According to calculations by Feri covering 42 sustainable development funds on sale in Germany, products in this category last year suffered an average loss in Euros of 35.42%, while the MSCI World Standard Core index in US dollars lost 31.60%, Handelsblatt reports.The best results in the category were for the Liga-Pax-Cattolico-Union fund from Union Investment, whose selection of shares that comply with the principles of the Catholic church is undertaken by the Milan-based firm E-Capital: the fund shows losses in 2008 of 28.74%. However, funds invested in small and midcaps tend to amplify the movements of the stock markets, and products such as the Fortis Green Future and the SEB-Oekolux show respective losses of 45.84% and 41.08%.
According to Axa, which published its annual results on Thursday this week, operating profits for its asset management unit are up 6% to EUR589m. Operating profits at AllianceBernstein have improved 9% to EUR318m, while operating profits at AXA Investment Managers have increased 3%, to EUR271m. Revenues from asset management are down 14%, to EUR3.947bn, affected by a decline in commissions (-11%), largely due to an average volume of assets under management lower than the previous year. Assets under management are down by EUR276bn (-8%), for a total of EUR816bn as of 31 December 2008. Of this decrease, EUR261n are due to ?unfavourable market conditions,? according to a statement. Net revenues are down by EUR28bn, with a negative contribution from AllianceBernstein in all client segments (-EUR30bn), while AXA Investment Managers remains in positive territory (+EUR2bn), due to inflows from institutional clients (including AXA).
Directors in the asset management sector in the United States may have seen a reduction in their income, but they are not being subjected to the same wave of austerity that is washing over other financial professions, the Wall Street Journal reports. In 2008, US equities funds lost an average of 39%. But most pay scales for directors in asset management are tied to the profitability of the firm, and not only to the performance of funds, the WSJ remarks. In addition, the asset management sector has had only limited recourse to TARP funds.
Jacques d’Estais, currently head of the CIB unit at BNP Paribas, has been appointed director of the AMS (Asset Management and Services) unit, replacing Alain Papiasse, who has been appointed? head of the CIB unit. The job swap will be effective from 31 March.
Expansión reports that the RREEF fund from Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs are shaping up as the two frontrunners to acquire a portfolio of 40 properties put up for sale by BBVA. RREEF is working with BNP Paribas, while Goldman Sachs would finance the acquisition itself. According to sources close to the negotiations, the final price of the portfolio may come out at something near the EUR2bn initially projected, which would allow BBVA to earn capital gains of about EUR1bn on its properties and branch locations.
Santander Real Estate on Wednesday concluded the sale of the first office property from the portfolio of its real estate fund Santander Banif Inmobiliario, Expansión reports. The sale went through at EUR23m, 17% below the estimated price, but 16% above the purchase price of the property in 1999. The buyer of the 5,500-square-metre property at Paseo de la Castellana 13 is Castellana Gestión Patrimonial.
Banif, the private banking affiliate of Santander, will offer some of its clients who lost money in the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy the same preferential shares in the group offered to victims of the Madoff fraud case (subscribers to the Optimal fund), Cinco Días reports.
Tocqueville will merge the FCP Tocqueville Dividende Europe fund (about EUR30m in assets) into the Tocqueville Dividende (about EUR500m), in order to adjust to the realities of the current economic situation. The two products have similar management objectives, with portfolios composed largely of European equities.
Panicked savers flooded into bank branches on Wednesday to withdraw their money from banks in Antigua and Venezuela with ties to Sir Allen Stanford, the Texan billionaire accused of massive fraud by the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Financial Times reports. The FBI is also investigating Stanford Financial Group, the newspaper adds.
There had been suspicions for years about R. Allen Stanford, the Texan billionaire accused of a USD8bn fraud, the Wall Street Journal reports. But a lack of coordination between Federal agencies and the difficulty of obtaining information about his bank in Antigua prevented regulators from having a clear view of the overall situation. It appears to have been the Madoff scandal which accelerated the Securities and Exchange Commission’s investigation of Stanford.
Irving Picard, the representative appointed by bankruptcy courts to locate the assets of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, has subpoenaed nine companies to obtain all documents they may possess about goods or services furnished to Bernard Madoff’s structure. According to the Wall Street Journal, the companies involved include law and accountancy firms, as well as a hairdresser.
