Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co a nommé l’ancien patron de Morgan Stanley John Mack au poste de conseiller senior. Surnommé «Mack the Knife», il avait abandonné en 2010 le rôle de directeur général à James Gorman mais continuait d’assister la banque pour des opérations majeures. Rev Worldwide, une société de services de paiement, l’a également recruté en tant qu’administrateur.
La Chambre des représentants a voté hier en faveur d’une exemption pour les utilisateurs non financiers de swaps des exigences de collatéral contenues dans le Dodd-Frank Act. MillerCoors et Constellation, qui utilisent des dérivés pour se couvrir face à la volatilité des prix des matières premières, avaient plaidé pour une telle mesure. Approuvée lors d’un vote bipartisan, elle doit désormais recueillir l’aval du Sénat.
«J’ai bon espoir que l’Europe puisse relever efficacement ses défis budgétaires actuels», a déclaré le président de la Fed de New-York lors d’une audition devant la Commission des services financiers de la Chambre des représentants. «A ce stade, bien que je n’anticipe pas d’efforts supplémentaires de la Fed pour traiter les effets éventuels d’une contagion de la situation européenne aux Etats-Unis, nous continuerons à surveiller cette situation étroitement».
La confiance du consommateur américain a fléchi en mars et ses anticipations d’inflation n’ont jamais été aussi élevées depuis 10 mois, selon l’indice du Conference Board publié mardi. Cet indice est ressorti à 70,2 contre 71,6 en février (70,8 en première estimation) et 70,3 selon le consensus Reuters. Les anticipations d’inflation sur les 12 mois à venir sont passées de 5,5% en février à 6,3% en mars, au plus haut depuis mai 2011.
Le ministre des Finances allemand Wolfgang Schäuble sera fort probablement le prochain président de l’Eurogroupe, ont déclaré à Reuters une demi-douzaine de responsables à Bruxelles et dans d’autres capitales européennes, encore qu’une décision ne soit sans doute pas finalisée d’ici juin. Cette nomination serait une manière de prendre acte de la position dominante allemande dans la bataille contre la crise de la dette européenne.
Les prix des maisons individuelles n’ont pas varié en janvier, laissant penser que ce secteur en difficulté peine à remonter la pente, montre l’indice S&P Case-Shiller publié mardi. Le consensus Reuters donnait une baisse de 0,2% de cet indice composite de vingt zones urbaines après un recul de 0,5% en décembre. En données non CVS, les prix ont toutefois diminué de 0,8%. Sur une base annuelle, les prix ont diminué de 3,8% en janvier.
A l’occasion d’une réunion ce matin, le gouvernement irlandais a fixé au jeudi 31 mai la date du référendum sur le nouveau pacte budgétaire européen. L’Irlande est actuellement dans la seconde année de son programme d’austérité lié à une aide de 67,5 milliards d’euros octroyée par l’Union européenne et le FMI. Le Royaume-Uni et la République tchèque ont déjà décidé de ne pas participer à ce «fiscal compact».
Philippe Lecomte, directeur général de Schroders France, rejoint La Française AM au poste de directeur général des pôles Finance Services et International. Il sera en charge de la clientèle institutionnelle et du développement international. Chez Schroders, c’est Nuno Teixeira, l’actuel directeur général adjoint, qui prendra courant avril la tête du bureau français.
La confiance des ménages signe une franche accélération en mars après avoir stagné en février, annonce l’Insee. L’indicateur synthétique de confiance ressort en hausse de cinq points à 87 contre 82 en février. Il reste toutefois toujours nettement inférieur à sa moyenne de longue période, calée à 100. Les 20 économistes interrogés par Reuters prévoyaient un indice à 82 en moyenne.
L’Italie a placé pour 3,8 milliards d’euros d’obligations souveraines, dans le haut de la fourchette visée, lors d’une adjudication qui a vu ses coûts d’emprunt à deux ans reculer nettement sous la barre des 3%. Le rendement du papier zéro coupon à échéance janvier 2014 a reculé à 2,35%, contre 3,01% fin février. C’est le rendement le plus bas enregistré pour une adjudication de ce type depuis novembre 2010.
La Région Ile de France a réalisé le 20 mars 2012 la première émission obligataire environnementale et socialement responsable d’une collectivité territoriale française sur le marché de l’euro. Cette émission, d’un montant de 350 millions d’euros sur une durée de 12 ans avec un coupon annuel de 3,625%, a suscité un vif intérêt de la part des investisseurs. Une heure après l’ouverture des livres, le volume des ordres excédait 600 millions d’euros.
L’indice de confiance du consommateur allemand calculé par le cabinet d'étude GfK était en baisse à l’approche d’avril, mettant fin à six mois de hausse, les anticipations de revenu des ménages étant affectées par la hausse des cours du carburant. L’indice GfK est tombé à 5,9 pour avril contre 6 en mars, alors que le marché attendait 6,1. Il reste toutefois proche de son plus haut niveau d’un an.
