Concerned by the disappointing relative performance of the fund when markets rose strongly last year, SIG CIO James Millard and his team have been heavily scrutinising the line-up and blending of the managers to ensure the fund is better placed to deliver more consistent outperformance. As a result, the fund will now have exposure to the following managers – Audrey Ryan at Aegon; Jacob de Tusch-Lec at Artemis; Richard Plackett at BlackRock; Luke Kerr at Old Mutual; Richard Buxton at Schroders, Hector Kilpatrick at SVM and George Luckraft at AXA Framlington. Out of the UK Best Ideas line up goes the Ignis Cartesian duo of Andrew Kelly and David Stevenson; Jupiter’s Anthony Nutt and River & Mercantile’s Dan Hanbury. SIG is also dropping Hanbury from Its Global Best Ideas Fund and replacing him with Luke Kerr from Old Mutual Asset Management. Separately, Skandia investment Group’s long / short equity fund – the Skandia UK Strategic Best Ideas Fund – is reducing the number of managers in the line-up to seven.
Money Marketing reports that Aberdeen is merging its British and European opportunity-driven funds with the objective of improving the effectiveness of its product range. The British Opportunities fund, with GBP42m in assets, will be merged into the GBP119m growth fund, which will be renamed Aberdeen UK Equity Fund. The EUR5.4m European fund will be merged into the European growth fund (GBP224m), to give birth to the European Equity Fund. Total management fees will be reduced from 1.9% to 1.63% for the UK Opportunities fund, and from 1.9% to 1.65% for the European Opportunities fund.
Assets under management at the South African investment firm Investec Asset Management as of 31 December 2009 totalled a record GBP41bn, thanks to record inflows of GBP3.7bn in the first nine months of the year. Since their low point in March last year, assets under management at Investec have risen 43%, Investment Week reports.
Antonia Saiz, who was head of mixed fund management at BBVA Asset Management, has been recruited by Bansabadell Inversión as director of investment strategy. Meanwhile, Xavier Blanquet, who was head of a team of six equities analysts, has been appointed as director of client and investment product strategy. Funds People relays reports in Expansión that Cirus Andreu, deputy CEO of Sabadell and director of investment, savings products and research, says the bank is no longer planning to sell off its asset management affiliate, but will instead seek opportunities for an acquisition in this area.
According to a study by Pablo Fernández, professor of finance at the ESE business school, based on Inverco statistics, Bestinver (an affiliate of Acciona) is the top Spanish management firm for returns in the past 15 years, with average performance of 12%, followed by Metagestión, with 9.9%, and Mutua Madrileña with 4%, Cinco Días reports. The worst-performing investment firms lost money; for example, Acapital Finanzas (-3.6%).
Lord Myners, the City minister, has written to fund managers urging them to re-examine the bonus payments they are planning to distribute to bankers, says the Financial Times. He asked the fund managers, such as Schroders and Fidelity, to specify what actions they had taken to “engage with the banks in relation to their bonus decisions”.
The Committee for Payment and Settlement Systems (CPSS) and the Technical Committee of the International Organisation of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) on 2 February announced that they have launched a complete examination of existing standards for market infrastructures, such as payment and settlement systems. Three sets of standards will form particular focus points: basic principles for payment systems (2001), recommendations for payment systems (2001/2), and recommendations for central chambers of compensation (2004). Market infrastructures have generally withstood the financial turbulence with success, but in light of hte time which has passed since the publication of these standards, the committees considered it useful to look over them and to modify them if necessary with the aim of strengthening them. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank will also participate in the process, which is a part of a larger effort by the Financial Stability Committee to reduce risk in the global financial system. A draft of the revised standards will be released for consultation in early 2011. A statement adds that the two committees have already made considerable progress in the revision of the 2004 standards for central chambers of compensation, and that a consultation document will be released in the next few months. The accelerated pace of the examination is related to the recent opening of chambers of compensation for OTC derivatives and of trade repositories.
