Alors que Heinz-Peter Clodius a pris sa retraite de directeur général de Generali investments Deutschland KAG au 31 décembre, le gestionnaire allemand a nommé Ulrich Kauffmann directeur général aux côtés du président Heinz Gawlak, rapporte Fonds Professionell.Le nouvel arrivant était auparavant directeur général d’UBS Global Asset Management à Francfort. Il reprend deux des dossiers de Heinz-Peter Clodiux, à savoir l’administration et la direction opérationnelle.Heinz Gawlak prend en charge les deux autres attributions de Heinz-Peter Clodius, la direction du marketing et celle de la distribution.
Ayant obtenu l’agrément de la BaFin, Santander Asset Management va ouvrir dans les prochaines semaines une succursale à Francfort dirigée par Stefan Jochum (en dernier lieu membre du comité exécutif de Staedel Hanseatic) et employant 11 personnes.Le groupe espagnol a indiqué le 14 janvier qu’il gère déjà 600 millions pour des investisseurs institutionnels allemands. Santander Asset Management Germany démarrera avec 100 millions d’euros dans six fonds offerts au public (trois produits actions, trois fonds profilés) et commercialisés depuis 2012.Le Santander dispose déjà en Allemagne d’un réseau de 170 succursales et compte dans ce pays plus d’un million de clients.
Amundi vise un encours sous gestion de 1.000 milliards d’euros sur les trois à cinq prochaines années, contre 700 milliards d’euros actuellement, a confié Yves Perrier, le directeur général de la société de gestion, dans un entretien à Financial News. Le patron d’Amundi, dont on apprend qu’il a failli devenir footballeur professionnel, veut aussi recruter 100 personnes par an. Autre priorité : l’expansion hors de France, qui représente encore 80 % des encours. Enfin, l’article de Financial News cite un investisseur évoquant la possibilité d’une introduction en Bourse d’Amundi d’ici à la fin de l’année. Une porte-parole indique ne pas être au courant de tels projets.
A fin mars, Charles Vaquier quittera ses fonctions de directeur général de l’UMR (10,2 milliards d’euros) pour devenir à temps partiel associé d’un consultant actuaire à Paris, rapporte IPE.com. Selon l’intéressé, le conseil d’administration recherche un successeur en externe et serait prêt à recruter un directeur général intérimaire avant l’arrivée de ce successeur «définitif».
Carmignac Gestion a annoncé lundi 14 janvier l’arrivée de Pierre Verlé dans l'équipe l’équipe taux en tant qu’analyste crédit. L’intéressé prendra ses fonctions le 21 janvier et travaillera sous la direction de Keith Ney, responsable crédit au sein de l’équipe taux que dirige Rose Ouahba.Expert notamment dans le secteur de prêts bancaires, d’obligations à haut rendement et de restructurations de dettes, l’impétrant interviendra dans la gestion de Carmignac Global Bond, Carmignac Sécurité, Carmignac Capital Plus et Carmignac Court Terme, ainsi qu'à la composante taux des fonds flexibles Carmignac Patrimoine et Carmignac Emerging Patrimoine, précise un communiqué.Agé de 33 ans, Pierre Verlé, avant de rejoindre Carmignac Gestion, a été co-gérant du fonds de dette distressed de Butler Investment Managers à Londres et analyste pour les investissements de situations spéciales chez Morgan Stanley.Par ailleurs, la société de gestion a annoncé l’arrivée, à compter du 4 février, d’Edward Cole au sein de l'équipe actions émergentes en tant qu’analyste responsable des marchés d’Europe de l’Est, du Moyen-Orient et d’Afrique (EMEA).Placé sous la direction de Simon Pickard, il contribuera à la gestion de Carmignac Emergents et Carmignac Emerging Discovery, ainsi qu’au fonds flexible Carmignac Emerging Patrimoine en participant au développement de la thématique de l’amélioration des conditions de vie dans les pays émergents. Agé de 37 ans, le nouvel arrivant a été co-gérant de fonds marchés émergents durant six ans, d’abord chez Ashmore Group, et ensuite chez Finisterre Capital. Auparavant, il a occupé le poste de stratégiste actions durant six ans, responsable notamment de la région EMEA chez JP Morgan Securities.
