The Chilean bank Corpbanca SA on 30 May bought a 51% stake in Banco Santander Colombia SA and Santander Investment Trust Colombia, for USD624m, Investment Europe reports. The remaining shares and the Colombian affiliates of Santander will be acquired by 30 June. The total transaction price totals USD1.23bn, which Corpbanca will finance with a capital increase of USD650m.Cinco Días reports that the sale will generate capital gains for Santander of EUR615m.
The British arm of the Old Mutual Asset Managers group has appointed Steven Brown as head of distribution to advisers, with priority given to strategic partners on the UK wholesale market, with an eye to the introduction of RDR regulations on 1 January 2013. Brown previously worked at RBS Global Banking & Markets. He will begin on 1 June.
The Börsen-Zeitung has obtained a copy of proposed legislation to govern high frequency trading, which the German federal finance ministry has completed much earlier than expected. The proposals would require high-frequency traders to register with BaFin, and would subject them to banking and securities laws. In addition, BaFin would have the power to demand information including details of algorithmic trades and the systems used as well as their strategies, parameters and trading limits. The proposals could be passed by the Cabinet and put before Parliament for a first debate even before the summer break.
The four major Greek banks, currently in the process of being recapitalised, will have to unveil restructuring plans in the next three months, including layoffs or closures of branches, the Hellenic financial stability fund announced on 30 May. The Greek national bank, the largest bank in the country, Alpha Bank, Eurobank and the Bank of Piraeus will have to lay out restructuring plans within three months, Anastasios Gagalis, vice-president of the Hellenic financial stability fund, said at a press conference. The chairman of the Fund, Panayiotis Thomopoulos, has confirmed that some job losses will be a part of this phenomenon. The requirement to restructure came on Monday as the four banks received EUR18bn from the European financial stability fund (EFSF) to recapitalise them, as provided for in the second phase of the support plan agreed in March by Greece and its creditors, the EU and the IMF. The amounts are part of an allocation of EUR25bn paid by the EFSF to the Hellenic Financial Stability fund to recapitalise Greek banks following losses of about EUR28bn, caused by a debt restructuring operation in March. Overall, the money handed out to Greek banks under the second phase of the support plan total EUR50bn.
Funds domiciled in the United Kingdom in April posted net retail subscriptions of GBP2.07bn, compared with GBP1.4bn in March and GBP3.21bn one year previously, according to statistics from the Investment Management Association (IMA). This is the highest amount since April 2011.However, institutional investors in the same period withdrew GBP1.31bn, following net subscriptions of GBP231.7m the previous month, and GBP536.7m in April of last year.Total assets in retail funds domiciled in the United Kingdom, for their part, fell to GBP607.3bn as of 30 April, compared with GBP613.3bn as of the end of March, although it has increased compared with GBP605.2bn twelve months previously.Meanwhile, assets under management by funds domiciled abroad as of the end of April totalled GBP36.8bn, compared with GBP37.1bn one month earlier, and GBP34.7bn as of 30 April 2011. Net subscriptions totalled GBP592.5m, compared with GBP282.4m in April and GBP418.8m in the corresponding month of last year.
The London Stock Exchange (LSE) on 30 May announced that db x-trackers (Deutsche Bank group) has launched eight new fixed income ETFs which replicate Markit CDX North American indices in the investment grade and high yield categories of credit derivatives. The new funds bring the number of newly listed bond ETFs listed since April to 25. Overall, the LSE lists over 100 fixed income ETFs.
The US asset management firm Eaton Vance Management has announced the launch of two UCITS funds investing in emerging markets and global equities, Citywire reports. Its affiliate, Parametric Portfolio Associates, will manage the two products, known as Eaton Vance International (Ireland) Parametric Emerging Markets Core and Eaton Vance International (Ireland) Parametric Global Equity.
The financial ratings agency Fitch Ratings estimates that fund financing will be likely to grow in size in the future, as debt reduction now being required of the banking sector will favour a strong desintermediation movement. Corporate and real estate loans will be the most highly financed by funds, which will often use debt to increase the returns paid out to pension funds or insurers. Fitch reports that these funds are often incorporated as limited partnerships, closed funds or vehicles with very limited regulations, and invest in private equity, loans, bonds and real estate. These funds, similar in many ways to structured products such as CLOs, nonetheless differ in several points, Fitch remarks, such as legal structure, flexibility of assets, and sources of financing.
