Hanseatische Investment GmbH (Hansainvest), an affiliate of the insurance firm Signal Iduna, announced on Tuesday in its annual report that its assets as of the end of December were down to EUR8.5bn, compared with EUR9.5bn one year previously, but that it posted net subscriptions of EUR383m last year. The number of white label funds has doubled, to 62.The manager says that it also doubled the size of its distribution team last year, with the recruitment of a director of IFAs and another for institutional investors. Since then, a third representative has also been recruited.Hansainvest, which at the beginning of the year launched a physical gold fund, the HansaGold (see Newsmanagers of 28 January), is planning to release a sustainable development environmental fund by the end of the year.
iShares (Barclays Global Investors group) on Tuesday announced the launch of the ETF iShares MSCI GCC Countries ex-Saudi Arabia, its first fund to replicate an index of shares from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, excluding Saudi Arabia.The product is listed on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) in US dollars, and has share classes denominated in US dollars and pounds Sterling. The portfolio will include 70 positions. The financial and telecoms sectors represent 68.01% and 12.71% of the index, respectively. The top three countries in the fund are Kuweit (53.59%), the United Arab Emirates (19.68%), and Qatar (16.48%). The composition of the portfolio can be viewed on the iShares website in the United Kingdom.
According to rankings by Expansión relayed in Funds People, 23% of the roughly 350 Euro-denominated money market funds on sale in Spain posted losses in first quarter. It is likely that the number of products in the red will rise in the next few months, if the ECB continues to lower its prime rates. One possible solution would be for managers to lower their commissions, particularly firms which charge more than 1% in fees; the average is 0.72%. Funds People points out that another possibility would be to blend corporate bond issues into the funds, in order to improve returns for products, as some investment grade issues offer twice the return of government bonds.Expansión has identified four money market funds which have posted performance of more than 1% in first quarter, including three products from Ibercaja and one from Bankpime.
This Wednesday, more than 1,400 banks and asset management firms will sign up to a new ?big bang? protocol, which will make it possible for investors to more easily know what would happen in the case of default on derivative contracts, the Financial Times reports. The US market will introduce a standardised pricing system for CDS contracts.
A study entitled ?Compensation Accomplices: Mutual Funds and the Overpaid American CEO,? undertaken by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), the Corporate Library and the Shareowner Education Network (SEN), which surveyed voting policies of the 26 largest mutual fund management firms, has found that some of them contributed to excessive pay scales for the managements of businesses. Most of them voted in favour of proposals by the management on the subject of pay at AGMs. Fund managers named as the primary ?accomplices? are AllianceBernstein, Ameriprise Financial, Barclays Global Investors and Columbia Management, while Franklin Templeton, T. Rowe Price and Charles Schwab are regularly at the top of the list of fund management firms voting to limit executive pay scales.
Caja Navarra (CAN) has announced the launch of a guaranteed fund, the CAN Siempre Positivo, whose subscribers may receive variable maximal returns of up to 7% per year in nominal terms, depending on the evolution of share prices in Telefónica, Santander and Repsol. If, at maturity in three years, one of these three shares is valued at less than its listed value on 1 June 2009, returns on the fund will be 2%. The fund is limited to a volume of EUR30m, and minimal subscription is set at EUR500.
The deep freeze in recruitments in the financial sector is now affecting business schools. The University of Paris-Dauphine is suspending admissions for one year to its Master 203 program, ?Financial markets, commodities markets, and risk management,? which trains professionals for the trading desks.?The years 2009 and 2010 will be marked by severe declines in recruitments, which may prove lasting even in the context of an economic recovery. For this reason, the University has decided that its responsibility is to suspend admissions of students to the Master 203 program for the 2009/2010 school year,? explains a statement. ?The University of Paris-Dauphine is reacting to the far-reaching transformations in the financial industry engendered by the financial crisis since August 2007,? the statement continues.The directors of the Masters 203 program will be taking the occasion of the suspension of the program to retrain themselves. In 2010, they are planning to open an ?ambitious program adapted to the new situation in the financial markets.?
Bolsas y Mercados Españoles (BME) on Tuesday announced that it has issued a license to Lyxor International Asset Management, which permits it to issue an ETF backed by the new inverse index Ibex 35 Inverso, which in turn replicates the Ibex 35 con dividendos (with dividends). The real-time calculation of the index will begin in the first week of May.BME states that its ETF segment, which opened on 20 July 2006, now has 30 funds listed on it. Transaction volumes in first quarter came to EUR604m.
The HFRX global hedge fund index in March posted a loss of 0.03%, following a decline of 0.38% in February. YTD, it is still in positive territory, at 0.68%.
