which will be retained until maturity. On a half-yearly basis, gains will be transferred to the money market fund DWS Fondepósito Plus (which charges a management commission of 0.7%). A 3% coupon will be paid on the nominal value of the investment every six months, and the system of partial redemptions will allow the investor to recuperate 20% of the investment at the end of the third year, and then another 20% at the end of the fourth year. The remainder, and the additional coupon, will be payable at the maturity of the fund. From 14 July 2010, management commission will be increased from 0.3% to 1.3%, while the depository banking commission will be 0.1% (for B-class shares, the management commission will be 0.45%). Front-end fees are 5% from 31 July 2010 until 29 June 2015, while the withdrawal penalty is 3% from 15 July 2010 until 29 June 2015.
The Spanish Inverco association of asset management firms announced on Monday that individual pension funds in May posted average returns of 3.42% over 12 months, despite the downward orientation of the markets. All categories show gains, ranging from 0.57% for funds specialised in short-term bonds, to 11.88% for those specialised in equities. However, over three years, funds have lost an average of 1.45% per year, and they have earned only 0.91% per year over five years, and 0.67% over 10 years.
According to the most recent statistics from the European financial management association (Efama), investors are continuing to favour long-term funds, bond funds and diversified funds to equities funds, and are also continuing to withdraw from money market funds. UCITS funds also posted inflows of EUR20bn in April (compared with EUR8.1bn in March), with net inflows of EUR27.3bn (compared with EUR27bn) for long-term funds, and outflows of EUR7.3bn for money market funds (compared with -EUR18.8bn in March). For the first time since March 2009, net inflows to equities funds were near zero, at only EUR230m, compared with nearly EUR8.5bn in March, and EUR21.2bn since the beginning of the year). Bond funds have posted net inflows of EUR14.9bn, compared with EUR13.3bn in March, and EUR57.5bn since the beginning of the year.
Andreas Bogdan has been recruited by Aviva Investors Germany as business development director, financial institutions, banks and private banks for Germany and Austria. He will report to Gabriele Miodini, based in Milan, who has recently been appointed head of financial institutions – Europe. Bogdan was director wholesale & relationship managers for the private banking activities of Julius Baer.
As returns on bunds are at record low levels, and high-risk investments in equities and private equity remain off limits, Feri Finance is recommending a double strategy for charities to confront an expected rise in inflation: on the one hand, investment in tangible assets such as gold, forests, and commodities, and on the other hand, an active risk management policy, the Börsen-Zeitung reports. Although the roughly 17,000 charities in Germany have succeeded in surviving the financial crisis undamaged due to conservative investment policies, they are now confronting difficulties in earning the necessary returns.
According to Financial News, Steve Lee, Pioneer’s head of UK institutional business development, has resigned from the asset manager to join UBS Global Asset Management. The fund manager has seen his third senior departure in a month from its institutional division. The departures are understood to reflect a decision by chief executive Roger Yates to scale back Pioneer’s institutional business.
On Monday, Charles Schwab announced that it is cutting the management commissions for six of its ETF funds, which, along with the other two funds whose fees will remain unchanged, will become the cheapest on the market. They will continue not to charge transaction commissions if orders are made online via the Schwab platform. The funds concerned are the following:• Schwab U.S. Broad Market ETFTM, for which commissions will be lowered from 0.08% to 0.06% • Schwab U.S. Large-Cap Growth ETFTM whose fees will fall from 0.15% to 0.13% • Schwab U.S. Large-Cap Value ETFTM, from 0.15% to 0.13% • Schwab U.S. Small-Cap ETFTM, from 0.15% to 0.13% • Schwab International Equity ETFTM, from 0.15% to 0.13% • Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETFTM, from 0.35% to 0.25% Meanwhile, Peter Crawford, senior vice president, Investment Management Services, says that Charles Schwab will launch three ETFs this summer, including a fund of inflation-linked Treasuries (TIPS), and two Treasuries funds.
Barclays Wealth has announced the appointment of Urban Wilde in the newly-created position of chief risk officer for the Asia-Pacific region. Wilde, who will begin in his new role on 2 August, was previously at UBS, where he served as managing director for strategic projects. He will report to global CRO Mark Cooke, and Didier von Daeniken, chief executive for Asia-Pacific.
Clariden Leu has appointed Peter Buehler, formerly of UBS, to the newly-created position of head of European clients and external fund managers seeking to invest in Singapore, Asian Investor reports. Buehler, based in Singapore, began in his new role on 1 June. He reports directly to Othmar Foffa, head of Southern Europe.
