Borrowing by sustainable industrialised or emerging countries overall has evolved more positively than sovereign borrowing by countries that are not considered sustainable. The availability of resources shows every sign of having gained importance as a parameter in the evaluation of government debt These are the findings of the sustainability analysis department of Banque Sarasin, in its most recent commentary on the sustainability of governments and the valuation of their borrowing. The evolution of sustainable and unsustainable industrialised countries, which had previously been nearly synchronous, has become clearly differentiated since the outbreak of the debt crisis in Europe. With a difference of 27.3 percentage points compared with unsustainable countries, sustainable economies had done considerably better as of the end of December 2011. In 2012, the difference fell to 12.4 percentage points, but the valuation difference remained substantial over the entire period. Taking sustainability criteria into account also paid off in the selection of emerging market government debt. This conclusion is drawn from a consistent decline which peaked during the international financial crisis in 2008, as borrowing from sustainable emerging countries such as Brazil, Peru and Indonesia developed considerably more favourably than those of unsustainable countries such as China or South Africa. At the end of December 2012, the performance difference peaked at 77.0 percentage points. In the context of the current market, the risk looms as large as the performance in the evaluation of an investment. Aside from returns and volatility, the sustainability analysis team at Banque Sarasin therefore also calculated the Sharpe ratio for the countries under study. Sustainable countries also clearly stand out from the others in this area.
Swiss-based wealth management firm GAM is reorganising. It is moving from a financial holding company structure to a much more strongly integrated structure. This is not expected to result in any one-time restructuring costs, according to a statement released on 16 January.The current chairman and CEO of the holding company, Johannes de Gier, will now concentrate entirely on his responsibilities as chairman of the board of directors. David Solo, currently CEO of the two operational business units, will take over as CEO for the group.The finance and risk departments will be combined, and will now report to a chief financial officer for the group, in the person of Marco Suter, currently chief risk officer. The CFO of Gam Holding, Andrew Wills, will oversee the transition before leaving the group. The changes will be effective from 17 April this year.At the next general shareholders’ meeting, de Gier, Dieter Enkelmann, and Hugh Scott-Barrett will stand for new terms. Their current terms will end in April this year. Tanja Weiher is proposed as a new independent member, the board of directors would then grow from five to six members.
The asset management firm Fourpoints Investment Managers, born of a merger in March 2012 of PIM Gestion France and IT Asset Management (see Newsmanagers of 8 June 2012), has assets of EUR876m, compared with EUR750m at the time of the merger. EUR41m of that increase is due to market appreciation, and EUR85mof it to net inflows, Muriel Faure, CEO, and Michael Raud, deputy CEO and CIO, announced on Tuesday.At its presentation, the firm emphasized its French-registered, UCITS-compliant FCP fund Fourpoints Euro Global Leaders, which currently has only EUR16m in assets, though the strategy has nearly EUR150m, of which EUR120m are in a mandate received in the second half of last year from a pension fund. Over five years, the fund shows annual returns of 0.6%, compared with losses of 6,1% for the MSCI EMU DNR, and over three years, annual gains come to 7.4%, compared with 1.3% for the benchmark.
The US alternative management firm Mariner Investment Group on 15 January announced the acquisition of Concordia Advisors, an alternative asset management firm with offices in New York and London, and assets under management totalling about USD1bn. Following the complete separation of Concordia’s activities from Mariner, the investment teams at Concordia, and some support functions will join Mariner. Portfolio managers at Concordia, Arun Puri, John Eckert, James Wise, Chris Dillon and Jason Cheung, will continue to manage their respective funds under the Mariner brand name. The head of Concordia, Best Williams, becomes deputy chief investment officer at Mariner, and joins the investment board, as well as the board of directors at Mariner. Assets under management at Mariner in mid-2012 totalled about USD4.7bn.
BNP Paribas Wealth Management has appointed Florent Bronès as chief investment officer. He is responsible for establishing a global investment strategy and drawing up recommendations on specific investment themes in concert with the international network of chief investment advisors, which he coordinates.BNP Paribas Wealth Management is strengthening its investment strategy resources in order to meet the growing demand from its Private Banking clientele for market intelligence. Given the rapid and complex developments taking place in the financial marketplace, the ability to communicate a clear view of the markets is key for BNP Paribas Wealth Management to be able to provide clients with first-class advice on how to invest their assets. In order to meet this need, BNP Paribas Wealth Management is able, when drawing up its investment strategy, to call on Group-wide expertise in various specialist fields – including asset management, investment banking and real estate – in addition to Wealth Management’s own global and local analysis capability.Before joining BNP Paribas Wealth Management, Bronès served from 2008 as director of the buy-side research office for Global Equities and Commodity Derivatives (GECD), and concentrated on developing investment strategy.