Industries & Finances, spécialiste du « build up », a annoncé hier un premier closing à 60 millions d’euros pour son troisième fonds, lancé en juillet 2012, rapporte L’Agefi. Le groupe espère parvenir en juin au bouclage définitif du véhicule, avec un objectif final fixé à 125 millions d’euros. La société prend des tickets majoritaires dans des PME de tous secteurs et dont la valorisation peut aller jusqu'à 60 millions d’euros, précise le quotidien. Objectif: aider les sociétés à changer de dimension et à se transformer en entreprises de taille intermédiaire (ETI) grâce à des opérations de croissance externe ciblées.
Le fonds de pension californien CalPERS a dégagé une performance de 13,3% sur les douze mois au 31 décembre 2012, selon un communiqué publié le 14 janvier. Au cours des six premiers mois de l’année fiscale 2012-2013, c’est-à-dire à fin décembre 2012, CalPERS a enregistré une performance de 7,1%, précise le communiqué. Le fonds de pension a récemment indiqué que sa performance de l’année fiscale 2011-2012 à fin juin avait été de seulement 0,1%.Les résultats des douze mois à fin décembre ont été portés par les actions internationales, qui affichent un gain de 17,2%, et l’immobilier qui a dégagé un rendement de 12,8%. Toutes les autres classes d’actifs sont dans le vert, notamment le private equity (12,2%) et l’obligataire (7,6%).CalPERS a par ailleurs annoncé la réélection à l’unanimité de Rob Feckner à la présidence de son conseil d’administration et de George Diehr à la vice-présidence.
UCITS registered net inflows of EUR 36 billion in November compared to EUR 41 billion recorded in October, according to the latest European Fund and Asset Management Association’s investment sales and asset data. Long-term UCITS (excluding money market funds) net sales rose in November to EUR 36 billion, from EUR 34 billion in October. Net sales of equity funds amounted to EUR 13 billion, up from EUR 3 billion the previous month, while net inflows into bond funds amounted to EUR 19 billion, compared to EUR 25 billion in October. Balanced funds registered a reduction in net sales month on month of EUR 3 billion versus EUR 5 billion.“Net inflows into bond funds remained the largest contributor to total net sales of UCITS in November. The substantial volume of net sales of equity funds was largely due to the transfer of some insurance company assets into UCITS,” said Bernard Delbecque, director of Economics and Research at EFAMA.Net sales of money market funds broke even in November after recording net inflows of EUR 6 billion in October.Net sales of non-UCITS totalled EUR 8 billion, down from EUR 13 billion in October. Special funds (funds reserved to institutional investors) reduced sharply in November to EUR 3 billion, compared to EUR 10 billion in the previous month.Finally, total net assets of UCITS increased 1.1% in November to EUR 6,316 billion, whilst non-UCITS net assets increased 0.9% to stand at EUR 2,502 billion.
On 11 January, Gottex Fund Management sent a letter to shareholders in the Gottex Absolute Return fund, stating that a lack of sufficient assets has required it to close the absolute return fund, Funds Europe reports. Assets under management had fallen to EUR4.11m as of 2 January, from EUR12.6m as of the end of June. The last net asset value from the single sub-fund of the Gottex Luxembourg-registered Sicav will be calculated on 15 February.
On 27 November, Global X applied to the SEC for a license for the Global X Junior MLP ETF, whose acronym on NYSE Arca will be MLPJ, and whose management commission and thus TER will be 0.75%. The product, which focuses on master limited partnerships (MLP) with USD200m-USD2.5bn, will replicate the Solactive Junior MLP Index from the Frankfurt-based Structured Solutions AG.According to Index Universe, the fund will be admitted to trading on 15 January.
