The Ramius Fund of Funds group has appointed Stuart Davies as managing director and chief investment officer, effective 20 January 2009, Hedge Week reports. He will also be a member of the investment management committee at the group. He replaces Thomas W. Strauss, who will remain as CEO of the Ramius Fund of Funds Group and also a member of the board. Davies previously held a similar position at Ivy Asset Management in New York.
Managers will toughen the liquidity terms of their new products, but promoters are likely to remain flexible to keep up with competition, Ignites Europe estimates on 8 January. ?This phenomenon has already begun for funds of hedge funds, but it will increasingly affect real estate funds, credit funds, and others,? says Aymeric Poizot, an analyst at Fitch Ratings.
Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. is launching a range of trading and investment products which focus on companies receiving government support during the financial crisis, the Wall Street Journal reports. The first product in the range is the Government Relief Index (GRI), which will track shares in 24 companies which have received more than USD1bn each in aid from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) or other assistance mechanisms. The index will measure the perormance of these companies and the effectiveness of the aid plan.
FinancialNews Online reports on 8 January that Henderson Global Investors has closed the activist fund which it launched two years ago, following the departure of its manager, John Havranek, for Hermes.
The United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund (UNJSPF) has launched a call for tenders to select a consultant for investments in funds of hedge funds and private equity. IPE reports that it is also seeking experienced managers in the area of alternative and bond investments. Meanwhile, the fund is also planning to enlarge its real estate portfolio to include infrastructure, agricultural land and forests.The UN pension fund, whose assets total about USD30bn, is also seeking a single master record keeper to replace the current global custodian, and who would also assume centralised control of reporting and administration, while cooperating with several regional custodians recruited within a number of separate mandates.
Bernard Madoff ordered his UK company to transfer about USD150m to his US firm just weeks before he confessed to running a fraud scheme, two former employees of Madoff Securities International said, according to the Financial Times. Mr Madoff explained that he was nervous about sterling.
In its 9 January issue, Il Sole - 24 Ore reports on EUR140bn in outflows from mutual funds on sale in Italy in 2008. The daily newspaper states that the leading management firm in the sector, Intesa Sanpaolo, saw net redemptions of EUR33bn in the 12-month period, while Pioneer Investments (UniCredit) saw outflows of EUR32.8bn. Other management firms which have lost assets are Banco Popolare (-EUR9.2bn), Crédit Agricole A.M. (-EUR8bn), Arca (-EUR5.8bn), Mps (-EUR5.5bn) and Ubi (-EUR5.1bn). Firms which posted positive net inflows are rare: Mediolanum (EUR891m), Generali (EUR242m), State Street Global investors (EUR280m), Banca Finnat Euroamerica (EUR273m), Agora, Pfm, and Rothschild.
In 2008, mutual funds on sale in Italy underwent net redemptions of EUR140bn, according to statistics from Assogestioni (the Italian association of management professionals). In 2007, these funds saw outflows of EUR50bn, in an atmosphere of skepticism about these products on the part of investors. The financial crisis has only aggravated the situation. Assets fell to a total of EUR409bn at the end of December.The category of funds which suffered most in 2008 was bond mutual funds, which saw outflows of EUR66bn, bringing total assets in these funds to EUR160bn. Equities mutual funds were not spared, with EUR29bn in net redemptions, bringing total assets to EUR70bn. Hedge funds saw net outflows of EUR8bn in the 12-month period, bringing assets to EUR21.5bn. In the month of December alone, this category lost slightly over EUR2bn, following a similar level of outflows in November.In December, net outflows represented slightly less than EUR9bn (nearly the same amount as in November), and aside from hedge funds, primarily affected bond funds (EUR2.8bn) and money market funds (EUR2.1bn).
Patrick Savadoux has joined Mandarine Gestion, the asset management company launched nearly a year ago by Marc Renaud, as a shareholder and equities manager. He will develop the firm’s product range in SRI (socially responsible investment), his area of expertise. Savadoux spent 15 years at Natixis Asset Management as a senior European equities portfolio manager and head of the SRI unit. In November 2007, he left the firm along with Stéphane Prévost to create La Financière Responsable, an asset management company specialised in SRI and partly owned by La Française des Placements. He left that firm one year later to pursue a project outside of finance, which was not ultimately successful.Savadoux’s first fund at Mandarine Gestion will be launched in January. It will invest in Euro zone equities following an SRI approach developed by the manager over the course of his career. The manager will rely on Vigeo, and is hoping to subsequently establish internal SRI research resources. Other products may follow, including thematic or solidaristic SRI funds.With the new addition, Mandarine increases its team of specialised managers and its product offerings, which already include value management, convertible bond management, and French equities management. The firm manages assets of EUR300m.
