According to reports in Handelsblatt, two general directors of Allianz Capital Partners (ACP), Matts Lundgren and Stefan Sanne, are about to leave the firm, following the departures of the CIO, Boris Bernstein, and the head of the private equity fund of funds activity (Allianz Private Equity Partners, APEP), Jonny Maxwell. The brain drain is said to be due to the fact that Allianz this summer called off plans to spin off its private equity affiliate. The founder of ACP, Thomas Pütter, moved to London in late July, and is provisionally serving only as head of the investment committee. However, officially, Allianz is continuing to project growth at ACP, and is even aiming to double assets to EUR15bn in five years.
Following disclosures yesterday of its stakes in Allianz SE, SAP, RWE, Adidas and K+S (see report in yesterday’s Newsmanagers), BlackRock’s stakes in several other German companies were announced in market statements from these businesses on Wednesday. The management firm, which has recently acquired Barclays Global Investors (BGI) as of 1 December owned 5.45% of Lufthansa, 5.40% of BASF, 10.07% of GEA Group, 4.80% of E.On, 4.58% of Munich Re, 7.01% of MTU Aero Engines, 4.55% of MAN, and 3.90% of Daimler.
The board of directors at the Banque Julius Baer on Wednesday appointed two new executve board members, effective from 1 January. Giovanni Flury will succeed Bernard Keller as market director for the Ticino region of Switzerland and Italy, while Yves-Robert Charrue will become director of the Investment Solutions group at the bank. He succeeds Boris F.J. Collardi, CEO of the Julius Baer group, who reorganized this “major activity” at Bank Julius Baer and directed it through the year 2009. Robert-Charrue joined Julius Baer early in 2009 as director of management for funds and products, in charge of management for the full range of investment funds worldwide. He “acquired solid experience at Credit Suisse” before joining the firm, the press release says.
The former head of the sovereign investment fund Korea Investment Corporation (KIC), Guan Ong, has launched a new product in Singapore, Asian Investor reports. His firm, Blue Rice Investment Management (BRIM), offers an absolute returns product, the Brim Asian Credit Fund. He hopes that the fund will manage USD40bn to USD50bn in assets by early 2010. Its capacity will be approximately USD1bn. The fund will focus primarily on Asian corporate bonds denominated in US dollars and other international currencies. Guan says that he is deliberately avoiding local currencies in order not to run currency risks in addition to credit risks. He prefers the investment paper category and avoids special situations. His prime broker is Credit Suisse, while administration services are handled by Deutsche Bank. The fund, which may use leverage of up to a factor of 2, is aiming for returns of 10% to 15% in 2010.
From 1 January 2010, Jürgen Werner and Henrik Fillibeck will become members of the managing board at the German asset management firm Catella Real Estate AG KAG. Werner will be in charge of portfolio management, while Fillibeck will be in charge of risk valuation for financial and investment projects, middle office, and service activities. Catella is adding to its board to cope with a planned development of its real estate investment management activities in Europe in the next few years. In September, Catella acquired a state in the Italian management firm Castello SGR.
Russell Investments has launched OpenWorld in Italy. The Irish-registered Sicav provides access for all clients, including retail investors, to specialised managers often available only to institutionals. In detail, the sub-funds available are: OpenWorld Global Climate Change (managed by Impax AM), OpenWorld Global Listed Infrastructure (RARE Infrastructure Limited), and OpenWorld Global Opportunistic Listed Property (CB Richard Ellis Global Real Estate Securities).
Alberto Ruiz, director of Omega Gestión de Inversiones, the Spanish affiliate of Omega Capital, has announced that from early 2010, the Cerrado fund will change from annual liquidity to monthly liquidity. The Fractal and Turaco funds will move from a quarterly liquidity window to a monthly opening, Funds People reports. Ruiz says Omega will seek to avoid if at all possible any investments in funds which use side pockets, as this type of activity is often destructive. However, he understands perfectly that fund managers may use gates to protect investors. Omega Gestión de Inversiones was issued a license in October 2006 by the CNMV to manage Spanish hedge funds. It launched two products, including the Laredo Inversión Libre, whose performance on one year totals 8.20%, and Alphaville, which was released on the market in October.
On Wednesday, the German management firm SEB Asset Management announced that its open-ended real estate fund SEB Immoinvest (EUR6.2bn in assets) has taken delivery of the completed Werfthaus building in Frankfurt/Main (14,000 square metres), and of the Kop van Zuid tower in Rotterdam (38,000 square metres). The former required an investment of EUR69.5m, while the latter cost EUR162m. The Werfthaus is 85% leased, with a 5-year guarantee from the vendors (Groß & Partner Grundstücksentwicklungsgesellschaft mbH and OFB Projektentwicklung GmbH) on the remaining 15%. The 44-story Kop van Zuid skyscraper, meanwhile, is fully leased for 10 years.