MLP announced on Wednesday that its assets under management as of the end of December totalled EUR11.4bn, the same level as one year previously. They have increased slightly from their levels of GBP11.3bn at the end of September, thanks to net inflows of EUR280m in December, which represents the best monthly result since the firm was founded.As of 31 December, MLP posted liquidity of EUR210.1m, up from EUR155.8m, which could allow for two or three acquisitions of small competitors.
Uwe Schroeder-Wildberg, chairman of the board at MLP, declared on Wednesday that putting the company under the control of an insurer is unimaginable, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. This amounts to a categorical rejection of plans at Swiss Life to merge its German affiliate AWD with MLP. The situation is complex, since Swiss Life also owns nearly 25% of MLP, whose founder and largest shareholder (30%), Manfred Lautenschläger, is opposed to a merger between the two providers of financial services.
Morningstar on Wednesday announced the launch of two ranges of asset allocation indexes using a methodology developed by its affiliate Ibbotson Associates. They include 13 horizon indexes in the Lifetime Allocation series (each of which is available in three risk profiles: aggressive, moderate, and conservative), and five Target Risk indexes, covering a full range of asset allocation profiles.
According to TrimTabs, net redemptions from hedge funds in January totalled USD74bn, bringing total redemptions since September to USD315bn, the Wall Street Journal reports. However, funds posted average performance of 0.3% last month. The heaviest outflows in January were from event-driven funds, at USD19.8bn, while the only funds to post net subscriptions (USD2bn) were funds specialised in mergers and acquisitions.
As United States authorities have frozen the assets of Sir Allen Stanford, accused by the US Securities and Exchange Commission of a USD8bn fraud, clients worldwide are panicking and seeking to recuperate money deposited with the Stanford International Bank (SIB), based in the offshore tax haven of Antigua. In Venezuela, the banking regulatory authority is reported to have announced that one third, or USD2.5bn, of the amounts involved in the fraud belonged to Venezuelan clients, according to the Telegraph. And in Europe? The wealth management firm is clamping shut all lines of communication. When contacted by Newsmanagers, the European offices of Stanford Financial, based in Zurich, indicated that they were no longer responding directly to enquiries from the media, and that all questions should be addressed directly to the SEC. On the subject of the exposure of European and French clients, ?we do not yet have precise information to disclose,? said Rose Romero, regional director of the SEC. Meanwhile, the investigation is continuing, apparently accelerated by the recent Madoff scandal. A manhunt has begun in the United States to find the billionaire, but for the moment, Stanford appears to be impossible to find.
Final statistics for the performance of the Credit Suisse/Tremont hedge fund index in January put it at 1.09%, with gains of 5.72% for convertible arbitrage strategies, and 3.69% for dedicated short bias. Initially, the January edition of the index announced gains of 0.8% (see Newsmanagers of 12 February).
Global Pensions reports that the institutional investor confidence index calculated by State Street showed a level of 72.9 in February, up from 60.2 in January and 48.2 in December. The North American index gained 13 points, to 64.5, while the European index was down 3.2 points to 69.2.
According to statistics from the Guernsey Financial Services Commission, assets in funds managed or administered in Guernsey fell by GBP1bn in fourth quarter 2008. However, at the end of December, these assets totalled GBP200.4bn, or 12.5% more than twelve months previously. In one year, the increase in assets under management or administration totalled 8.1% for open-ended funds, to GBP63.6bn; 19.8%, to GBP91.5bn, for closed funds; and 39%, to GBP45.3bn, for foreign funds which are partly managed or administered on the island.
Selon La Tribune, citant Morgan Stanley, les fonds souverains issus des pays émergents et aujourd’hui à la tête de 5.000 milliards de dollars, ont mis en stand by leurs projets d’investissements en actifs occidentaux. # Ainsi, 40 % des sondés privilégient le marché domestique pour investir aujourd’hui, #, indique le quotidien en se référant à une étude de Financial Dynamics, et en soulignant qu’une partie des liquidités disponibles a été réorientée pour soutenir les investissements locaux.