Axel Schroeder, chairman of the board at MPC Capital, has announced that the wealth management and closed fund management firm will lay off 55 employees out of a total of 300, in order to achieve a configuration that will allow the firm to become profitable on net subscriptions which are limited to only EUR300m. Currently, the business is set up to handle more than EUR1bn in net inflows. MPC Capital revised its projections for net inflows in 2008 less than two months ago, down to EUR600m from EUR1.1bn (see Newsmanagers of 19 November).The cost reduction plan will also include other measures which will be announced in mid-February. The objective is to save EUR10m this year.
Germany’s Union Investment Real Estate (UIRE) has announced that it has acquired the ?green? office building Solaris in Vienna (about 9,000 square metres) from S+B Gruppe, though it has not disclosed the purchase price. The property, completed in September 2008, will be added to the portfolio of the open-ended real estate fund UniImmo: Deutschland. The property is already 90% leased, and the vendor will provide a three-year guarantee on rental of the remaining space.UIRE has recently announced the acquisition of another property for UniImmo: Deutschland (see Newsmanagers of 6 January), in Madrid.
An internal email addressed to employees by John Thain, former CEO of Merrill Lynch, which has been obtained by Dow Jones, confirms that Dan Sontag, head of American Wealth Management, has been appointed as expected as head of the global wealth management group, replacing Robert McCann, who has resigned. Sontag thus becomes head of a brokerage division that employs 16,850.
Veritas Investment announced on Thursday that its ETF fund ETF-Dachsfonds, launched in April 2007 (see Newsmanagers of 20 March 2007) has over EUR100m in assets as of the beginning of this year, thanks to net subscriptions of EUR45m in the month of December alone. The product, which was launched at a time when Veritas was owned by Boursorama (Société Générale group), and which is still managed by Markus Kaiser, posts performance since its launch of 5.4%; in 2008, the fund earned 0.7%.
Handelsblatt reports that in mid-December, the five Luxembourg funds of funds from LRI managed by Bernd Greisinger had total exposure of 7% and 50%, respectively, to two Madoff funds, for a total of EUR20m. LRI is planning to sue the depositary bank (HSBC).Universal Investment (UI), for its part, states that four small funds with less than EUR10m each have been affected, but that they had an average investment of only 2% in Madoff funds. Universal is also planning to claim damages and interest from the depositary bank.
HSBC Global Asset Management has extended its product range to British retail investors, and has made the ten global emerging markets (GEM) sub-funds of its Luxembourg Sicav GIF available on the Cofunds platform, Citywire reports. All the funds, including Indian Equity, Chinese Equity and BRIC Freestyle, may be traded and ?report? in Pounds Sterling.
One of the lessons for asset managers to learn from the Madoff scandal is that, as soon as something seems too good to be true, it usually is, says Sonya Morris, director of training for the pan-European and asiatic research teams at Morningstar, cited by Ignites Europe on 7 January. Philippe Carrel, executive vice-president of Thomson Reuters, says the asset management sector should be preparing for a fundamental reform of the legal and regulatory framework for mutual funds.
UniCredit has announced that, as part of the valuation and rationalisation of its real estate portfolio, UniCredit Real Estate (UIRE) on 30 December finalised a centralisation of all its assets within a real estate fund managed by Fondi Immobiliari Italiani SGR (Fimit), of which 62% has been placed with institutional investors. The portfolio includes 72 positions on commercial real estate properties, including 70 bank branches of the group and properties on the Piazza Cordusio and Livio Cambi in Milan. The total value of the properties represents about EUR800m, of which 60% has been financed by a loan from a banking union.UniCredit states that URE will retain a 33% stake in the fund (which has a 15-year horizon), while a further 5% will be sold to institutionals by the end of February 2009.Placement of shares with institutional investors will generate capital gains, before taxes, of about EUR280m in fourth quarter 2008, which will have a positive impact on the core tier 1 owners equity ratio, to the tune of about 5 percentage points.
Theodora Zemek, head of bond management at Axa Investment Managers in London, has recruited a head of ex-US bonds, as planned (see Newsmanagers of 25 September 2008), in the person of Graham Nicol, who was previously head of the Investment Grade Credit team at JP Morgan.The appointment comes at the same time as that of Mondher Bettaieb Loriot, who will join the AXA IM teams as a bond manager in May 2009 in London. He is currently based in Zurich at Swisscanto Asset Management, where he is also serving as interim director of the bond division and as a manager.