Denis Beaudouin, CEO of Finaltis, a small French management firm dedicated to alternative management, sees a bright side to the crisis in that it has brought about a spring cleaning of the hedge fund sector. Managers will now need to choose between liquidity and illiquidity.How will the alternative management sector survive the crisis?Beaudouin: The crisis we are going through now goes much further than alternative management or asset management.With that said, alternative management is now in the process of evolving at an accelerated pace. Companies are dying, funds are closing, teams are disappearing. But at the same time, other funds are being born. This crisis has had the positive consequence of taking out those who had no reason to be in the sector, since they brought no added value. In addition to this cleaning out, the crisis has put absolute returns back at the core of the profession, and revealed a rift between managers who suppose this can be achieved only with opacity and illiquidity, and those who feel they can do it while remaining liquid and transparent.At any rate, those who have illiquid strategies and who have maintained higher levels of opacity are disappearing, and that’s a good thing.What is the situation in alternative management in France?Beaudouin: 2008 revealed the limitations of the French alternative management model. The only advantage of the French system, which was based on the depository’s obligation to reimburse funds, is now facultative, since a new ordnance of October 2008. In addition to this, the Lehman affair introduced a good deal of uncertainty.Now, we think direct alternative management in France will be done through UCITS III funds, and not through Aria EL funds anymore. We have also recently launched a French multi-strategy fund that complies with European UCITS III standards, entitled Finaltis MultiStrategies.What is the future of funds of hedge funds in France?Beaudouin: 2008 was marked by the bankruptcy of Aria III funds [many of which were required to introduce emergency measures set out by the AMF -ed]. They will need to reinvent themselves, in the sake of the illiquidity problems which they have had to confront. They will have to choose sides, between liquidity and illiquidity. They will also have to respond to a certain reticence on the part of some hedge funds which saw them leave very rapidly and brutally when the crisis hit. It is possible that some hedge funds will impose minimal thresholds for investments by funds of funds.
According to a survey by International Financial Services London (IFSL), assets in hedge funds fell by 9% in January-February, largely due to USD115bn in net redemptions. In 2008, these assets already fell by nearly 30%, to USD1.5trn, in the wake of negative performance of 15.7%, with nearly three quarters of single hedge funds and 85% of funds of hedge funds in the red, while net redemptions totalled 13.2% of assets under management, with record redemptions in third and fourth quarters. The FISL predicts that assets in the sector will contract again by more than 20% in 2009.At the end of 2008, New York was the world’s largest hedge fund centre, with a market share of 42%, ahead of London, at 18%.The largest managers as of January 2009 were Bridgewater Associates (USD38.6bn), followed by JPMorgan (USD32.9bn) and Paulson & Co (USD29bn). D.E. Shaw Group, Brevan Howard, Och-Ziff Capital Management and Man AHL are next in the rankings, with USD28.6bn, USD26.8bn, USD22.1bn and USD22bn in assets.
The small alternative management firm Finaltis, in which BNP Paribas is the largest shareholder, is launching a French-registered FCP fund, which complies with the European UCITS III directive. The multi-strategy product, entitled Finaltis Multistratégies, replicates the management of a mandated fund created in December 2006, which earned returns of 10.1% in 2008.The fund will invest in several more liquid asset classes, such as equities, currencies, bonds, and commodities. It will combine directional quantitative strategies, (trend monitoring, contrarian investment, global macro) and relative value strategies (volatility and deviation from the average), all of which are managed by teams at Finaltis. The fund will use a dynamic allocation to markets and strategies.
On Tuesday, Credit Suisse announced the appointment of Lim Eng Guan, location head for China market in Singapore since March 2008, as managing director and market leader for Singapore in its private banking division. He will report to François Monnet, managing director, head of private banking Southeast Asia and Australasia. Before joining Credit Suisse, Lim spent 15 years at Citibank.
ETF Advisor k, which offers open architecture retirement savings plans, has launched a new product which uses iShares ETF products exclusively, Global Pensions reports. The plan targets fee-based IFAs and trust departments who wish to offer an open architecture retirement platform. The 170 iShares ETFs are available from the plan.
Private equity investor Lone Star has strengthened its investment in Japan with a JPY115.5bn bailout of the first Reit fund to ever to enter legal bankruptcy protection, the Financial Times reports. The move is a show of confidence in the Japanese real estate market. The US fund specialised in distressed assets has been retained as a ?rehabilitation sponsor? for the New City Residence Investment Corporation (NCRI), whose debts in October totalled JPY112.3bn. The other candidates for the bailout were Daiwa House, Development Bank of Japan, and the US real estate fund Oaktree.