Selon Le Figaro, les prix dans le haut de gamme ont baissé d"au moins 10 % à 15 % à Paris. C’est surtout sur la rive droite que les baisses de prix ( -20%) sont les plus importantes, la rive gauche étant relativement protégée par la rareté des biens. De l"avis général, ce retournement de marché est plus brutal que celui observé pendant la crise des années 1990, ajoute Le Figaro.
A l’exception notable des CTA et des vendeurs à découvert, toutes les stratégies alternatives ont enregistré l’an dernier des pertes historiques, selon les statistiques publiées par l’Edhec relatives aux performances en 2008 des différentes stratégies mises en ?uvre par les hedge funds (#Hedge Fund Performance in 2008#). Souvent pris comme une référence pour l’ensemble de l’industrie, les fonds de hedge funds ont ainsi accusé un rendement moyen négatif de -17,08%. C’est la première fois depuis 1997 que cet indice tombe dans le rouge.La plupart des stratégies ont enregistré davantage de mois négatifs que positifs. Six stratégies (convetible arbitrage, distressed securities, emerging markets, event driven, fixed income arbitrage et fonds de fonds) ont même eu des rendements négatifs durant neuf mois sur douze. Les stratégies CTA Global et Short Selling ont en revanche dégagé des rendements exceptionnels, proches de leurs niveaux records de 1997. Meilleure de la classe, la stratégie Short Selling affiche un rendement de 24,72%. En queue de peloton se trouvent les marchés émergents (-30,30%) et l’arbitrage de convertibles (-26,48%).
Selon les statistiques de Barclays Global Investors (BGI), l’encours mondial des ETF à fin janvier ressortait à 658,8 milliards de dollars, une baisse de 7,3 % qui s’avère inférieure à celle de 8,9 % accusée par l’indice MSCI World en dollars. Le nombre d’ETF a augmenté de 12 unités par rapport à fin décembre, à 1.602, mais 14 nouveaux produits ont été mis sur le marché, et il existe actuellement des projets de lancement pour 613 autres ETF.Selon Strategic Insight, par ailleurs, les ETF ont enregistré pour janvier-novembre 2008 des souscriptions nettes de 214,8 milliards de dollars alors que les mutual funds accusaient des remboursements nets de 204,7 milliards.
Selon les Echos, mardi à Madrid, 34 cabinets d’affaires de 21 pays représentant des plaignants privés ou des investisseurs institutionnels victimes de l’affaire Madoff, ont décidé à l’initiative du cabinet espagnol Cremades & Calvo Sotelo de s’associer. L’objectif est de mettre en commun toutes les informations dont ils disposent et de procéder à des actions coordonnées.
Selon La Tribune, la publication d’une note de Moody’s sur le risque de fragilisation des grandes banques occidentales dont les filiales sont engagées à l’Est, a provoqué une sanction boursière immédiate. La SocGen exposée à l’Est pour 11 % de son résultat avant impôt a dévissé de 9,6 %, BNP Paribas, exposée pour 6 % de ses encours pondérés a plongé de 7,5 %, et le Crédit Agricole, a cédé 4,3 %. En Autriche, le repli des bancaires a été encore plus sévère, précise le quotidien.
Royal Bank of Scotland va payer à ses salariés des bonus pour un montant de 950 millions de livres au titre de 2008, malgré son renflouement pour 20 milliards de livres, rapporte le Financial Times. Ce package a été approuvé par le gouvernement qui détient 70 % de la banque. Une grosse partie de la somme est émise en dette subordonnée.
Legal & General a cherché mardi à rassurer ses investisseurs au sujet de ses positions en capital en indiquant qu’il doublerait le montant des réserves pour défauts sur obligations d’entreprises à 1,2 milliard de livres, rapporte le Financial Times. Le groupe d’assurance et d’investissement a publié un déclin de 45 % de ses excédents sur les trois derniers mois de l’année.
Selon La Tribune, la fièvre de l’or, attisée par l’inquiétude des investisseurs, ne cesse de monter et, après un bond à 973,10 dollars l’once sur le Comex, le métal jaune cotait 970,40 dollars mardi soir à Londres. «Les achats d’or constatés ces derniers temps sont exclusivement le fait de fonds indexés sur l’or, les ETF, dont chaque dollar est directement investi sur le marché physique de l’or», précise le quotidien.