Following the example set by Goldman Sachs Asset Management, BlackRock and JPMorgan Asset Management, Fidelity Investments on Sunday announced that it will publish net asset values on a daily basis with a one-day delay, from 16 January, for shares in money market funds which it manages (USD430bn in assets). This will have no impact on the principle of the constant net asset value of USD1 which will continue to apply to all transactions by investors on fund shares, says Nancy Prior, president of money markets.
In Hong Kong, Citi on 8 January announced that Franklin Templeton Investments (Asia) Limited has selected it to provide trustee, custody and transfer agency services to the Templeton China Opportunities Fund, the first unit trust of Chinese A-class QFII equities from Franklin Templeton.The contract extends the service mandates which links Citi to the MPF funds from Franklin Temlpeton, says David Russell, regional head, Asia Pacific, securities & fund services at Citi.
Carmignac Gestion further strengthens its fixed income expertise with the hiring of Pierre Verlé as credit analyst, bringing the fixed income team headed by Rose Ouahba to 6 fully dedicated members. He will take up this role on January 21 and will work under the responsibility of Keith Ney, head of credit. Verlé will be involved in the management of Carmignac’s four fixed income funds Carmignac Global Bond and Carmignac Sécurité, Carmignac Capital Plus and Carmignac Court Terme as well as the fixed income portfolio of flexible funds Carmignac Patrimoine and Carmignac Emerging Patrimoine. Before joining Carmignac Gestion, Pierre Verlé, 33, was co-manager of the distressed debt fund at Butler Investment Managers in London and an analyst covering special situations principal investments at Morgan Stanley. He focused on high yield bonds, bank loans and successfully negotiated numerous debt reorganizations. The asset management firm has also announced the arrival on 4 February of Edward Cole on the emerging market equity team as an analyst responsible for the markets of Eastern Europe the Middle East and Africa (EMEA). He will report to Simon Pickard, and will contribute to the management of the Carmignac Emergentes and Carmignac Emerging Discovery funds, as well as the flexible fund Carmignac Emerging Patrimoine, where he will contribute to the development of a theme for improving living conditions in emerging countries. Cole, 37, was co-manager of emerging market funds for six years, first at Ashmore Group, and then and Finisterre Capital. He previously served as an equity strategist for six year, in charge of the EMEA region at JP Morgan Securities.
Santander Asset Management has received a license from BaFin, and in the next few weeks will open a branch office in Frankfurt, to be led by Stefan Jochum (most recently a member of the executive board at Staedel Hanseatic), with 11 employees.The Spanish group on 14 January announced that it already has EUR600m in assets under management for German institutional investors. Santander Asset Management Germany will start up with EUR100m in six open-ended funds (three equity products, three profiled funds) which have been on sale since 2012.Santander already has a network in Germany of 170 branches, and has over 1 million clients in the country.
Last year, German open-ended real estate funds which are not in liquidation invested EUR4.3bn, in 37 deals, including EUR1.1bn in Germany, EUR725m in Eastern Europe (almost entirely in Poland), EUR740m in the United Kingdom, EUR625m in France, and EUR400m in the United States.According to the Berlin-based rating agency Scope, the largest investments were made by the UniImmo: Deutschland fund from Union Investment (EUR1.3bn), the Deka-ImmobilienEuropa fund (EUR750m), the WestInvest InterSelect fund (also from Deka) and the UniImmo: Europa (EUR500m each).In terms of net subscriptions, Union Investment Real Estate has posted inflows of EUR1.9bn in January-October, putting it ahead of Deka (about EUR1bn) and RREEF (Deutsche Bank) with EUR618m). However, Commerz Real Investment has undergone net redemptions, with outflows of EUR566m from the hausInvest fund.
Holger Fahrinkrug, who had been chief economist at Portigon, formerly WestLB, will in February join Meriten Investment Management, formerly WestLB-Mellon Asset management (EUR23.6bn in assets), a joint venture in which BNY Mellon recently bought up the remaining stake held by Portigon.At his new firm, Fahrinkrug will again serve as chief economist, and will report to Werner Taiber, CEO. He succeeds Holger Sandte, who has left the firm.