Christopher Faddy, Asia head of distribution for the asset management unit at Barclays, has been recruited as head, asset management distribution, for Asia ex Japan (NJA distribution) by Credit Suisse in Hong Kong. He will be responsible for providing investment management services to sovereign wealth funds, institutional investors and third-party distributors.
Instead of merging with the asset management firm Unicaja, as had originally appeared planned, Liberbank Gestión will be merging with Ibercaja Gestión (EUR4.43bn in assets under management as of the end of April), which will create Spain’s sixth-largest asset management firm, with assets in funds of EUR5.33bn, Funds People reports, putting it ahead of Ahorro Corporación (EUR4.78bn). Currently, Ibercaja Gestión is the seventh-largest Spanish asset manager, while Liberbank Gestión is 24th. The top five are, in order, Santander AM (EUR20.3bn). BBVA AM (EUR19.45bn), InverCaixa (EUR14.9bn), and Popuylar Gestió (EUR6.19bn).
According to the CNMV annual report, assets at Spanish asset management firms and investment funds as of the end of December totalled EUR132.369bn, 8% less than at the end fo 2010. Of the EUR11.256bn by which assets under management declined, EUR10.853trn were due to net redemptions, and EUR673m to losses on portfolios. Overall, 207 funds ceased operations, of which 204 were absorbed into other funds, As of the end of 2011, the profession had 2,341 funds, 88 less than one year previously. Average assets were down to EUR56m from EUR59m in 2010. Profits at the 114 Spanish asset management firms wree down by 6.5% last year, to EUR194m, compared with EUR207.5m, due to an 8% contraction in management commission revenues, at EUR1.61bn, partly offset by a 3.8% reduction in personnel costs to EUR188.26m.
Investec Asset Management has recruited Tom Nelson and Charles Whall to manage the global energy fund, Money Marketing reports. They will replace Mark Lacey and Honathan Waghorn, whose departure was announced last month, and who will be leaving the firm in July. Nelson previously worked at Guinness Asset Management, Whall at Newton. They will begin in their new roles in September in the former case, slightly later in the latter.
Several Chinese asset management firms, including China Universal, E-fund, Harvest, ICBC-Credit Suisse, Full Goal and Yinhua, are currently in talks with the Shanghai (SSE) and Shenzhen (SZSE) stock exchanges to launch money market ETFs, ahead of applying to the Chinese regulator (CSRC) for a license, Z-Ben Advisors reports. If the plans are approved by the authorities, cash deposits in securities accounts could be used to buy shares in these money market ETFs. Currently, asset management firms are still facing several technological problems such, for example, as T+0 transactions, which would then help to ensure liquidity.
The timetable to enact Basel III legislation remains unchanged, despite the euro zone debt crisis, the head of the financial stability board (FSB), Mark Carney, stated on 30 May. The new Basel III standards, passed in 2010, will gradually be enacted from 2013, and will be fully in force by 2019, the head said following a meeting in Hong Kong of the banking regulatory organism. “I would not call this timetable aggressive. It is a timetable established by consensus. It will not change,” the head, who is also governor of the Canadian central bank, told the press. Many US banks are said not yet to have fully applied Basel III standards, published in 2004, which have been rolled out in Europe. Some actors in the sector nonetheless claim that the rules adopted are too strict at a time when the world is facing a credit drought provoked by the debt crisis in Europe. “It is absolutely essential … that banks be correctly capitalised,” says Carney. Applying the measures “will contribute to financial stability and growth worldwide, including in Europe,” the head adds.
The Wall Street Journal cites the examples of P. Schoefeld Asset Management, Marathon Asset Management, Octavian Advisors and Strategic Value Partners, as signs that a growting number of US alternative management firms are “hopping the pond,“ i.e., crossing the Atlantic to invest or open offices in Europe at a time when high yield investments are becoming scarcer in the United States. Some hedge fund managers think that banks will be required to sell assets at fire sale prices, while others are looking for shares which have been driven too low, or corporate debt which will need to be restructured in times of crisis.
