In the first seven months of the year, in Portugal, there were 13 mergers of funds, compared with 5 in 2008 and 2 in 2007, according to Negocios, relayed by Funds People. Since the beginning of the crisis in June 2007, assets in funds have declined by more than 50%, from EUR40.1bn to EUR14.9bn.
Eaton Vance plans to launch a mutual fund - Eaton Vance Build America Bonds Fund -, which will invest mostly in Build America Bonds, taxable debt instruments which are part of the federal stimulus program, the Wall Street Journal reports.
Les Echos reports that central bankers on Sunday, 6 September agreed on new measures to strengthen supervision of banks, including the adoption by 2011 of a leverage limit, previously used primarily by US banks, which ties banks’ overall balance sheets to their levels of capital. French bankers have made two suggestions toward the new leverage rules: the inclusion in the numerator of assets not included on the balance sheet, which have previously not been included in the American ratio, and a clear definition of assets not included on the balance sheet on both sides of the Atlantic. .
Where is the best place to stash one’s money? In the past, money market funds were the best solution. But now, money market rates are below 1%, and partly for this reason, Germans withdrew EUR19.4bn from money market funds in the first seven months of the year, Financial Times Deutschland reports. After fees, these funds are not highly lucrative, and money market ETFs are not any better. Werner Hedrich, director of fund research for Morningstar Germany, says that investors now have a reason to take advantage of promotional offers from retail direct banks of savings accounts: Santander Direkt Bank is offering 2.25%, and ING Diba is paying 1.5% interest on deposits. DWS (Deutsche Bank) is the largest manager of money market funds in the country, with more than EUR20bn in assets. But it is cutting back its product offerings: at the end of the year, the DWS Geldmarktfonds and the DWS Vario Rent will be merged with the DWS Geldmarkt Plus. These products will disappear as, with 0.6% annual management fees, they are too expensive considering the current level of returns. The DWS Geldmarkt Plus charges fees of 0.37%.
The asset management affiliate of Banco Espirito Santo (Bes) has registered the ES Etico y Solidario fund with the CNMV, a global ethical and solidaristic product, all of whose investments will comply with principles and values corresponding to the social doctrine of the Catholic church, Funds People reports. This means that the management team will exclude shares in companies involved in the manufacture of weapons, alcohol, tobacco, and all products detrimental to health. It will also abstain from investment in the capital of companies which do not recognize the rights of workers, or which inflict damage on the environment. In government bonds, the ES Etico y Solidario will invest only in debt issued by countries that have signed the Kyoto protocol, and which have laws to prevent child labour and promote equality. In addition, the manager will contribute 0.25% of assets to charities which apply the social doctrine of the Catholic church and which respect human dignity. Currently, the charities are Cáritas Española and La Bruixa D’Or.
The German asset management firm Real I.S. (a joint venture of the German savings banks and BayernLB) has bought the headquarters of Unilever NV in Rotterdam for EUR86m, from the pension funds BPF Bouw and Progress. The property, with over 24,000 square metres of space, includes two buildings (the smaller, at 2,400 square metres, is leased to Tio Teach BV). The property will be added to the portfolio of the institutional real estate fund BGV Bayerische Grundvermögen III SICAV FIS.
La Tribune reports that the stock market operator LSE has seen an increase of 11% to its daily trading volumes for its British and Italian market activities, compared with the previous month, with EUR7.2bn traded.
The obsession of major asset management firms with risk management and wealth preservation is not accidental. Assets at the 300 largest pension funds on the planet last year fell back to their 2006 levels, according to data published by Pensions & Investments and Watson Wyatt. Assets in these funds contracted by about 13% last year, to USD10.4trn, a decline of about USD1.5trn in one year. However, cumulative annual growth rates over a five-year period remain at about 10%. The study also finds that the United States remains the largest global market, with 41% of assets in pension funds (USD4.7trn), but that its market share peaked at 53% in 2003. The weak US dollar and the rise of sovereign funds are identified as the causes of this development. Japan takes second place, with a market share of 19% (up from 14% in 2007), largely due to the dominant position of the Japanese sovereign fund, the Government Pension Investment Fund, which follows a highly conservative allocation policy and has topped the rankings for several years, with assets as of the end of 2008 of nearly USD1.3trn. With continued growth in its assets over the past five years, the Asia-Pacific region has overtaken Europe for the first time. Its assets totalled about USD3trn, compared with USD2.5trn for Europe. In 2008, the Asia-Pacific region was the only one to gain volume, with 11% growth. Coming out of the turbulence in previous years, the top 20 funds did better than all other funds: they saw a decline of only 4% to their assets, compared with a fall of 14% for other funds. In the past five years, the top 20 funds grew by 14%, compared with 7% for other funds in the sample.