The Hamburg-based asset management firm Union Investment Real Estate (UIRE) has recruited Martin Brühl, who resigned in August from his position as director of Cushman & Wakefield for Germany, as head of his international department, the Immobilien Zeitung reports. He will begin in the newly-created position on 1 May 2013, and will be responsble for the United Kingdom, the Americas and Asia.The appointment comes as part of a reorganisation of investment management at UIRE, which includes three other departments (Europe, shopping centres and hotels). The investment management unit is led by Frank Billand, one of the MDs.
Shortly after Heinz-Peter Clodius retired as MD of Generali Investments Deutschland KAG on 31 December, the German asset management firm Generali Investments Germany has appointed Ulrich Kauffmann as MD, alongside chairman Heinz Gawlak, Fonds Professionell reports.The new recruit had previously served as CEO of UBS Global Asset Management in Frankfurt. He will take over two roles from Clodius, in administration and operational management.Gawlak will take over Clodius’ other two roles, as director of both marketing and sales.
Among the top ten Spanish asset management firms by assets, only the Basque Kutxabank posted net inflows last year, with a total of EUR53.66m. The strongest net subscriptions last year were for Aviva Gestión (EUR392.96m), March (EUR269.46m) and Caja Laboral Gestión (EUR206.32m), according to statistics from VDOS Stochastics.However, the top three firms in terms of assets under management posted net redemptions in 2012. Santander Asset Management saw net outflows of EUR3.8376bn, BBVA Asset Management had net redemptions of EUR1.586m, and the champion for net subscriptions in previous years, Invercaixa, has seen outflows of EUR1.2784trn. Ahorro Corporación Gestión, for its part, has posted net redemptions of EUR1.4256bn.In the top 10 by assets in Spanish-registered funds, only two companies managed to increase their AUM. They were Allianz Gestión (+EUR56.6m) and Kutxa Gestión (+EUR30m). But Santander Asset Management has seen a decline in its assets year on year of EUR3.0634bn, to EUR21.1745bn, while assets at BBVA AM were down by EUR727.12m, to EUR19.1392bn. Assets at InverCaixa, for their part, were down by EUR425.6m to EUR17.1741bn.Overall, assets in Spanish-registered funds were down 4.49% in the twelve months to the end of December, at EUR126.83912bn, while net redemptions totalled EUR11.86847bn for the year 2012 as a whole.
The Spanish Inversis Banco has added to its team of fund-pickers, following the departure of Carlos Fernández, former head of fund research, Citywire global reports. Juan Hernando will replace him. He has been working at Inversis for 4 years, previously as a manager and fund analyst. The Spanish firm has also recruited Carlos Moreno Espinoza from Allianz Popular, as a fund analyst.
The Californian pension fund CalPERS has earned returns of 13.3% for the twelve months to 31 December 2012, according to a statement released on 14 January. For the first six months of the 2012-2013 fiscal year, to the end of December 2012, CalPERS has posted returns of 7.1%, the statement says. The pension fund has recently announced that its performance in the 2011-2012 fiscal year to the end of June was only 0.1%. Results for the twelve months to the end of December were driven by international equities, which gained 17.2%, and real estate, which posted returns of 12.8%. All other asset classes show gains, including private equity (12.2%) and bonds (7.6%). CalPERS has also announced that it has unanimously re-elected Rob Feckner as chairman of its board of directors, and George Diehr as its vice-chairman.
At the end of March, IPE reports, Charles Vaquier will be leaving his position as CEO of UMR (EUR10.2bn) to become a part-time managing partner at an actuarial consulting firm in Paris. According to Vaquier, the board of directors is seeking an external successor, and may be prepared to recruit an interim CEO until his “final” successor arrives.
JP Morgan has launched an electronic multi-asset class platform which is able to unite post-market reporting and reporting on settlement and clearance operations on a single platform, Asian Investor reports. The new platform, JP Morgan Markets, allows banks and asset management firms to manage data on OTC transactions in a standard format, which may be sent directly to depositaries.
