Ossiam, the specialist ETF asset management firm for smart beta strategies, has announced that it has topped EUR1bn in assets, including EUR789bn in ETFs alone. In december 2012, the firm already had nearly EUR557m in assets under management via its strategy ETFs, a growth of 41.6% in nearly one year.The Natixis Global Asset Management affiliate sells Minimum Variance strategy ETFs and ETFs based on an Equal Weight strategy. This latter family, based on the STOXX Europe 600 universe, has posted the strongest growth in its assets (+164%) in the past twelve months, followed by Ossiam Emerging Markets minimum variance (+131%).
The Austrian-German asset management firm C-Quadrat on 18 November announced that as of 30 September, it had posted record assets of EUR4.8bn, which represents a 12% increase compared with the end of December.Net profits in third quarter totalled EUR3.5bn, compared with EUR0.6m in the corresponding period (an increase of 529%), while earnings of EUR42.9m were up 31% compared with July-September 2012. 85% of earnings come from management commissions, and 9% from performance commissions.
For the quarter to the end of September, Nuveen Investments has posted losses of USD6m, compared with USD76.7m for the corresponding period of last year, while losses in January-September total USD167.3m, compared with USD525.1m.The Chicago-based asset management firm has reported assets of USD214.86bn as of the end of September, compared with USD216bn as of the end of June, with net outflows of USD5.09bn in June-September. One year previously, assets under management totalled USD220.09bn, after net redemptions of USD74m in third quarter 2012.Nuveen Investments has also announced the recruitment of David R. Wilson, who had been responsible for more than USD9bn in customised mandates at Cutwater Asset Management, as managing director, to lead the new Institutional Solutions Group unit. He will report to Bill Huffman, chairman of Nuveen Asset Management, and will lead a team responsible for designing custom strategies for retirement savings plans, public funds, charities, insurers, and other institutional investors.Lastly, the asset management firm has appointed Maureen Beshar as executive vice president and head of institutional sales, based in New York. She will join in December, and will report to Tom Schreier, vice chairman of wealth management. She had previously been head of institutional sales & consultant relations at Clearbridge Investments.
Jennifer Drake, ex-managing director at Goldman Sachs, has been appointed as head of development at DW Investment Management, the US-based credit division of Brevan Howard, Financial News reports. She will be based in New York and will chair the executive and risk boards at the asset management firm.
UBS Wealth Management has recruited a team of six people, who previously worked at Deutsche Bank, Investment Week reports. The team of experts will join the unit dedicated to strategic partnerships, in order to help the group to meet growing demand for financial planning services. Financial planners will help investors to place assets on platforms.
Wells Fargo will sell 11 funds in Sweden via the Nordnet platform, Realtid.se reports. The US-based asset management firm is also working with Folksam. These agreements come as part of the development of Wells Fargo in Europe, particularly in the Scandinavian countries.
Habib Subjally has left First State, where he was a global equity manager, Citywire Global is able to reveal. The asset management firm will be closing its First State Global Opportunities fund. When asked by Citywire about the departure of the manager, First State answered: “After an internal review, First State has decided to close its range of global equities managed by Habib Subjally and his teams in London, and to concentrate on two other ranges of global equities: Worldwide and Worldwide Sustainability.”
The Netherlands insurer Achmea has selected its own asset management firm, Syntrus Achmea, to manage a EUR8bn bond portfolio, Fonds Nieuws reports. The website stresses that Achmea (which has EUR4.26bn in assets under management) is still seeking a manager for a value equity portfolio.Robeco and F&C Asset Management are the two main asset managers for Achmea.
Assets in catastrophe bonds (cat bonds) currently total USD19bn, and may reach USD50bn by the end of 2018, according to a report by BNY Mellon (The disaster gap: How insurers and the capital markets can harness big data to close the gap). The compound average growth rate (CAGR) for this asset class is expected to come to 20% for the period under review.In terms of insurance-linked securities (ILS), of which cat bonds form part, assets are expected to reach USD150bn by the end of 2018, with a CAGR of 25%.By comparison, the CAGR for the past 13 years has been 24% for ILS, and 30% for cat bonds over the last 9 years..
According to De Telegraaf, relayed by Fund Nieuws, Royal Bank of Scotland has entered exclusive negotiations with BNP Paribas to sell its European structured investment product activities to the French group, including the famous “turbos” taken over from ABN Amro.For its part, fundweb reports that RBS has confirmed that it is currently in talks “with a potential outside buyer” for its investor product & equity derivatives (IP&ED) operation.