Christian Pellis joined Amundi at the beginning of this year as global head of external distribution, a position that was before covered by the head of institutional clients.Pellis previously worked at LGT Capital Management, as head of distribution. He was also a member of the executive board (2010-2012).However, Pellis has spent the majority of his career at Threadneedle Investments, first in Frankfurt as regional director of sales for Europe (1998-2001), and then in London, where he served in a similar role as head of development for new markets in Europe and Latin America (2002-2004). He then spent six years as head of European distribution in London, specialised in institutional clients in Europe and Latin America (2004-2010).
As of 31 December, assets at the German asset management firm Mainfirst Asset Management topped EUR3bn, a record, compared with EUR1.1bn twelve months previously. The firm declined to tell Newsmangers the respective level of assets under management in eight open-ended funds and in mandates; the distribution appears to be about 50/50, according to some sources familiar with the matter. The largest fund from the Frankfurt-based asset management firm is the Mainfirst Top European Ideas Fund, with about EUR1.3bn.Mainfirst AM did not wish to provide details about net subscription levels either. A statement says merely that the product range grew in 2012 with the addition of a quantitative equity strategy, the MainFirst North America fund (managed by a former Swisscanto manager), two bond strategies, including the MainFirst Emerging Markets Corporate Bond Fund Balanced (managed by former Clariden Leu managers), the recruitment of a team from Postbank Financial Services (which will bring out a new fund this year), and lastly, the creation of a multi-asset class unit. For the latter, Mainfirst has already applied for sales licenses for three open-ended absolute return funds, which will be managed by a team recruited from DB Advisors.
AXA Private Equity on Tuesday, 15 January announced the sale of the Curtiss-Wright Corporation of its stake in the Phönix/Strack group , a leader in the design and production of special plumbing for companies active in the energy, petrochemical and chemical industries. The sale price totals EUR82m. The completion of the operation is pending approval from antitrust authorities.
The German insurer Allianz on 15 January confirmed its operating projections for 2012, despite EUR455m in charges due to Hurricane Sandy in the United States. “Despite the impact of hurricane Sandy, we continue to predict an operating profit for 2012 of over EUR9bn,” the CFO of Allianz, Dieter Wemmer, says in a statement. The insurer at the end of October announced the operating profit outlook of over EUR9bn at the end of October, but had warned that this figure included a merely provisional evaluation of damages related to hurricate Sandy, which was not disclosed at that time. Stating that the figure remains provisional, Allianz now estimates the damage at USD590m, or EUR455m, the total cost of reimbursements to clients and of their associated expenses.
As of 30 April, Peter Ebertz will be leaving his job as managing partner of Bankhaus Lampe KG (a business owned by the Oetker family), for personal reasons. The private bank states that Ebertz is responsible for branches and relationships with high net worth private clients, as well as business clients.Nicholas Blanchard, who joined Lampe on 1 March 2012 from Bayerische HypoVereinsbank (HVB), will be appointed as a managing partner alongside Stephan Schüller and Ulrich Cosse. He will be responsible for all market activities of the bank.The Düsseldorf institute also reports that Ute Gerbaulet (formerly of Commerzbank) was recruited on 1 January 2013 as head of the capital markets & advisory unit; she also joins the extended executive board of Bankhaus Lampe.