With EUR8bn in assets, Amundi Asset Management, the management firm birthed by the marriage of Crédit Agricole Asset Management and Société Générale Asset Management, has taken its place as the top manager of socially responsible investment (SRI) products in France, Novethic reports. The new entity far outstrips the second-largest manager of these products, Natixis Asset Management, and the third-largest, Allianz GI France, whose assets total over EUR3bn each. Dexia AM is in fourth place, with slightly under EUR3bn, followed by BNP Paribas IP, which has about EUR2bn in assets. Novethic also notes that Macif Gestion, Axa IM and OFI AM have entered the top 10. Four new French firms have also arrived on this market (CCR AM, Edmond de Rothschild AM, IT Asset Management and Mandarine Gestion), while two foreign asset managers have begun offering their funds in France (F&C Investments and First State Investments). In rankings of firms by strongest growth in assets, excluding conversions of existing funds to SRI, Macif Gestion takes first place, followed by Robeco SAM, Allianz GI, Natixis AM and Dexia AM. The market is expected to grow further: as Novethic observes, “the impact on SRI of several mergers now underway -- Fortis IM with BNP Paribas IP; UFG with LFP; Prado Epargne Gestion and Agicam -- is not yet known.”
Managing direcor et head de l’activité private label cash management chez BlackRock, Barry F. X. Smith a été recruté par State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) comme global head cash business. Il aura à ce poste nouvellement créé la responsabilité de quelque 500 milliards de dollars, avec la distribution, le pricing, le développement de produits et le service à la clientèle. Son poste lui permettra de coiffer les fonds monétaires de SSgA, gestionnaire dont l’encours total représente 1.900 milliards de dollars.L’intéressé, qui a rejoint le 1er février, est subordonné à James Kase, head of global sales & marketing. Il travaillera en étroite coopération avec Steve Meier executive vice president et global cash CIO.
Managing direcor et head de l’activité private label cash management chez BlackRock, Barry F. X. Smith a été recruté par State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) comme global head cash business. Il aura à ce poste nouvellement créé la responsabilité de quelque 500 milliards de dollars, avec la distribution, le pricing, le développement de produits et le service à la clientèle. Son poste lui permettra de coiffer les fonds monétaires de SSgA, gestionnaire dont l’encours total représente 1.900 milliards de dollars.L’intéressé, qui a rejoint le 1er février, est subordonné à James Kase, head of global sales & marketing. Il travaillera en étroite coopération avec Steve Meier executive vice president et global cash CIO.
Managing direcor et head de l’activité private label cash management chez BlackRock, Barry F. X. Smith a été recruté par State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) comme global head cash business. Il aura à ce poste nouvellement créé la responsabilité de quelque 500 milliards de dollars, avec la distribution, le pricing, le développement de produits et le service à la clientèle. Son poste lui permettra de coiffer les fonds monétaires de SSgA, gestionnaire dont l’encours total représente 1.900 milliards de dollars.L’intéressé, qui a rejoint le 1er février, est subordonné à James Kase, head of global sales & marketing. Il travaillera en étroite coopération avec Steve Meier executive vice president et global cash CIO.
Managing direcor et head de l’activité private label cash management chez BlackRock, Barry F. X. Smith a été recruté par State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) comme global head cash business. Il aura à ce poste nouvellement créé la responsabilité de quelque 500 milliards de dollars, avec la distribution, le pricing, le développement de produits et le service à la clientèle. Son poste lui permettra de coiffer les fonds monétaires de SSgA, gestionnaire dont l’encours total représente 1.900 milliards de dollars.L’intéressé, qui a rejoint le 1er février, est subordonné à James Kase, head of global sales & marketing. Il travaillera en étroite coopération avec Steve Meier executive vice president et global cash CIO.
In January, Philippe Berthelot (CFA) joined Natixis Asset Management as director of corporate and structured credit management. Berthelot joined Axa Investment Managers (Paris) in 1998, and was appointed director of European credit management in January 2009. In his new role, Berthelot will be responsible for the corporate management (cash and CDO), ABS, and structured credit units.
Managing director et head de l’activité private label cash management chez BlackRock, Barry F. X. Smith a été recruté par State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) comme global head cash business. Il aura à ce poste nouvellement créé la responsabilité de quelque 500 milliards de dollars, avec la distribution, le pricing, le développement de produits et le service à la clientèle. Son poste lui permettra de coiffer les fonds monétaires de SSgA, gestionnaire dont l’encours total représente 1.900 milliards de dollars.L’intéressé, qui a rejoint le 1er février, est subordonné à James Kase, head of global sales & marketing. Il travaillera en étroite coopération avec Steve Meier executive vice president et global cash CIO.