Rothschild & Cie Gestion has opened an office in Milan and recruited Alessio Coppola to ensure development of the Paris-based asset management firm in Italy. Coppola, who will have the title of country head, previously worked at the Italian asset management firm Anima SGR, where he served in the wholesale activity. He has also worked at Société Générale Asset Management, where he was head of distribution. Among his responsibilities, Coppola will be responsible for assembling a team in Italy. “We want to make our brand and our investment funds known to Italian investors, and we intend to build an entirely dedicated Italian team in the next few months,” he says in an Italian press statement. The office of the French asset management firm will be located at via Santa Radegonda 8, where Rothschild Global Financial Advisory is already located. The objective for Rothschild & Cie Gestion, which has assets of about EUR22bn, is to “develop asset management activities via long-term relationships with clients, based on a range of quality funds (equities, euro zone corporate bonds, diversified and global flexibles), and the range of dedicated investment solutions,” the statement says.
The Credit Suisse group is in the process of setting up a new division which will group fixed income, currency and commodity operations, and which will result in staff reductions of 100 people in London and New York, the news agency Bloomberg reports, having obtained an internal memo distributed to personnel.The new division, entitled Global Macro Products, will be led jointly by the global head of fixed income, Joni Kinol, in New York, and the global head of currencies, David Tait in London. A spokesperson for the group in Zurich has confirmed the reports.
Julius Baer on 19 November announced that its affiliate Infidar will merge with WM Partners to form one of the largest independent wealth management firms in Switzerland. Infidar Conseils en Investissements SA (Infidar), founded in 1954, with headquarters in Zurich, has 26 employees, and is led by Markus Gonseth since 2007. WMPartners Vermögensverwaltungs AG (WMPartners), also based in Zurich, was founded in 1971, and is managed by three partners: Willi Leimer, Balthasar Meier and Heiner Grüter. The two businesses are currently leaders in independent wealth management in Switzerland.Initially, the Julius Baer group has taken over shares in WMPartners. In a second phase, Infidar will merge with WMPArtners. The conditions of the transaction will not be made public. With a total of about 50 employees and CHF4bn in client assets, the business will be one of the largest independent wealth managers in Switzerland, and will collaborate with 30 depository banks.
The Cantonal Bank of Zurich (ZKB) has taken over market making for 32 investment funds on behalf of the Swiss SIX stock exchange, the Swiss stock market announced on 18 November. As a new sponsor and market maker, ZKB is introducing 18 new products for trading on the Zurich market. ZKB is also taking over market making for 14 other products for which the Julius Baer bank is assuming the same role, SIX says in a statement. Overall, about 304 sponsored funds are traded on the Swiss stock market.
Citic Securities Futures, from the Citic Securities group, has created an RMB2bn (USD330m) fund, which will be invested in local hedge funds, the Financial Times reports. The asset management firm Hwabao Securities is launching a similar USD1bn fund in partnership with KKM Capital, a firm which helps Chinese hedge fund firms to establish their activities. This is a sign of the growing interest in hedge funds in China. Six foreign hedge funds have also recently obtained licenses to raise capital from Chinese investors for the first time: Canyon Partners, Citadel, Man Group, Oak Tree, Och-Ziff Capital Management and Winton Capital Management.
Pimco will launch a wave of recruitments of managers, traders and analysts at the beginning of next year, in order to build up its equity unit, Financial News reports. The process will be led by Virginie Maisonneuve, who will join the firm from Schroders in January.
F&C Investments has announced the appointment of Robet Thorpe as head of consumer. He will join the firm in December from Sarasin & Partners, where he had been head of retail, after serving as head of UK retail for nine years at Cazenove Capital. At F&C Investments, Thorpe will be responsible for sales and distribution to retail clients and investment trusts.
M&G Investments in 18 November announced that one of its best-known managers, Graham French, is retiring. He will now hand the management of the M&G Global Basics fund to his deputy, Randeep Somel, who has been working alongside him for more than five years. “After nearly 25 years at M&G, the time has come to pass the baton to another generation of portfolio managers. I am retiring knowing that I am leaving the shareholders in the Global Basics fund in very good hands,” saysa French in a statement.The deputy manager of the M&G Global Basics fund since 2010, Somel was trained in international equity management internally at M&G, as was Matthew Vaight, manager of the M&G Global Emerging Markets Fund (EUR1.4bn as of 30 September 20130, and the M&G Asian Fund (EUR576m as of the same date) and Stuart Rhodes, manager of the M&G Global Dividend Fund (EUR9bn, also as of 30 September). He has been a member of the international team since he began at M&G nearly nine years ago.There will be no changes to the investment approach of the M&G Global Basics fund, whose assets as of the end of September totalled EUR5.1bn, the statement sayas. The philosophy and investment principles of the fund will remain unchanged: management will continue to be oriented around a conviction portfolio without benchmark constraints and composed of about 60 positions.The only dark spot in the picture is that the M&G Global Basic shows returns of only 4.7% in the past three years, compared with gains of more than 33% for the corresponding benchmark index. According to Citywire, French has recently apologised to investors for the underperformance of the fund, whose assets under management peaked at GBP6.6bn in June 2011.