Investors in 2013 are looking for the best terms possible, with an appetite for risk not seen in nine years, according to the latest BofA Merrill Lynch survey of a sample of 354 respondents representing cumulative assets under management of USD754bn, undertaken between 4 and 0 January.Global investors have entered 2013 in buoyant but not yet exuberant mood. The new year sees asset allocators assigning more funds to equities than at any time since February 2011, while their confidence in the world’s economic outlook has reached its most positive level since April 2010.Investors’ appetite for risk in their portfolios is now at its highest in nine years, while an increasing number judge equities as undervalued – particularly in Europe. Moreover, investors have reduced cash holdings to 3.8 percent from 4.2 percent in December.Participants’ perception of the U.S. fiscal crisis as the biggest “tail risk” for asset markets has calmed (down nearly 20 percentage points in two months), though it remains their largest concern. Views of China remain very positive, with a net 63 percent still anticipating a stronger economy this year, but one in seven sees a Chinese hard landing as their number one risk.Investors’ bullishness reflects a growing confidence in economic recovery. A net 59 percent now expect the global economy to strengthen this year, compared to a net 40 percent a month ago. This marks the panel’s most positive outlook since April 2010. An increasing proportion of respondents expect inflation to pick up as well.The panel has shifted its stance on financial stocks strongly, moving to its first net overweight in global bank names since February 2007 following a 15 percentage move versus last month. Nevertheless, banks are still perceived as the global equity market’s most undervalued sector. The existing overweight in insurance has also been extended, particularly in Europe, and now stands its highest level since January 2007.
The SS&C GlobeOp hedge fund performance index posted a gross return of 1.27% in December, Investment Europe reports. The index of net inflows (Capital Movement Index), for its part, shows a decline of 2.58% in the month of January. Assets under administration by the GlobeOp platform currently represent about 10% of assets invested in the hedge fund sector.
The Dow Jones Credit Suisse hedge fund index gained 1.48% in December, following gains of 0.64% in November. For the year as a whole, the index is up 7.67%. All strategies of the index contributed to this performance, except the dedicated short bias strategy, which lost 2.95% in December, and more than 20% for the year. Among the best results of the month are emerging market strategies, with 2.3% in December and 10.28% for the year as a whole, and event-driven, which was up 1.98% for the month, and 10.63% for the year.
The Californian pension fund CalSTRS has invested USD50m in the global macro strategy from the manager of the hedge fund MKP Capital Management in the quarter ending on 31 December, Pensions & Investments reports. MKP Capital is the third hedge fund manager to be selected by CalSTRS, whose assets under management total about USD154.3bn.
Fidelity Worldwide Investment has today announced that it is recruiting for its institutional team in France, with the arrival of Anne-Charlotte Aguttes as head of the Clients – Institutional and Corporate department. She joins Jean-Marc Didier, who is head of this activity, with whom she will work closely to strengthen Fidelity’s presence serving French institutional clients, a statement says. Before joining Fidelity, Anne-Charlotte Aguttes served as senior RFP Manager at State Street Global Advisors in Paris, where she had worked since 2006, as a specialist in institutional requests for proposals, covering all strategies and asset classes offered by the group.
The most popular investment criterion for institutional investors in 2013 will be the quality of results announced by businesses, before macroeconomic data is taken into account, according to the most recent European Corporate Survey by Crédit Agricole Cheuvreux, conducted between 23 October and 6 November, of 270 international investors in 28 countries. More than 50% of international investors, and 78% of US investors, say that profits at businesses will be the most important criterion in their investment decisions in 2013. Only 24% of investors estimate that macroeconomic criteria will be important, compared with 32% currently. The survey finds that 81% of investors surveyed estimate that the Euro Stoxx 50 index will rise until 30 June 2013, while 46% estimate that the index will remain in a range of 0 to +10%, and 35% predict that the index will gain at least 10%. One third of investors hope to increase the number of corporate meetings in 2012, as “corporate access” is now indissociable from the investment decision. 50% of US investors who participated in the study would like to increase the number of corporate meetings in the next 12 months. British and French investors value these contacts: 43% and 34%, respectively, meet with more than 60 companies per year (compared with an average of 27).
In a difficult fundraising environment, a growing number of new hedge fund firms is setting up shop in New York, where they estimate that it is easier to get noticed, the Wall Street Journal reports. Of the new hedge fund firms opening in Manhattan or Greenwich or Stamford in Connecticut, about 86% have chosen New York, on average, between 2003 and 2008, accorsing to eVestment. In 2009 and 2010, Manhattan accounted for 92% of fund launches. 2011 data indicate that the trend has continued.
The Préfon association on 15 January announced that its Préfon-Retraite pension scheme has generated inflows of EUR430m in the past twelve months, an increase of 3.4% year on year. The leader in elective retirement savings for public employees has also announced that the number of new members joining the Préfon-Retraite scheme rose 15% in 2012 compared with the previous year, with 8,500 new subscriptions. As of the end of September 2012, assets at Préfon-Retraite totalled about EUR11.2bn.