BNY Melllon has announced the recruitment of two people for its team dedicated to outsourcing. Paul Gately has been appointed as head of global outsourcing business. He will report to John Lehner, who has also recently been appointed.
According to Agefi, citing information from Reuters, Affiliated Managers Group, Federated Investors, New York Life Insurance and Permira are planning to make bids for Dexia AM. Macquarie is also reportedly in the process of evaluating the asset management firm. Dexia is hoping to sell off its asset management division, which as of the end of December had EUR78bn in assets, for about EUR750m.
The asset management group Nikko Asset Management has appointed Aoifinn Devill has head of the World Series Fund Platform, to direct and develop manager selection activities, first in Japan, and then in Europe and other parts of Asia, Hedge Week reports. Funds from the platform distributed under the Nikko AM brand name are currently sub-advised by more than 40 fund managers worldwide, including Pimco, Wellington, JP Morgan AM, Ashmore, Blue Bay and Franklin Templeton, and are distributed to retail and institutional investors throughout Asia. The platform currently has over USD29bn in products from third-party managers distributed in Japan, Australia and Singapore.
Foreign banks in Switzerland are surviving the crisis better than expected. Their cumulative net profits have increased 4%, to CHF2.04bn in 2011, the Association of foreign banks in Switzerland (ABES) reported on 30 May. Added value and personnel in the sector have both fallen by 1%. The number of businesses operating in Swiss territory fell last year, from 154 to 145 as of the end of December 2011. Foreign banks nonetheless employ about 20,000 people in Switzerland. The movement of consolidation means that there are now only 141 businesses as of the end of April 2012, which corresponds to about 45% of all banks in Switzerland. As last year, no new licenses were issued in 2011. This decline should nonetheless be viewed in perspective, due to the current economic and political turbulence, the Association notes. Assets under management have fallen 5% to CHF860bn, compared with CHF910bn one year previously. The largest foreign wealth manager is HSBC Private Bank (Suisse SA), followed yb Banque Sarasin & Cie SA, BSI SA, Crédit Agricole (Suisse) SA and Coutts Bank SA. The association also claims that Switzerland will soon be offering solutions to strengthen the attraction of the financial market. It defends withholding taxes, which “remain the only option, and which unite regularisation of wealth, future taxation, and protection of privacy.” In addition, “although self-declaration is considered an adequate proposal, Switzerland will offer it as an international standard at the OECD, and introduce it as such. Switzerland will call off plans to adopt more transparent standards which are not internationally recognized.”
Selon nos informations, le FRR vient de terminer la phase des candidatures pour l’appel d’offres marché public portant sur le renouvellement des mandats « Actions Europe ISR » constitués en 2006 et arrivés à échéance en décembre 2011. Le FRR a retenu 10 candidats pour le lot 1 (mandats de fonds collectifs thématiques pour 150 millions d’euros) et 6 candidats pour le lot 2 (mandats de gestion active Actions Europe, nouvelle croissance durable pour 200 millions d’euros). La prochaine étape consistera à envoyer les documents d’offres (questionnaires) aux candidats, vraisemblablement début juillet, ce qui permettra ensuite de réduire le nombre de sociétés de gestion à rencontrer dans le cadre d’une due diligence.
Nous ne nous prononçons pas sur la probabilité de sortie de la Grèce, mais sur les conséquences d’un tel événement, en particulier la réaction de la BCE
Critiqué pour sa gestion de la crise du système financier espagnol, le gouverneur démissionnaire de la Banque d’Espagne veut donner sa version des faits.
Les prix de l’immobilier à Londres dans les quartiers les plus prisés, tels que Mayfair ou Belgravia, pourraient chuter de 50% dans le cas d’un effondrement de la zone euro, selon une étude du cabinet de conseil économique Fathom Consulting citée par le quotidien. La hausse vertigineuse des prix dans ces quartiers, six fois supérieurs au prix moyen national, n’est pas soutenable selon l’étude.
Le conseil d’administration du circuit automobile professionnel devrait se réunir ce week-end afin de décider si oui ou non il souhaite poursuivre le projet d’introduction en Bourse, selon le quotidien qui cite des sources proches du dossier. CVC Capital Partners pourrait bien publier un prospectus d’opération dès le 5 juin si les marchés sont jugés suffisamment solides.