In 2009, assets in open-ended mutual funds which adhere to a socially responsible investment (SRI) approach on sale in France rose 68%, to a total of nearly EUR34bn, according to the most recent statistics from Novethic. This growth was largely driven by SRI money market funds, whose assets increased by 132.2% over the course of the year to EUR14.6bn, and which now have more assets than equities funds (EUR13.9bn). The number of money market funsd has increased form 16 to 23, out of a total of 268, though these funds were largely created through conversions of existing funds. In total, conversions of traditional products into SRI funds represented EUR8.6bn in 2009, meaning that they accounted for most of the increase in assets, though subscriptions totalled EUR2.2bn. The remainder of asset growth (EUR3bn) is due to positive market effects. Novethic notes that “best in class” type selection remains the norm in France, though there is now increased interest in thematic and normative exclusionary approaches.
According to a survey by Handelsblatt of the ten largest ETF providers, assets in these products in Europe may increase from EUR156bn at the end of 2009 to EUR200bn as of 31 December 2010, and EUR480bn in five years.
BNY Mellon announced on 2 February that it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire the Global Investment Servicing affiliate of PNC for USD2.31bn (see Newsmanagers of 29 January, 2010). The acquisition allows BNY Mellon to increase its product range and market share serving managers and independent financial advisers. According to a statement, with this acquisition BNY Mellon becomes the world’s second-largest provider of fund administration and transfer agency services, and the third-largest actor in the hedge fund administration business. BNY Mellon will increase its portfolio of Usd855bn in assets under administration, including USD460bn in assets in custody. The transaction, which will be funded by a round of fundraising for more than USD800m, will be completed in third quarter 2010.
From this Wednesday, Fidelity will no longer charge commissions for its ETF Fidelity Composite Index Tracking Index and 25 of the 200 ETF funds bearing the iShares brand (BlackRock), which it currently offers for sale. The agreement with BlackRock will be valid for at least three years, a spokesman for Fidelity, Adam Banker, has told Mutual Fund Wire.
Jupiter Asset Management has announced the appointment of John Chatfeild-Roberts as chief investment officer. Since 2000, Edward Bonham Carter has combined the CIO role with his work as chief executive officer. John Chatfeild-Roberts, who joined Jupiter in 2001 as head of the Jupiter Merlin Fund of Funds Team, will take on the role from 3 February 2010. His position as head of the Jupiter Merlin Fund of Funds Team will remain unchanged. Edward Bonham Carter, chief executive of Jupiter Asset Management, said: «this will enable me to have a greater focus on developing Jupiter’s growing business and extending its international reach.”
Investment Week reports that a group of 17 managers at Artemis, which has recently been taken over by the American firm AMG (see Newsmanagers of 1 February) have agreed to a four-year lock-in period. They have agreed not to leave the firm or to sell their shares in the firm during this time, until 2014. AMG is rumoured to have paid USD150m to USD200m for its 51% stake in Artemis.
Macquarie Funds Group, the asset management division of the Macquarie group, has launched three funds. They are sub-funds of the Luxembourg Sicav Macquarie Funds Solutions. The Macquarie Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund, managed by David Dali, is invested in shares on the most promising emerging markets. Its benchmark is the MSCI Emerging Markets index. The Macquarie Emerging Markets Infrastructure Fund focuses on shares in businesses which are active in emerging market infrastructures. It is managed by David Ong, and its benchmark is the MSCI Emerging Markets Infrastructure Sector Capped Index. The Macquarie and Rogers China Agriculture Fund provides exposure to the evolution of the Macquarie and Rogers China Agriculture Index, which reproduces the prices of certain commodities in China.