Patrick Pittaway, manager of the future URAM Gold Allocator fund, which will invest in gold ETFs and shares in the gold industry, says the recent downturn in the price of gold is welcome, but that USD2,000 remains a reasonable target for gold prices in the long term, Citywire reports. The new product, a SICAV sub-fund, will be a copy of a Cayman Islands-registered offshore URAM fund launched last year.
The alternative management boutique Future Capital Partners (FCP, GBP6bn in assets) has announced that it has recruited Piers Denne as head of sales & marketing. Denne will use his wide-ranging expertise to direct development strategy. Initially, he will handle marketing for a large range of new products which FCP is planning to launch in first quarter 2010. Denne, who held top marketing positions at Gartmore, Fidelity and Threadneedle previously, is also secretary of the Investment Funds Association.
Legal & General Trust Managers has recruited a head of sales to external distributors. Sean Gardner will supervise commercial relations with platforms, life insurers and affiliated IFAs, Money Marketing reports.
Hedge Week reports that Cheyne Capital has appointed Tom Wiggin as head of distribution for the UK. The newly-created position is a response to the recent appointment of Max Nardulli as head of the International Sales and Distribution unit, and will aim to increase Cheyne Capital’s presence on the UK market. Wiggin previously spent more than 10 years at Deutsche Bank in London. He was most recently managing director for relations with hedge funds in Europe.
Das Investment reports that the Grant Thornton law firm, the receiver for the former K1 Invest fund of the “German Madoff,” Helmut Kiener, who has been in custody since late October, has announced that it has found only slightly over EUR0.3m in the fund. As of late July, assets in the fund totalled EUR348m.
A group of British pension funds is discussing the possibility with American lawyers of filing a class action lawsuit against the Royal Bank of Scotland. Many other pension funds are considering joining the class action suit. Responsible Investor reports that the California law firm Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman and Robbins estimates that the British pension funds were not correctly informed about the banking group’s exposure to subprime risks, and that they may claim several hundred million pounds in damages and interest. Coughlin is known largely for having recuperated USD7bn for investors in Enron.
Lee Robinson, the founding partner of Trafalgar Asset Managers, a European hedge fund, has moved his country of normal residence from the UK to Monaco, says Financial News Online. The tax-free principality’s attraction grows among London-based financiers looking for lower tax rates, adds the newspaper.
According to Morningstar, the Total Return Fund from Pimco (Allianz Global Investors) will beat the all-time record of USD202.3bn (EUR137bn) in assets set in 2007 by the Growth Fund of America, by the end of the month. The Morningstar figures are reported in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, relaying Bloomberg. In the first eleven months of the year, bond funds have seen net subscriptions of USD297bn, compared with USD12bn for equities funds. As of the end of November, assets in the Total Return Fund, managed by Bill Gross, totalled USD199bn, compared with USD153bn for the Growth Fund of America.
The French national pension fund, the Fonds de réserve pour les retraites (FRR), on 9 Deccember announced the appointment of six management firms to new bond management contracts as part of a revision of its bond management. The mandates are for investment grade bonds denominated in Euros totalling an estimated EUR1bn for a five-year period. The management firms selected were AXA IM Paris, BNP Paribas AM, Halbis Capital Management (HSBC), La Banque Postale AM, Quoniam AM and Standard Life Investments. The selection process continues for the third round of calls for tenders (investment grade credit denominated in US dollars, for active management). Results for the first round of the call for tenders (inflation-linked bonds denominated in Euros) were announced on 16 November.
The fund of hedge funds Sail Advisors, based in Hong Kong, has decided to open an office in the United States, in New York, Asian Investment reports. The local team will consist of Jeff Tomlinson, Chris Solarz and Shaunak Amin, who will provide analysis of hedge funds in the Big Apple. The activity will be launched in January 2010. Mike Tomlinson will join his colleagues in New York in March 2010. All four are former members of the ING fund of hedge fund team.
Mutual Fund Wire reports that T. Rowe Price on Friday submitted an exemptive relief application to the SEC to be permitted to issue actively-managed ETFs based on US and international equities as well as bonds.
Les Echos reports that Maif, Macif and Matmut yesterday unveiled Sferen, their joint mutual insurance group (SGAM), which was officially founded on Tuesday evening. The three mutuals have created the second-largest French mutual entity, after Covéa. They will now appoint a CEO for their SGAM. The partners have identified seven top-priority activities (insurance for lenders, life insurance, reinsurance, purchasing in external professions related to insurance, asset management, and personal services). Macif and Matmut, which are partners in OFI AM, are also considering centralising their asset management, though they are hesitant to “put all their eggs in one basket,” says the president and CEO of Matmut, Daniel Havis. Maif is an “observer” in that area, he adds.