A new foreign asset management firm is setting up shop in Paris. In March, the British management firm Old Mutual Asset Managers UK (OMAM) licensed four sub-funds of its Irish-registered Old Mutual Dublin Funds with the French financial market regulator, the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF), in a first step in its development strategy for France. The funds it registered are the Old Mutual Global Bond Fund, the Old Mutual Global Equity Absolute Return Fund, the UK Select Smaller Companies, and the UK Dynamic Equity.For the moment, OMAM will serve France from London. The idea is to initially test the market, and then possibly to open a Paris office later on. A three-member team serves continental Europe at the asset management firm. The move into France is part of a European deployment at Old Mutual AM. In March, the firm also licensed its Irish sub-funds in Sweden and Switzerland. It is also preparing to do the same in Italy and Spain, says David Aldred, head of European distribution, on a visit to Paris. Old Mutual AM manages assets of GBP4.4bn, as of 30 April, in equities, bonds, and alternative investments, on behalf of retail and institutional investors. The management firm belongs to the British Old Mutual financial group, which already has other asset management structures in France, including Skandia and Skandia Investment Group.
OFI Asset Management has been granted the status of qualified financial institutional investor (QFII) in China, the deputy CEO of the firm, Thierry Callault, has announced at a conference on emerging markets. The official status, which few French management firms have been granted, will allow the firm to invest in the A-class Chinese markets. To make use of this authorisation, OFI AM will create a fund of A-class shares in 3rd or 4th quarter this year. The management firm is planning to launch another fund based on the theme of emerging markets, which will be an alternative multi-management fund focused on Latin America.
Pimco, one of the world’s biggest bond fund managers, is expanding into European equities, says the Financial Times. It launched two actively managed equity funds in Europe on Monday.
In April, bond flows accounted for a whopping two thirds of April’s EUR27bn sales, says Lipper FMI.Sales in bond funds these past two months were the best since their all-time high of EUR20bn in July 2005. So far this year, sales are running at EUR61bn, a figure that is not only 70% of 2009’s bond total, but also marginally higher than like-for-like sales in 2005, which was the bond’s sector record year (EUR150bn). This time, low interest rates are driving bond enthusiasm and Emerging markets, Global Currencies and high yield varieties of bond funds are heading the bill. The question on everyone’s lips is whether the crisis in Greece and its Southern European neighbours will bring this bond trend shuddering to a halt, says Lipper.Equity fund flows totalled EUR4bn, half of March’s total, and were the lowest since March 2009. Emerging Markets, US and UK were the sectors of choice. The top selling groups were Franklin Templeton, HSBC and Aviva with flows of EUR4bn, EUR3.6bn and EUR2.3bn respectively. For bond fund sales, the best selling group by a wide margin was Franklin Templeton (EUR3.5bn). For equity fund sales, the top selling group was Amundi with sales of EUR800m.
The Hong Kong-based hedge fund galaxy Asset Management will launch a UCITS III-compliant version of its Galaxy China Opportunities fund, using the Dublin-based platform of Merchant Capital, Asian Investor reports. The fund will be available by September at the latest, with abn objective of about USD500m in assets. The vehicle will be aimed at institutional and high net worth clients, with a front-end fee of EUR100,000. Since its launch in 2005, the original fund has earned total annual returns of 22% to 24%.
The European Commission on 14 June published two documents which will be open for consultation until 10 July, on the subject of short-selling and derivative products. While France and Germany are pushing for a prohibition on some short positions, the Commission appears to be adopting a more prudent position, proposing a scenario in which national regulatory authorities may intervene temporarily in urgent situations.
The United Auto Workers’ union (UAW) has built up a USD45bn war chest through its agreement to participate in bailout efforts to save the three major US auto makers, the Wall Street Journal reports. The VEBA (Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association) has already placed USD2.2bn with BlackRock, and has launched requests for proposals for the management of international equities and bond mandates. The objective is to render the assets more conservative and liquid, by reducing allocation to alternative investments, which include USD2bn in five hedge funds, USD380m in shares in realty firms, and USD375m in private equity.
Société Générale is aiming for net profits from its private banking, asset management and investment services division of EUR05.bn to EUR0.7bn, out of a total of EUR6bn for the bank overall, the group has announced in its Ambition SG 2015 plan. In the first two months of second quarter, the unit has posted an increase in its net banking proceeds compared with first quarter, the bank notes.
After 13 years at Morgan Stanley, where he became chief strategist for European equities in London, the Dutchman Teun Draaisma is joining TT International Investment Management, where he will manage a hedge fund, the Börsen-Zeitung reports. He will be replaced by Graham Secker.