Assets in pension funds worldwide (1) recovered by 15% last year to a total of over USD23trn, according to a study published on 2 February by Towers Watson. The development, which was not enough to offset losses of more than 21% in 2008, is largely due to positive market effects and pension funds’ strong exposure to equities. Assets at pension funds rose by an average of more than 16% in 2009, after a decline of 11% in 2008, bringing the ten-year growth rate to nearly 7%. Despite losses of market share in the past ten years for the United States, Japan and the United Kingdom, these countries remained the largest markets on the planet, representing 57%, 14% and 8% of global assets, respectively. The United States and Japan together account for more than 70% of assets in pension funds. The smallest markets are, in order, Brazil (USD392bn), South Africa (USD201bn), France (USD178bn), Ireland (USD102bn), and Hong Kong (USD23bn). Assets in pension funds now total 70% of average global GNP, compared with 76% ten years ago, a strong increase over the figure of 58% for 2008. The Netherlands have the largest assets in pension funds as a proportion of GNP, with a ratio of 120%, compared with 113% for Switzerland and 93% for Australia. Bond allocations for seven countries included in the study (Australia, Canada, Japan, the Netherlands, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States, which represent more than 94% of total assets), rose from 25% in 2005 to 32% in 2008, then fell back to 27% in 2009. Meanwhile, allocations to equities hit 54% in 2009. In the past five years, other asset classes, such as real estate, and to a lesser extent hedge funds and private equity, have increased from 12% to 17%. In detail, allocations to equities last year varied from 27% (Switzerland) to 72% (Brazil), with levels of 33% in France and 61% in the United States, while for bonds, the figures range from 13% (Australia) to 62% (Germany), with 46% in France, 55% in Japan, and 48% in the Netherlands. The study also finds that in the ten years from 1999 to 2009, actuarial rates for defined benefit funds totalled 6%, compared with a rate of 2% for defined contribution assets. Defined-contribution assets now represent 42% of assets in pension funds, compared with 32% ten years ago. Australia has the highest percentage of defined-contribution assets (82%, compared with 78% in 1999). The countries with higher proportions of defined-contribution assets includ the United States, Australia and Switzerland, while Japan and Canada are nearly 100% in defined-benefit schemes. France has 75% of its assets in defined-benefit schemes. (1) The thirteen largest markets are Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Japan, the Netherlands, south Africa, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Le rebond économique en Europe n'étant pas acquis, S&P juge possible une nouvelle détérioration de la qualité de crédit des actifs sous-jacents au sein des titrisations
Selon l’association Inverco des sociétés de gestion, l’encours des fonds de valeurs mobilières distribués en Espagne a diminué de presque 911 millions ou de 0,56 % en janvier à 161,65 milliards d’euros, les remboursements nets représentant 435 millions d’euros.
Le Credit Suisse a notifié à la CNMV qu’il détient à présent au travers de ses fonds d’investissement et de filiales à Hong-Kong, Monaco, Gibraltar, Singapour et en Allemagne 3,11 % du Santander, ce qui correspond à un total d’environ 2,56 milliards d’euros aux cours actuels.
Selon les calculs d’Expansión relayés par Funds People, les sociétés de gestion espagnoles ont affiché pour 2009 une performance moyenne de 5,57 %. Le meilleur résultat a été enregistré par Bestinver, filiale d’Acciona, avec 52,6 % pour la moyenne de ses six produits (le Bestinver Internacional s’est adjugé 72 %). Bestinver est le seul des meilleurs gestionnaires à disposer d’un encours supérieur au milliard d’euros. Les deux suivants, avec moins de 100 millions d’euros d’actifs sous gestion, sont Metagestión avec une performance moyenne de 34,3 % pour ses trois fonds et Gescafix avec 24,8 % pour son unique fonds (diversifié).Seules trois sociétés de gestion parmi les dix plus grandes, Invercaixa, Ibercaja Gestión et BBVA Asset Management, ont affiché des performances supérieures à la moyenne.
Groupama Asset Management a annoncé le 1er février que Christian Collin, directeur général Finance et Risques de Groupama, assure depuis le 1er janvier 2010 les fonctions de président du conseil d’administration de Groupama Asset Management. Il remplace à ce poste Helman le Pas de Sécheval, depuis le 1er janvier directeur général de la Caisse régionale Groupama Centre-Atlantique.Christian Collin a été nommé directeur général Finance et Risques de Groupama le mois dernier. A ce titre, lui sont rattachées les Directions Financement et Investissements, la Comptabilité groupe et la Réassurance et Pilotage, les fonctions risques, contrôle interne et actuariat groupe ainsi que les filiales financières du groupe dont Groupama Asset Management, Groupama Private Equity, Groupama Banque et Groupama Immobilier.
Pour 68 millions d’euros, l’allemand Deka Immobilien (caisses d'épargne) a acheté un immeuble de commerces rue Sainte-Catherine à Bordeaux pour son fonds immobilier offert au public WestInvest InterSelect. Le vendeur de cet actif entièrement loué (H&M, Fnac, Sephora Go Sport) sur le long terme de 16.700 mètres carrés est Corio France, filiale du néerlandais Corio.