UBS will have a hard time avoiding any responsibility for the Madoff scandal, Ignites Europe reports on 7 January, citing lawyers. The Swiss bank was, until recently, the depositary for the LuxAlpha Sicav. Last month, UBS defended itself by pointing to the subscription terms of LuxAlpha, which stated that the firm was not the guardian of the fund’s assets. Jean Bricher, a partner at Brucher & Associés, says that clauses of this nature exonerating the firm from responsibility are not valid under Luxembourg law.
The BVI association of management firms is distributing a new flyer, which describes ?seven good reasons investment funds are necessary in a portfolio.? On this occasion, it is also publishing the results of a survey by GfK of 869 subscribers, which found that 85.2% of investors value transparency of fees, and 75.2% place importance on the fact that funds give them protection from total loss of their capital. However, the flexibility of investment in funds is only important to 38.2% of those surveyed.
The Financial Times reports that Deutsche Bank was approached about ten times in recent years with requests for loans to investors in hedge funds who wanted to place the money with Bernard Madoff, but every time, the bank refused to lend the money, since the manager did not meet the bank’s due diligence criteria. In the same article, the FT reports that a preliminary investigation has been launched in France to determine if investors in Madoff funds are victims of a crime.
The alternative management firm Marathon Asset Management (USD10bn in assets) has announced the appointment of five new partners, who are also high-ranking executives at the business. They are Andrew Rabinowitz, COO, Richard Ronzetti (Global Investment Management & Head of Research), Jon Halpern (Head of Real Estate), Steve Kim (CIO of Asia) and Adam Phillips (CIO of Europe).
The Hadleigh Holdings company, based in Miami, on Wednesday filed a suit in bankruptcy court against J.P. Morgan Chase, the depositary, and Irving Picard, the trustee in charge of liquidating Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, the Wall Street Journal reports. Hadleigh claims that it paid Madoff USD1m on 8 December, three days before he was arrested.Meanwhile, a government prosecutor has told the courts that Madoff possesses valuables at three residences in the United States and one home in France. The prosecutor claims that the suspect may unload these goods if he is not imprisoned.
Hermes, which manages the assets of the BT pension fund, has suspended plans to reorganise in the wake of poor performance of its main activist fund, and after the departure of two managers (Stephan Howaldt and Wouter Rosingh), the Financial Times reports. Rupert Clarke, CEO since December 2007, had planned to transform the group into several independent investment boutiques.
According to sources close to the case, the SEC has reopened its two-year investigation into possible insider trading of Microsoft shares in 2001 by the alternative manager Pequot Capital Management, which it had previously closed without any definite findings, the Wall Street Journal reports. Pequot is said to have made more than USD2m on the trades in question.
Judging by the number of applications for sales licenses, 2009 will be a bumper year for socially responsible ETF fund launches, the Wall Street Journal notes. Pax World Funds is planning to release two new ETF funds investing in shares of North American and overseas companies which stand out for their environmental, social and governance (ESG) policies, and a third fund focused on companies which develop environmental technologies. Veritas Funds will launch five ETFs corresponding to Catholic, Baptist, Lutheran, Methodist and ?Christian? criteria, to respond to demand from the various Catholic faiths.Javelin Investment Management is planning to launch the JETS Dow Jones Islamic Market International Index Fund, which respects the precepts of Sharia law.
Rubicon Investment Consulting estimates that Irish pension funds have seen a decline of EUR27bn in their assets in 2008, with an average loss of 34.8%. The best manager of the ten large groups studied was Setanta Asset Management, with losses of 29.6%, while the worst was Hibernian Investment, with losses of 38.8%. This is largely due to excessive exposure to Irish equities, which represented 14% of the funds’ assets at the beginning of 2008, and which lost 65% last year. This allocation alone cost the funds EUR4.6bn in assets.
Axa Investment Managers announced on Wenesday that Clitilde Bouchet, former managing director and CFO of Abn Amro France, on 3 November took over as CFO of the Axa IM group in Paris. In her new position, Bouchet will be in charge of accounting, management controlling, taxation issues, analysis of activity levels and monitoring of the profitability of the AXA IM group, allocation of internal resources, and the deployment of warning systems ?which will allow the business strategic options while retaining its ability to invest,? the management firm says.Bouchet ?suceeds Vincent Godemel, who will be continuing his career at AXA Tech.?