Aberdeen Asset Management on 18 November announced that it has signed a final agreement with Lloyds Banking Group to construct a long-term strategic alliance, which will include the acquisition of Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP) by Aberdeen, as well as its private equity fund management and infrastructure fund management operations.The announcement confirms reports in the British press (Newsmanagers of 18 November). The cost of the transaction totals about GBP550m, with an additional payment over five years of up to GBP100m, depending on the performance recorded. Assets under management and activities acquired by Aberdeen total about GBP136bn.Aberdeen has also published its results for the period to 30 September, which include an increase of 7% to its assets under management, to GBP200.4bn, compared with GBP187.2bn one year previously. The year finished with outflows of GBP2.5bn, however.Pre-tax profits were up 39%, to GBP482.7m, compared with GBP347.8m.
JP Morgan Asset Management has recruited James Davidson from Bank of America Merrill Lynch, as a global income equity fund manager, Citywire reports. He is joining the London office, and will manage the JPM Global Equity Income and JPM Global Dividend funds. He will work alongside Gerhard Woort-Menker.
L’OCDE a revu en baisse de 0,4 point à 3,6% sa prévision de croissance de l’économie mondiale pour 2014 (contre 2,7% prévu pour 2013). Le ralentissement en cours dans plusieurs pays émergents pèse sur la croissance mondiale, que les grandes économies avancées convalescentes n’ont pas la capacité d’entretenir à elles seules, indique l’organisation dans ses prévisions économiques d’automne.
Le sentiment des analystes financiers et des investisseurs allemands a atteint en novembre son niveau le plus élevé depuis quatre ans grâce à des perspectives économiques un peu meilleures pour la zone euro dans son ensemble. L’indice de l’institut économique ZEW de Mannheim est ressorti à 54,6 en novembre, au plus haut depuis octobre 2009, contre 52,8 le mois précédent. «La légère amélioration des perspectives économiques de la zone euro a pu contribuer à cette évolution», indique l’institut.
Le coût de la reconstruction après le passage du typhon Haiyan sur le centre des Philippines pourrait atteindre 250 milliards de pesos, soit 4,25 milliards d’euros, a déclaré mardi Arsenio Balisacan, secrétaire philippin à la Planification. Selon le dernier bilan officiel, le typhon, qui a atteint les terres le 8 novembre, a fait plus de 3.900 morts.
Le groupe Edmond de Rothschild a annoncé hier le lancement de son activité de private merchant banking à Londres. Cette nouvelle offre profilée pour une clientèle privée propose des services dans le conseil stratégique et financier, la structuration, le conseil en investissement et la gestion de fortune sur mesure. L'équipe sera menée par Henrick Schliemann.
Le gouvernement italien présentera cette semaine le contenu d’un plan de privatisations destiné à réduire la dette publique, a déclaré hier le président du Conseil, Enrico Letta. Celui-ci pourrait inclure la cession d’un bloc de titres Eni.
Le sentiment des promoteurs immobiliers américains s’est stabilisé en novembre, après deux mois de baisse d’affilée, montre l’enquête mensuelle de la fédération NAHB publiée hier. L’indice NAHB/Wells Fargo est ressorti à 54 en novembre, contre 54 en octobre (révisé de 55), alors que les économistes interrogés par Reuters l’attendaient en moyenne à 55.
La Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) a obtenu d’un tribunal fédéral une injonction visant le courtier américain MF Global, qui devra restituer 1,2 milliard de dollars (890 millions d’euros) à des clients lésés et payer une amende de 100 millions de dollars. Le courtier s’était mis en faillite en 2011 après un pari de plus de 6 milliards de dollars sur les dettes souveraines européennes.
Le gouvernement portugais a annoncé hier soir que le service postal public CTT serait privatisé d’ici à la fin de l’année à un prix allant de 4,10 à 5,52 euros par action. Cette fourchette signifie que Lisbonne lèvera entre 430 millions et 580 millions d’euros via la cession, aussi bien à des investisseurs institutionnels qu'à des petits porteurs, de 70% de l’opérateur postal.
Le président de la Réserve fédérale de New York, l’un des plus ardents défenseurs d’une politique monétaire ultra-accommodante, s’est déclaré hier plus optimiste sur les perspectives de reprise de l'économie américaine, prévoyant une amélioration de la croissance l’an prochain et en 2015. «Non seulement nous disposons de meilleures statistiques, mais de surcroît, le poids budgétaire, qui pèse sur l'économie, devrait s’alléger considérablement au cours des quelques années à venir, en même temps que les soutiens fondamentaux à l'économie se renforcent», a-t-il indiqué lors d’une réunion au Queens Collège de New York. Ces commentaires d’un proche du président de la Réserve fédérale américaine Ben Bernanke pourraient laisser penser que la Banque centrale est plus près qu’on ne le pense généralement de réduire le rythme de ses achats d’actifs, actuellement de 85 milliards de dollars par mois.