Les Echos reports that Goldman Sachs Infrastructure Partners has become the largest shareholder in the firm that operates the channel tunnel, with 21.2% of capital, far outstripping the M & G fund (Prudential group), which held a 7% stake at the beginning of the year. Small shareholders retain about 30% of the firm. This increase in Goldman’s stake is the expected consequence of a restructuring plan, a capital increase of EUR800m launched in March 2008 which allowed the firm to pay off part of its debts. Redeemable bonds were issued as part of the Eurotunnel safeguard plan. The operation was undertaken through bonds convertible into equities, of which 82% were subscribed to by two funds from Goldman Sachs Infrastructure Partners, which then decided, one and a half years later, to convert its bonds into shares.
Christine du Fretay, the widow of Gilles du Fretay, has been appointed chairwoman of the board at HDF Finance, while Gilles Guérin on 1 September became CEO and vice-chairman of the board. Since 2007, Guérin has been CEO of Alphasimplex, an alternative management firm founded by Andrew Lo, which specialises in overlay management and market risk control. Christian de Juniac, who in June accepted a position as chairman of the board at HDF Finance, replacing Gilles du Fretay (who died on 7 August), has been promoted to vice president of HDF Group SAS, the holding company which includes all HDF’s affiliates and participations.
Nine months after the acquisition of its parent company, National City Corporation, by PNC Financial, Allegiant Asset Management will merge with the management firm PNC Capital Advisors INC, to form a new entity to be known as PNC Capital Advisors LLC. Following the merger, John Abunassar, chairman of Allegiant, will leave the firm. Kevin McCreadie, CEO of PNC Capital, will direct the new entity, which will have a total of USD37bn in assets under management.
Impax Asian Environmental Markets will be the new investment trust form Impax Asset Management (USD1.8bn in assets), which the provider plans to launch in partnership with the Hong Kong-based management firm Ajia Partners (USD2bn). As its name indicates, the new product will focus on businesses in the environmental sector based in the Asia-Pacific region. The fund will be managed by Bruce Jenkyn-Jones, managing director at Impax, and David Li at Ajia Partners. It will be listed on the main market segment of the London Stock Exchange.
The Advanced Technology Investment Company (ATIC), which is wholly owned by the government of Abu Dhabi, has announced its acquisition of Charered Semiconductor Manufacturing (Chartered) for SGD2.68 per share, which represents about SGD2.5bn (USD1.8bn). The amount of the transaction, which is expected to be concluded during fourth quarter, is about SGD5.6bn, or USD3.9bn, when outstanding debt is included. The agreed price represents a markup of 14.2% over the trading price in the past 30 periods on the Singapore stock exchange (SGX), and of 44.6% over its trading price in the past six months. Currently, Singapore sovereign wealth fund Temasek owns 62% of Chartered. The acquisition of Chartered will allow ATIC to exploit synergies with the Global Foundries platform, a joint venture created in March with AMD. Pending the necessary regulatory approval, Doug Grose, CEO of Global Foundries, would become CEO of the business born of the merger, while Chia Song Hwee, CEO of Chartered, would become COO, with particular responsibility for overseeing the integration process.
The Telegraph claims to have information that Schroders has contacted Prince Andrew, the second son of Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain, to offer him a potential role as ambassador for its international activities, particularly in its interactions with sovereign funds. The prince is the special representative of the British government for international commerce and development.
The British wealth management firm Brooks Macdonald Group on 7 September announced its acqusition of the Canterbury-based business Lawrence House Fund Managers Limited. This is the first external growth operation undertaken by Brooks Macdonald, the group says in a statement. Assets under management at Lawrence House total about GBP60m, distributed between an OEIC with three sub-funds and a number of dedicated portfolios. These funds will be integrated into Brooks Macdonald Asset Management, the management firm of the group specialised in assisting independent financial advisors. As a part of the transaction, two members of staff will move to the offices of the business recently opened in Tunbridge Wells: Alan Stokes, who will be a fund manager, and Carol Evans, as a member of the new activities development team. The former parent company of Lawrence House, the independent financial advisory firm Pharon Independent Financial Advisers Limited, is not included in the transaction and will remain independent. But Pharon will form a strategic alliance with Brooks Macdonald Asset Management to provide management services to its clients. Assets under management at the Brooks Macdonald group, which has offices in London, Manchester, Winchester and Tunbridge Wells, totalled nearly GBP1.4bn as of the end of June 2009, an increase of 17% in twelve months.
A shake-up at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership has led to the departure of Graham Wood, the chief investment officer of equities, Scotland on Sunday reports. He will be temporarily replaced by Dean Buckley, managing director of SWIP.
HSBC is reported to have offered more than GBP1bn to acquire the private banking activities of ING, according to the Sunday Times. The British group is reported to be one of five candidates to acquire the business, alongside the Singapore fund DBS and Julius Baer. The buyer will be selected in the next six days. In Asia, AUM for the business represent USD16bn, while in Switzerland, they total about USD15bn.
As its new head of product & sales, Beatrix Purchart becomes the new head of strategic development of distribution and products at the Swiss asset management firm Rising Star. She was previously head of institutional distribution in Germany and set up a distribution network in France for RMF Investments, since the acquisition of that firm by UK-based Man Group.