The German asset management firm MainFirst Asset Management has announced that its first fund investing outside Europe, MainFirst North America Fund, will be launched on 18 April (see Newsmanagers of 15 March), Fonds Professionell reports. The portfolio of 150 to 200 US and Canadian shares will be constructed on the basis of a computer-based model along with several objective criteria; it will generally invest 90% to 100% of its assets. The objective is to outperform the benchmark index, MSCI North America, but 400 to 500 basis points.
The German asset management firm Morgan Stanley Real Estate Investment GmbH at the end of this week confirmed that it has sold a 56.95% stake which the open-ended real estate fund P2 Value (DE000A0F6G89) held in the firm which owns the Trianon tower in Frankfurt to an affiliate of Madison International Realty (see Newsmanagers of 27 February). The transaction was made at a price “nearly” corresponding to the most recent expert valuation of EUR408m, which means a further loss of about 72 cents to the fund’s net asset value, to EUR21.23 per share. The sale of the stake in Trianon, after loans are paid off, would bring about EUR92m in liquidity into the fund, which in July will be required to make its fourth half-yearly distribution before it is liquidated (on 30 September 2013). As of 24 March, assets in the P2 Value fund totalled EUR622.42m.
Philippe Lecomte, CEO of Schroders France, will be leaving the asset management firm. He will soon be starting in a new position at another firm, in late April or early May. According to information obtained by Newsmanagers, the new firm may be La Française AM, where he would be responsible for inernational activities. Lecomte joined Schroders in 2003.At the British group, Nuno Teixeira, currently deputy CEO and head of development for all Schroders clients in France for the past year, will replace him. Teixeira will officially take over as head of teams based in Paris in April. According to John Toriano, head of institutional operations at Schroders worldwide, to whom the head of Schroders France reports, Teixeira, who contributed to the development of institutional clients in France, will now continue to grow the activities of Schroders in France, both aimed at institutional and intermediated clients. “For the past three years, the dynamic has clearly been on the side of institutionals,” the new president of Schroders France tells Newsmanagers, “but we have a clear ambition to continue to develop the two institutional and retail units.”Teixeira arrived at Schroders France in 2003, nine months before Lecomte. Before joining Schroders France, Teixeira served as deputy CEO and head of the multi-management team at Invesco Gestion (France), where he began in 1997.
Rothschild & Cie Gestion announced on Tuesday, 27 March, that it has signed a marketing and sales cooperation agreement with the financial investment advising firm Koris International to set up investment solutions and distribution based on dynamic risk budget controlling techniques. The techniques are conceived and developed by Koris International. For its part, Rothschild & Cie Gestion provides the financial management of the range of multi-manager, multi-asset class range, allowing the two firms to “deploy dynamic risk control management techniques as part of specific solutions adapted to the needs of investors,” the asset management firm says. These offerings will be a part of Rothschild Investment Solutions, recently created following the acquisition of Héritage AM (see Newsmanagers of 2 February 2012), which concentrates on alternative and long-only management. This is done “on the basis of open architecture, which gives us access to classic management funds as well as ETFs and hedge funds.” Then “once the selection is made, Koris will provide the equivalent of an intellectual service, by acting to dynamically control risk budgets,” says Jean-René Giraud, CEO of Koris International. The product range will be composed of funds, potentially “seeded” funds, and also mandates. The two partners will jointly provide sales of these solutions to private banking and institutional clients in France. At Rothschild & Cie Gestion, Laurent Levenq, formerly of Héritage AM, will be in charge of commercial and client development.
According to the International Strategy & Investment Group (ISI), in the past five months, hedge funds trading on the S&P 500 have accepted defeat and have sold off short positions at their highest pace since 2010, Expansión reports. The indicator, which measures the percentage of long contracts held by funds, came out at 48.6, compared with 42 in November 2011; this is the largest increase since April 2010.The index is constituted on the basis of information provided by 36 hedge funds, whose assets total USD89bn. If the index is at 50, that means long and short bets are balanced out.
Vanguard has seen an increase in its ETF activities in the United States to USD204bn, even though it arrived late to this market, Financial Times Fund Management observes. The group, which is the world’s third-largest player, may soon overtake State Street, which has USD298bn. ETFs now represent 45.2% of net subscriptions for Vanguard, compared with 28.4% in 2009.
The French absolute returns strategy specialist Bernheim, Dreyfus & Co has appointed BofA Merrill Lynch as its additional prime broker for the Diva Synergy Fund and Diva Synergy Ucits Fund, Hedgeweek reports. Asset allocation for the fund between BofA Merrill Lynch and the current prime brokers and custodians for the fund will be determined depending on the type of transaction, at the discretion of Bernheim, Dreyfus & Co.