Selon Les Echos, les fonds souverains sont de nouveau repartis en quête d’acquisitions hors de leurs frontières après un passage à vide au plus fort de la crise. Mais ils ont aujourd’hui des ambitions plus modestes. Mieux acceptés en Occident, ces «macro-gérants» ont aussi redécouvert les vertus de l’action collective, au travers d’initiatives conjointes afin notamment d’atténuer le risque de leurs placements dans un contexte de grande prudence.
Le cabinet de conseil international bfinance a publié, vendredi 11 juin les résultats d’un sondage sur les fonds d’infrastructures. Ce dernier reposait sur une population de 15 fonds d’infrastructures affichant une ancienneté et des tailles différentes en termes d’encours. Pour disposer d’une vision la plus générale possible, bfinance a également interrogé des gérants originaires du Royaume-Uni, mais aussi de France, des Etats-Unis et d’Australie, et dont les fonds étaient pour leur part enregistrés principalement au Luxembourg mais aussi au Royaume-Uni ou en Australie. A noter également que près de la moitié des gérants (46%) ayant répondu investissent d’abord en Europe, tandis que 27 % investissent dans le monde entier, 20 % en Amérique et 7 % dans d’autres zones géographiques. Pour quels résultats ? En dépit du manque d’expertise des investisseurs de ces fonds et qui à terme, selon les gérants, pourrait être pénalisant pour le développement de cette classe d’actifs, les pilotes de ces fonds maintiennent leurs perspectives de rendement élevé. 67 % d’entre eux anticipent ainsi un rendement moyen annuel de leurs investissements de 10 % - 15 % sur les trois à cinq prochaines années (nets de frais) même si 60 % des répondants jugent qu’il est aujourd’hui plus difficile d’accéder aux financements bancaires que de prendre des participations dans les projets d’infrastructures. Selon plus de la moitié des gérants (53 %), les banquiers, qui participent au développement des projets de cette nature adoptent désormais un comportement plus conservateur qui entraine une réduction du niveau de levier des fonds d’infrastructures.Il n’empêche. Selon Vikram Aggarwal, Senior Associate spécialiste des investissements en infrastructures chez bfinance, « les fonds de pension et autres grands investisseurs institutionnels internationaux s’intéressent de plus en plus aux infrastructures, en raison du potentiel de cette classe d’actifs à générer des revenus prévisibles et corrélés à l’évolution des prix sur le long terme, ainsi que de sa capacité à accueillir des flux d’investissements importants ». Reste la question de la transparence des frais. Selon les résultats de l’étude, seuls 33 % des gérants de fonds d’infrastructures ont pour habitude de présenter une estimation des dépenses de fonctionnement de leurs véhicules d’investissement, tandis que 54 % ne fournissent aucune estimation du total expense ratio. 13 % déclarent ne pas savoir. «Au final, les investisseurs ne comprennent pas toujours correctement les coûts de ces fonds et, pour cette raison, peinent à évaluer correctement les performances attendues», relève bfinance. Il est important que les institutionnels soient bien conscients du type d’investissement en infrastructures dans lequel ils placent leur argent. Ils n’en appréhendront que mieux les frais auxquels ils s’exposent. Tous les projets d’infrastructures ne sont pas comparables et les frais facturés sont proportionnels au niveau d’expertise et aux risques sous-jacents. Enfin, la crise récente du crédit a montré que la classe d’actifs n’est pas complètement décorrélée du cycle économique. Et cette notion n’est pas non plus forcément comprise par les investisseurs…
L’encours des 946 ETF domiciliés en Europe fin mai, contre 932 fin avril, se situait à 220,7 milliards de dollars contre 234,3 milliards un mois plus tôt. Il a ainsi diminué de 2,7 % par rapport aux 226,9 milliards de fin décembre. Le nombre de produits s’est accru durant les cinq premiers de l’année de 14,1 %, avec 177 nouveaux lancements, selon les statistiques établies par BlackRock.iShares (BlackRock) demeure largement en tête avec 173 ETF et 81,5 milliards de dollars, devant Lyxor Asset Management (Société Générale) avec 133 produits et 42 milliards de dollars d’actifs, db x-trackers (Deutsche Bank) arrivant en troisième position avec 133 ETF également et un encours de 34,4 milliards de dollars. Leur part de marché total (sur 36 émetteurs) se situait à 71,5 % contre 72,1 %.Le palmarès est différent pour les souscriptions nettes, qui ont totalisé 22,2 milliards de dollars sur les cinq premiers mois de l’année : iShares a drainé 4,1 milliards de dollars, tandis que db x-trackers se classe deuxième avec 3,8 milliards, Lyxor attirant pour sa part 3,4 milliards de dollars.