L’indice de performance SS&C GlobeOp des hedge funds a dégagé un rendement brut de 1,27% en décembre, rapporte Investment Europe.L’indice de mesure de la collecte nette (Capital Movement Index) affiche pour sa part un recul de 2,58% pour le mois de janvier. Les actifs sous administation de la plate-forme de GlobeOp représentent environ 10% des actifs actuellement investis dans le secteur des hedge funds.
La société de gestion ECM Asset Management, une filiale du groupe bancaire Wells Fargo, a nommé Jens Vanbrabant en qualité de co-gérant de deux de ses plus gros fonds dans sa gamme de sicav, rapporte Citywire.Jens Vanbrabant devient le troisième gérant de la European Credit Fund Sicav-Elbe dont les actifs sous gestion s'élèvent à 467 millions d’euros et co-gérant de la European Credit Fund Sicav-Danube (82 millions d’euros). Les gérants en place sur ces stratégies, Henrietta Pacquement et Derek Hynes, conservent leurs fonctions, mais seront désormais soutenus par Jens Vanbrabant.Malgré ces nouvelles responsabilités, Jens Vanbrabant conserve la gestion des trois fonds qu’il pilote actuellement, un fonds obligataire européen (European Credit Fund Sicav-Interlaken), un fonds obligataire corporate (European Credit Fund Sicav – European Corporate) et un mandat obligataire européen pour d’Universal Investment.
Fidelity Worldwide Investment annonce ce jour le renforcement de son équipe institutionnelle en France avec l’arrivée d’Anne-Charlotte Aguttes au poste de responsable Service Clients – Institutionnels et Entreprises.Elle rejoint ainsi Jean-Marc Didier qui dirige cette activité, avec qui elle travaillera en étroite collaboration pour renforcer la présence de Fidelity auprès des clients institutionnels français, indique un communiqué.Avant de rejoindre Fidelity, Anne-Charlotte Aguttes occupait le poste de senior RFP Manager chez State Street Global Advisors à Paris où elle a travaillé depuis 2006 et s’est spécialisée sur les appels d’offre institutionnels, couvrant toutes les stratégies et classes d’actifs proposées par le groupe.
Dans un environnement difficile pour lever des capitaux, les nouvelles sociétés de hedge funds sont plus nombreuses à s’établir à New York, où elles considèrent qu’il est plus aisé de se faire remarquer, analyse The Wall Street Journal. Sur les nouvelles sociétés de hedge funds qui se lancent à Manhattan, Greenwich ou Stamford, environ 86 % ont choisi New York, en moyenne, entre 2003 et 2008, selon eVestment. En 2009 et 2010, Manhattan a abrité en moyenne 92 % des lancements de fonds. Les données de 2011 indiquent que la tendance a continué.
Le britannique M&G envisage de fusionner deux fonds d’actions britanniques, le UK Select dont les actifs sous gestion s'élèvent à 81 millions de livres, et le UK Growth Fund (546 millions de livres), rapporte Money Marketing.Les deux fonds sont actuellement gérés par Mike Felton, qui a repris la gestion du UK Growth Fund en décembre dernier.Sous réserve de l’approbation des porteurs, les deux fonds devraient fusionner le 15 mars prochain.
Le fonds de pension californien CalSTRS a investi 50 millions de dollars dans la stratégie global macro du gérant de hedge funds MKP Capital Management durant le trimestre au 31 décembre, rapporte Pensions & Investments.MKP Capital est le troisième gérant de hedge funds sélectionné par CalSTRS, dont les actifs sous gestion s'élèvent à environ 154,3 milliards de dollars.
L’association Préfon a annoncé le 15 janvier que son régime Préfon-Retraite a généré une collecte de 430 millions d’euros sur les douze derniers mois, soit une hausse de 3,4% sur l’année.Le leader de la retraite facultative de la fonction publique indique par ailleurs que le nombre d’affiliations au régime Préfon-Retraite a progressé de 15% en 2012 par rapport à l’année précédente, avec 8.500 nouveaux souscripteurs.A fin septembre 2012, les actifs de Préfon-Retraite s'élevaient à quelque 11,2 milliards d’euros.