Although the German-Austrian asset management firm C-Quadrat is highlighting a 25% increase in its commission revenues in 2011 in its communications materials, to EUR44.65m, and a reduction of personnel costs from EUR8.4m to EUR6.6m, operating profits at C-Quadrat have fallen to EUR823,000 from EUR9.38m, and operating profits have fallen to EUR2.97m from EUR15.29m.Assets as of the end of the financial year were down to slightly under EUR2.93bn, from EUR3.33bn, but the increase in commission revenues is due to an increase in average annual assets and a replacement of institutional assets by higher-margin retail assets.
The Hamburg-based real estate fund management firm Warburg – Henderson Kapitalanlagegesellschaft für Immobilien mbH on Monday announced that its new distribution affiliate, Warburg – Henderson Vertriebs GmbH, commenced its activities on 9 March. Its management team includes count Christian von Hochberg, who had previously been director of institutional sales, and distribution specialist Bodo Schrah.The new entity will be responsible for distributing 17 institutional funds from Warburg – Henderson (EUR4.1bn in assets), advising German and foreign clients, and winning new mandates.
The German asset management firm Loys has appointed Ufuk Boydak as co-manager for the Loys Global and Loys Global L/S funds. The 26-year-old young man joined the firm upon completing his studies in 2009, as an equities analyst.
In the ETF universe, the name of a product, as long and detailed as it may be, does not necessarily give the correct information about its contents. These are the findings of a study by the US consultant Casey Research (“Top 10 Misleading ETFs”). Casey has created a list of the 10 ETFs with misleading names, which includes, for example, the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Eastern Europe Index Fund (ESR). Unlike what the name would suggest, this ETF does not cover a range of promising countries of Eastern Europe, but is exposed largely to Russia (76%), with 21% invested in Gazprom, 16% allocated to Poland, 4.1% to the Czech Republic and 3.4% to the Hungarian market. Due to the large number of products which sometimes lack transparency in their names, Casey Research emphasises that it is important to select products that are adapted to the needs of investors. The full study is attached.
The Solvency 2 directive still represents “a positive force for change in the insurance sector,” analysts at Morgan Stanley claim in a study published on 23 March (“Solvency 2: The Long and Winding Road,” by Morgan Stanley/Oliver Wyman).However, the lack of political consensus or agreement within the profession mean that the bill is in danger of losing its relevance, and arriving in a final form far from the original vision of its designers. Morgan Stanley does not expect the directive to be applied before 1 January 2014, or even 2015, and in light of concerns on the part of politicians and professionals, the regulator will need to allow for long transitional periods. With this in mind, there are reasons to be concerned that there will be significant divergences between countries in the application of the rules, while heavyweights in the sector will have lost the advantages originally planned.This is thus more an evolution than a revolution, and the initial hopes that Solvency 2 would become an international point of reference for regulation of the insurance sector appears more distant than ever.
The chairman of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, yesterday defened the German banking associations’ measures, resolved at the end of 2011, including subsidized credits for euro zone banks, Les Echos reports. Draghi welcomed the new budget treaty now in the ratification process, and the efforts on the part of Italy and Spain, but warned that guard should not be let down. Banks, he says, should take advantage of the current favourable environment to increase their resistance to shocks, by holding on to their profits instead of handing them out as bonuses and dividends.
On 13 March, Van Eck applied to the SEC for a sales license for the Market Vectors Preferred Securities ex-Financial ETF fund, for which the index provider and fee levels have not yet been determined.The ETF is focused on preferential US equities in all sectors except the financial sector, which may invest in any preferential type shares, including convertible shares, depositary preferred securities, and perpetual subordinated debt, as well as REITs. The objective will be a correlation of at least 95% with the benchmark index.The fund will be listed on the NYSE Arca platform. It does not yet have an acronym.
The French public employees’ additional retirement fund (ERAFP) is planning to bring its full weight to bear in the debate over the governance of publicly-traded businesses. Its board of directors has unanimously approved guidelines which would have some impact in the area of shareholder engagement. The French public pension fund, which currently manages EUR12bn in assets, would like to see boards of directors include 50% independent directors, that these directors not be allowed to serve for more than three terms, and that the position of chairman of the board of directors be separated from the position of CEO. In terms of pay, a director would not be allowed to get paid more than 100 times the minimum wage. Major publicly-traded businesses would no longer be allowed to hand out stock options, which would be allowed only for startups. Finally, the ERAFP claims that golden farewells and golden parachutes are not compatible with the principles of long-term investment it aims to promote.
Following sanctions levelled by the AMF against the major French banks, Crédit Agricole, Natixis, BNP Paribas and Société Générale, the French financial markets association (Amafi) would like to submit a code of conduct to the French financial market authority for market surveys, Les Echos reports. The newspaper says that the code would, in theory, need to be examined by the College of the AMF within 15 days, and would be accompanied by proposed modifications to the AMF’s general rules in relation to market surveyes. The market authority says that it participated in the association’s considerations, but had no further comment.