Pioneer Investments has appointed Jon Bailie as head of Western Europe and Latin America. He will join the firm in April and will report to Sandro Pierri, chief executive officer. He will also be a member of Pioneer Investments’ Management Committee and will be based in London.Jon Bailie takes the role from Sandro Pierri, who continued to hold this position ad interim following his appointment as chief executive in July 2012.Jon Bailie joins from AXA Investment Managers, where he was global head of distribution and member of AXA IM ‘s executive committee. Previously he spent 16 years at Russell Investments, where he held several senior roles.
Robeco Group has annouced the rebranding of its subsidiary SAM, the investment specialist focused exclusively on sustainability investing in RobecoSAM. As well as the rebranding, Robeco’s engagement and voting services will become part of RobecoSAM’s range of investment solutions and services. This step will enable Robeco to align its group wide efforts in the field of sustainability investment more closely.
Jonas Granholm, who left the Swedish pension fund Skanska on 11 January, and Gustav Lundeborg, who will be leaving his job on 18 January, are teaming up with the former CFO of the pension fund, Hans Biörck, to launch a hedge fund, the website IPE reports. Granholm will be CEO of the new firm, while Biörck will be its chairman. The hedge fund may be launched in October.
Funds on sale in Sweden in 2012 recorded net inflows of SEK74.5bn (EUR8.6bn), according to statistics from the Swedish investment fund association Fondbolagens förening. That is far higher than the SEK16bn (about EUR1.8bn) posted in 2011. Inflows were driven by balanced funds (SEK34.6bn) and equity funds (SEK30.8bn), while bond funds also did well (SEK20.8bn). However, money market funds saw outflows of SEK5.3bn, while hedge funds had net redemptions of SEK6.2bn. At the end of 2012, assets in Swedish funds totalled SEK2.049trn, or about EUR237bn, of which about 53% were in equity funds. That represents an increase of SEK230bn year on year.
Konrad Hummler and Otto Bruderer, who heads of the former Wegelin bank, are suing Christophe Darbellay. The chairman of the Christian Dmocratic party (PDC) called them “traitors” for announcing that Wegelin’s fraudulent practices in the United States represented the norm among Swiss banks. Darbellay still maintains his position. “The statements of Mr. Hummler and Mr. Bruderer constitute a defamation of the Swiss financial market before the entire world. As a Swiss sitizen and politician and a representative of the Swiss economic centre, I feel that such an attitude is treason,” the member of Swiss parliament says, cited by Béatrice Wertli.
The Chinese State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) has issued new quotas for a total of USD1.4bn to eight asset managers which have been licensed as Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors (QFII), including USD500m for the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), and CNY18bn for holders of RQFII licenses (Hong Kong yuan-denominated funds), Asian Investor reports. As of 31 December, SAFE had awarded QFII quotas totalling USD37.4b to 169 asset management firms, and CNY67bn to 24 RQFII managers.The other five recipients of QFII quotas are Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank, BOC Group Life Assurance Company (USD200m each), KB Asset Management (USD100m), the Church Pension Fund, and Duke University (USD50m each).For RQFII quotas, SAFE has increased by CNY5.8bn the quotas for China Asset Management and E Fund, and CSOP for a further CNY5bn, while ICBC Credit Suisse, China International Fund Management and GF Fund Management have received their first quotas for CNY800m each.
finews.ch reports that J. P. Morgan Asset Management (JPMAM) has appointed Philipp Pfenninger, who had previously served as head of distribution to banks, as country head for Switzerland, replacing Roland Vogel, who has left the business.JPMAM has also recruited an investment consultant from Bank Vontobel, Marc Schumacher, who will join the team to assist clients at the cantonal and regional banks.The news website also reports that Claudia Nägeli (formerly of RBS) joined JPMAM in October 2012 as senior sales executive, global liquidity. She will be particularly responsible for assisting corporate and institutional clients.