Christian Pellis a rejoint Amundi en début d’année en tant que directeur mondial de la distribution externe. Ce poste n’existait pas en tant que tel jusqu’ici, mais été regroupé avec la direction institutionnelle. L’intéressé travaillait précédemment chez LGT Capital Management en tant que responsable de la distribution. Il y était également membre du comité exécutif (2010 – 2012).Mais Christian Pellis a passé la majorité de sa carrière chez Threadneedle Investments, d’abord à Francfort en tant que directeur régional des ventes pour l’Europe (1998 – 2001), puis, à Londres où il a occupé un poste similaire avec comme responsabilité le développement de nouveaux marchés en Europe et en Amérique Latine (2002 – 2004). Par la suite, il a été pendant six ans directeur de la distribution européenne à Londres en se spécialisant sur la clientèle institutionnelle en Europe et en Amérique Latine (2004 – 2010).
Avec The Kresge Foundation (3 milliards de dollars) et la Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC), Morgan Stanley a participé au premier fonds d’investissement (doté de 100 millions de dollars) destiné à permettre aux économiquement faibles, aux personnes à faibles revenus, d’accéder aux services de santé et à des logements abordables. D’autre part, le fonds vise à financer des services permettant d’atteindre ces deux objectifs dans les quartiers défavorisés.Ce fonds est amorcé avec suffisamment de capital pour construire 500 logements avec des services de santé intégrés ainsi que huit centres de santé avec agrément fédéral susceptibles de fournir leurs services à 75.000 personnes. Cette structure doit mettre en rapport des prestataires de service de santé et des promoteurs immobiliers dans le domaine du résidentiel qui n’ont pas une grande habitude de travailler ensemble, même lorsqu’ils s’adressent aux mêmes populations à faibles revenus dans les mêmes quartiers.Le fonds est géré par New Markets Support Company, une filiale de la LISC, et il devrait contribuer dans un premier temps à la création de 2.200 emplois dans des quartiers particulièrement défavorisés.
Au 30 avril, Peter Ebertz quittera pour raisons personnelles ses fonctions d’associé gérant de Bankhaus Lampe KG (un établissement appartenant à la famille Oetker). La banque privée précise que l’intéressé est plus particulièrement chargé des succursales et des relations avec la clientèle de particuliers haut de gamme ainsi qu’avec les entreprises.Parallèlement, Nicolas Blanchard, qui a rejoint Lampe au 1er mars 2012 en provenance de la Bayerische HypoVereinsbank (HVB), sera nommé associé gérant aux côtés de Stephan Schüller et d’Ulrich Cosse. Il sera responsable de l’ensemble des activités de marché de la banque.Par ailleurs, l’institut de Düsseldorf indique qu’Ute Gerbaulet (ex-Commerzbank) a été recrutée au 1er janvier 2013 responsable du pôle capital markets & advisory; elle entre ainsi dans la direction élargie de Bankhaus Lampe.
AXA Private Equity a annoncé, mardi 15 janvier, la cession à la société Curtiss-Wright Corporation de ses parts dans le groupe Phönix/Strack, un des leaders de la conception et de la production de robinetterie spéciale pour des sociétés intervenant dans les secteurs de l’énergie, de la pétrochimie et de la chimie. Le montant de la transaction s'élève à 82 millions d’euros. La finalisation de l’opération reste soumise à l’approbation des autorités de la concurrence.
L’assureur allemand Allianz a confirmé le 15 janvier sa prévision opérationnelle pour 2012, en dépit des 455 millions d’euros de charges que lui coûte le passage de l’ouragan Sandy aux Etats-Unis."Malgré l’impact de l’ouragan Sandy, nous continuons de compter sur un résultat opérationnel pour 2012 dépassant 9 milliards d’euros», a indiqué le directeur financier d’Allianz, Dieter Wemmer, dans un communiqué.L’assureur avait relevé fin octobre cette prévision de bénéfice opérationnel pour la porter à plus de 9 milliards d’euros, mais avait prévenu que cela tenait compte d’une évaluation seulement provisoire -et non divulguée à ce moment-là- des dommages liés à l’ouragan Sandy.Tout en précisant qu’il s’agit toujours d’un chiffre provisoire, Allianz évalue désormais à 590 millions de dollars, soit 455 millions d’euros, le coût total des dédommagements dus à ses clients et des frais qui y sont liés.