According to an estimate by the Swiss federal social insurance office (OFAS), covering about 1,900 retirement planning institutions, 56.7% of second pillar retirement support pension funds showed a decrease in their coverage rates at the end of March, while 17.8% had coverage of less than 100%. These totals compare with 50.1% and 13.5% as of 31 December 2008. In other words, despite the falling securities markets in 2008 and early 2009, 43.3% of pension funds had a coverage rate of at least 100%, compared with 49.9% three months earlier, while 16%, compared with 18%, had 110% coverage or higher.
Hugo Bänziger, a member of the managing board (risk management) at Deutsche Bank, has taken control over DWS. The position was previously held by Kevin Parker, head of asset management and wealth management at the group, who is not a member of the managing board, and who is now under internal pressure within the company, Handelsblatt reports. The appointment improves Bänziger’s odds of succeeding Josef Ackermann as chairman of the managing board.
Les swaps en devises étrangères au profit de la Fed portent sur 285 milliards de dollars, contre 309,8 milliards pour les swaps en dollars annoncés en octobre
SEB Asset Management has announced that on 30 April it will liquidate six of its funds (five of them registered in Luxembourg and one in Germany), whose assets do not allow for a profitable operation of the fund for the management firm or investors. Assets under management in the funds concerned range from EUR0.23m to EUR8.75m. SEB AM is offering subscribers a free transfer to four funds with similar objectives.
DekaBank has announced the launch of another guaranteed fund, the Deka-CapGarant 1, which offers full participation in the performance of the DJ Euro Stoxx 50 index, up to a maximum of 37%, and a guarantee on full invested capital minus the front-end fee. The Luxembourg-registered fund has no fixed maturity date, but the counters will be reset to zero after six years, and Deka will charge a restructuring commission of 3% when that time has completed on 30 April 2015. Front-end fee and management commission are 4% and 15, respectively.
Uwe Bachert, who was formerly director of sales for Sauren Funds Services, has been appointed director of distribution (a newly-created position) at Neue Vermögen Asset Management, Das Investment reports.
The manager of the UK Growth Fund from New Star, Trevor Green, who joined New Star in June 2008 from Credit Suisse, has announced that he is planning to remain in his current position and also to join the UK equities team at Henderson Global Investors (HGI) when New Star is taken over by HGI, Investment Week reports. Roger Dossett, chief executive for real estate funds, has also decided to join HGI, where he will continue in the same position as at New Star. However, Stuart Webster, manager of the International Property fund and head of global property, has announced that he will not follow his colleagues to HGI, but will remain an advisor to the fund.
Management firms have a tendency not to place surveillance or risk management at the top of the list of priorities in their hierarchies, according to a survey by Copenhagen business school, in partnership with SimCorp StrategyLab, cited by Financial Times Fund Management. ?Risk management is considered an obstacle to be surmounted in an activity,? says Steen Thomsen, a professor at the Danish school.
The French minister of the Economy on 5 April published an announcement in the official journal dates on 2 April, which contains a summary of modifications to the general regulations of the AMF related to public calls for capital and prospectuses. Article 212-16 stipulates that ?when one or more investment services providers participate in an initial admission to a regulated market for the trading of capital securities and/or any public offers or the admission to trading on a regulated market for such securities in the three years after the first admission to trading of these capital securities, this provider or providers must confirm to the AMF that they have undertaken the professional diligence required and that the diligence has not found any imprecisions or significant omissions in the prospectus of a nature which would induce error in investors or mislead their judgment.?
A monthly survey by Lipper of 14 major Spanish asset management firms reveals that in March, 53.85% of these firms were underweight in equities, compared with 61.54% the previous month, and that average investment in equities measures 32.11% of the portfolio, compared with 31.98% the previous month, Cinco Días reports. Cash allocations have decreased very slightly, from 34.65% to 33.87%.
The Wall Street Journal reports that at least six potential buyers have expressed interest in the USD100bn in assets that AIG Investment manages on behalf of third parties. The potential buyers include four private equity investors, Ashmore Investment Management, Hellman & Friedman, Rhône Group and TA Associates, and two asset management firms, Franklin Templeton Investments and Southgate Alternative Investments. The offers range from USD400m to USD800m, while the price would normally be about USD1bn to USD2bn. The newspaper reports that AIG is planning to complete the sale by the end of May, but that the group may have to call off plans to sell the division if the offer price is too low. Alternative assets in the portfolio up for sale totalled about USD34bn at the end of February, of which USD26bn were in private equity and USD6.8bn in hedge funds. Since then, assets in hedge funds have been reported to be closer to USD5bn.
After already doubling the initially planned amount of its borrowing to EUR1bn last week, BASF on Monday raised a further EUR350m in capital, the Börsen-Zeitung reports.