Sahba Hadipour, Director, Private Equity and Wealth Management at CIC Holding (Invesco Holding), has been recruited by Barclays Wealth as director of its international private banking team in the Middle East, TradeArabia news Service reports. He will report to Fawaz Baba, managing director of the Dubai International Private Banking Office, and will be based in Dubai. He will be in charge of focusing on high net worth and ultra-high net worth client markets in the United Arab Emirates.
DB Platinum, a platform from Deutsche Bank, has teamed up with Millennium Global, a manager specialised in currencies and alternative assets (USD11bn in assets) to launch the Millennium Global Systematic Alpha fund, a product which complies with the UCITS III directive and offers daily liquidity. The open-ended product aims to generate returns related to those of the Millennium Global Systematic Alpha program, which is based on a systematic diversified approach involving eight investment strategies including currencies, bonds, equities, and commodities. This fund management method combines market neutral and short-term directional approaches.
Mónica Vidal is leaving her position as director of alternative asset management at the Spanish management firm N+1 to become commercial director for the Alternatives unit at JPMorgan Private Bank in New York, Funds People reports. She will be in charge of product placement (hedge funds, private equity, real estate) serving Latin American clients.
The hedge fund manager Och-Ziff is reportedly about to re-establish performance commissions on all of its assets, totalling USD2.17bn, Hedgeweek reports. The flagship fund from Och-Ziff, the Och-Ziff Master Fund, has gained 17.6% since the beginning of the year, which means that it has nearly offset all of its losses in 2008. Various sources estimate that Och-Ziff funds will now begin to show net inflows. The founder of Och-Ziff, Daniel Och, estimated last month that inflows to funds remained modest. “It will take a little time for them to gain size,” he added. In second quarter 2009, Och-Ziff made a net loss of USD88.3m.
Michael Bücker has been appointed as chairman of the board at Commerz Real (EUR43bn in assets), an affiliate of Commerzbank, from 1 October. He will replace Hubert Spechtenhauser, who was head of CommerzLeasing & Immobilien from 2002 to 2007, and then of Commerz Real since the merger in 2007 of CommerzLeasing with Commerz Grundbesitz. The appointment of Bücker who has been head of the corporate banking activities of Commerzbank in the Munich region since 2005, is related to a repositioning of Commerz Real being planned by the group, whose details will be revealed in the coming months.
Banque Sarasin has selected 64 real estate firms as eligible providers to its sustainable development criteria, out of a universe of 160 businesses in 17 countries. The study “Auf nachhaltige Gebäude bauen,” by Klaus Kämpf, a specialist in sustainable development research, has determined that the top two firms in the rankings are the British firms Land Securities and British Land. The French firms Gecina and Unibail-Rodamco also show above-average results, as does Mitsubishi Estate. However, says Sarasin, there are several firms which have received a lower-than-average sustainable development rating, particularly in the Americas and Asia, regions where environmental standards are based on voluntary compliance and certificates, while in Europe, the requirements are set by law.
In its “Report on Progress 2009,” the United Nations organisation that oversees the Principles for Responsible Investment (UN-PRI) cites the method of integration of environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues at the Swiss asset management firm SAM Asset Management (Robeco group) as “best practice,” and as an example which the 275 signatories of the Principles (153 asset management firms and 123 asset owners) may follow to improve their scores in this area.
The French national pension fund, the Fonds de réserve pour les retraites (FRR), on 7 September declared its support for the initiative for transparency in the mining industries (ITIE), in keeping with its investment strategy, adopted in April 2008. As signatories of the initiative, it joins other institutional investors, as well as several governments, including France, businesses, representatives of civil society and international organisations The ITIE aims to strengthen transparency and responsibility of actors in the mining industries through verification and complete publication of payments made by these businesses and revenues earned by governments from the exploitation of mineral, oil and gas resources. “By supporting the ITIE, the FRR invites all businesses in sectors directly or indirectly concerned in which it is currently a shareholder to participate, and those businesses who are already involved to suppose the inititative by taking an active role in putting it into action,” the Fund says in a statement.
L’Agefi Switzerland reported that Switzerland and India will soon conclude a revised double taxation agreement. Negotiations will begin by the end of the year. The ruling Congress Party in India is under pressure from the opposition to provide precise information about Indian holders of Swiss bank accounts.
Selon Les Echos, le conseil scientifique des indices de Nyse-Euronext a annoncé le 4 septembre qu’Air France-KLM sortait du CAC 40 au profit de Technip. Le mouvement inverse a lieu au sein du CAC Next 20. Ces modifications entreront en vigueur le lundi 21septembre. Aucun changement n’a été décidé pour les autres indices de valeurs françaises.
Les conseillers en gestion de patrimoine indépendants (CGPI) se sentent prêts à repartir à la conquête des clients malgré l’impact de la crise sur leur situation. Le 3ème baromètre du marché conduit auprès de 500CGPI par Cardif (BNP Paribas Assurance) et TNS Sofres, huit conseillers sur dix restent fondamentalement optimistes quant à l’avenir de leur profession. Mais ils restent aussi lucides: ils ne sont plus que 43% à juger leur situation aussi bonne que l’année précédente, contre 89% en 2007.