For the fiscal year to 30 September, Hennessy Advisors Inc. has announced a net loss of USD195,349, compared with net profits of more than USD1.61m in the twelve months to the end of September 2008, on revenues of USD5.81bn, compared with USD10.27bn. Although assets increased by 5.4% to USD923.4m as of the end of September, compared with USD876m twelve months earlier, the decline in assets under management has weighed down results, as assets fell to USD475m in March. The manager says that in the past fiscal year it has acquired four mutual funds, with assets of USD232m. It has also launched the Hennessy Select Series mutual funds, actively-managed products which are contracted out to selected “highly-qualified” sub-advisors.
BNY Mellon Asset Servicing has announced that it has been issued a mandate by the Dutch pension fund Pensioenfonds Horeca & Catering (PH&C) for custody and added value services on USD2.8bn. PH&C is the pension fund for the restaurant, catering and hospitality industries, serving 80,000 members at 30,000 member businesses.
As of 30 November 2009, the top ten funds on sale in Germany by performance since 15 September 2008 ranged, in decreasing order, from 124.3% to 67.3%, far outstripping the performance of their nearest rival, Carmignac Investissement, with gains of 23.2%. However, the Berenberg Emerging Ukraine and the Julius Bär Black Sea funds posted the heaviest losses, totalling over 60%, Das Investment adds. Of the top funds, the Earth Gold Fund UI, managed by Joachim Berlenbach, is the fund which has earned 124.3%; it places ahead of two China funds, Henderson China (+87.8%) and GAM Star China Equity USD (+86.8%), while the seven remaining funds in the top ten are gold funds, led by the LODH World Gold Expertise (USD).
Goldman Sachs has been issued a license to offer onshore fund management, business advising and financing services in Malaysia, Asian Investor reports. The bank will open an office in Kuala Lumpur in first quarter 2010. The decision on the part of the regulator is part of an effort by Malaysia to liberalise the local financial industry.
Selon Les Echos, les banques françaises, qui emploient des milliers de professionnels à la City, ne savaient pas trop hier comment accueillir la nouvelle d’une taxation des bonus outre-Manche (lire par ailleurs). Cette décision pourrait conduire à la transformation de contrats locaux en contrats d’expatriés pour y échapper.
Peter Langeman, president and CEO of Mutual Series Group, will take over the management of the Franklin Mutual Global Discovery Fund with immediate effect, replacing Anne Gudefin and Charles Lahr, who left the firm on 4 December to join Pimco (Allianz). His co-manager will be Philippe Brugère-Trélat, who manages the Franklin Mutual European Fund. The departure of Gudefin will also affect the Franklin Mutual Beacon Fund, which will now be co-managed by Steve Segal and Deborah Turner.
Les Echos reports that the first French sukuk may be issued in 2010, according to Thierry Dissaux, known within the French government as “Monsieur Islamic Finance,” speaking yesterday at the French Islamic finance forum. Initially, a private business would be created to launch the sukuk. A public issue would come only later. The announcement did not reassure actors in the sector, and the Franco-Arab Chamber of Commerce, co-organizer of the event, publicly expressed regrets that France is still “behind” in the development of this type of finance.
The acquisition of Wyeth by Pfizer and of Schering-Plough by Merck are two of at least nine transactions which are being scrutinised by the Securities and Exchange Commission as part of an investigation into possible insider trading, sources familiar with the matter have told the Wall Street Journal. The newspaper last week revealed that the regulator had sent dozens of subpoenas to hedge funds and brokers to ascertain whether advisors to financial operations and traders were illegally sharing insider information.
Merchant Capital is planning to launch a UCITS III fund structure which will provide an appropriate and effective vehicle for hedge fund managers to manage their own UCITS III funds, Hedge Week reports. It will take three to six months to construct and launch the fund product on the market. For funds which use the Merchant Capital platform, the delay will vary from four to six weeks, with a significant reduction in costs as a result. Hedge fund managers will not have to pay a front-end fee, and will also benefit from reduced administrative and legal costs.
Schroders has announced that Hardeep Dogra, a partner at Goldman Sachs International in London and head of the fixed income, currencies and commodities sectors, will join Clive Dennis has co-manager of the Global Managed Currency global currencies fund, launched in June. The product is a sub-fund of the Luxembourg Sicav Schroder ISF (see newsmanagers of 9 June). The British manager has also announced that two new classes of Euro-hedged shares will be available to German and Austrian investors. Minimal subscription is set at EUR1,000, and management commission is 1%, while the front-end fee is a maximum of 5%.