P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The London-based Swede Gustaf Lindskog has left Soros Fund Management to join GLG Partners, the Swedish website realtid.se reports. He had previously worked for Highbridge.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Man Group is to limit cash bonuses for its top executives to 250 per cent of salary, the Financial Times reports. Non-cash awards at Man in the future are to be subject to a mandatory three- to five-year deferral period and subject to clawback arrangements. Man also said it would be paying no bonuses at all to its top executives for their performance in 2012. Peter Clarke, former CEO of Man, will receive no bonus for 2012, while the share price of the firm has lost 20%. He will also receive no golden farewell. The new CEO, Emmanuel Roman, will receive no bonus either for his work last year as chief operating officer.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } First State Investments is said to have ceased actively selling its Asia Pacific Leaders fund, whose assets under management total about GBP7.4bn, Investment Week reports. First State has asked wealth managers no longer to place large bets on the fund, which it is planning to close to new investors in the next few months. In the five years to 1 March, the Asia Pacific Leaders fund earned returns of 73.4%, compared with an average return of 50.7% for the IMA Asia Pacific ex Japan sector.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The British asset management firm Milton Group is planning to launch a series of British equity funds, after seeing a strong increase in its assets under management last year, Investment Week reports. Assets under management by Milton Group, previously known as MAM Funds, last year rose 7.2% to GBP1.79bn. The group, which had posted a pre-tax loss of GBP0.4m in 2011, returned to profitability last year, with profits of GBP0.9m. The new strategies planned will be dedicated to British small and mid cap equities.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Guido Giubergia, chairman and deputy director of Ersel, has left his position as chairman of the corporate governance committee at Assogestioni, the Italian association of asset managers. The Italian website Bluerating cites divergences in point of view as a factor in the decision. Following the move, Mario Vicinanza (of the Arca group) will co-ordinate the management committee until a new chairman can be found for the governance committee.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } In order to restore investors’ confidence in financial services, the CFA Institute in New York on 18 March kicked off the long-term «Future of Finance» initiative, which will be led by a consulting committee chaired by the economist John Kay, and will initially include seven others, among them Elizabeth Corley, CEO of Allianz Global Investors, and Saker Nusseibeh, CEO & Head of Investment at Hermes Fund Managers.As a first move, Future of Finance has released a “Statement of Investors’ Rights,” a list of principles to help buyers of financial services to demand and obtain the conduct that they have a right to expect from their providers in the areas of investment management of investments, research and advising, retail banking, insurance and real estate. The rights include objective advice, communication of potential conflicts of interest, and fair and reasonable commissions.
The new Luxembourg registered Franklin Templeton Shariah Funds (FTSF) Sicav will initially (from March, 25th) have thre subfunds aimed at investors seeking investments that follow Islamic investing principles: Franklin Templeton Global Sukuk Fund, Templeton Shariah Global Equity Fund et Templeton Shariah Asia Growth Fund.The Franklin Templeton Global Sukuk Fund is managed by Mohieddine (Dino) Kronfol, Dubai-based chief investment officer for MENA Fixed Income and Global Sukuk, and Stephen Dover, international chief investment officer of Franklin Templeton Local Asset Management Group. Franklin Templeton reports that the fund focuses on fixed and floating rate Shariah-compliant securities issued by government, government-related and corporate entities. The fund may include both investment-grade and non-investment grade securities and allocations to developed and emerging markets.Templeton Shariah Global Equity Fund is managed by Alan Chua, executive vice president, portfolio manager and research analyst with Templeton Global Equity Group while the Templeton Shariah Asia Growth Fund is managed by Mark Mobius, executive chairman, and supported by Dennis Lim and Allan Lam, senior managing directors and portfolio managers of the Templeton Emerging Markets Group. “The fund is designed to uncover compelling opportunities in the largest emerging markets in the world by investing at least 80% of its net assets in securities of companies located in the Asia region (excluding Australia, New Zealand and Japan)”, according to a press release.All three Franklin Templeton Shariah funds are independently reviewed and endorsed by the Amanie International Shariah Supervisory Board. “The Amanie Scholars provide initial approval on investment objectives and strategy, as well as on going supervisory and monitoring services to ensure continuous adherence to internationally accepted Shariah principles and standards”, the release says.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The three largest asset management firms control more than half of the EUR300bn in assets which pass via platforms in Germany, Italy, Sweden and the Netherlands, according to Financial Times Fund Management, citing data from the Platforum. In France and Spain, the percentage is 40%, while in Switzerland and Austria, the proportion is two thirds. In the United Kingdom alone the percentage is low, at about 24%. In this environment, it is difficult for small asset management firms to attract business, FTfm suggests.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Frankfurt-based SEB Asset Management on 15 March completed the sale of a diversified real estate portfolio with 137,200 square metres in property, in a total of 11 properties located in Germany, for about EUR420m, or 95% of its book value, to Dundee International REIT, in a transaction which was announced more than a month ago (see Newsmanagers of 6 February).The German asset management firm has also announced that it has sold the office property Andel Park B in Prague, which had been in the portfolio of SEB InnoInvest, to a fund managed by GLL Real Estate Partners GmbH.Since the most recent distribution of EUR145m on 28 December (see Newsmanagers of 11 December). SEB AM has sold 13 properties, for a total of EUR710m.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asset managers have increased their marketing and professional ethics spending dedicated to social networks by more than 60% between 2011 and 2012, according to a study by Cerulli Associates, published in the March issue of “Cerulli edge-US Asset Management Edition.” More precisely, marketing recruitments increased 62% year on year, at a time when recruitments in compliance rose 76%. More than half of asset managers currently have a person to deploy their social network strategy. Responsibilities devolved to social networks are generally in the marketing departments, with 32% in marketing and corporate communications, 32% in digital strategy, and 26% in a marketing and retail communications unit.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The billionaire John Paulson has announced that he has no plans to move his residence to Puerto Rico, denying reports in the Financial Times (Newsmanagers of 12 March).The alternative asset management firm released a statement to this effect, stating that Paulson was planning investments in Puerto Rican real estate, and that he had visited the island, but that he had no plans to establish a permanent residence there.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Despite returns of about 12% last year, the coverage rate for German pension funds deteriorated considerably in 2012, largely due to a 140 basis point decline in the discount rate, to 3.35%, Towers Watson Germany finds in its study entitled “German Pension Finance Watch Jahresrückblick 2012.” However, Towers Watson points out that beginning in January 2013, the discount rate has risen back to 3.7%, which may be the first sign that the situation is normalising.The decline in the discount rate triggered a revaluation of liabilities for Dax companies at the end of December, from EUR259bn to EUR317bn, and for MDax companies from EUR34bn to EUR41bn. These correspond to respective coverage rates of 57.9% and 43.9% as of the end of 2012, compared with 65.6% and 48.9% as of the end of 2011, with dedicated reserves of EUR183.8bn, compared with EUR169.6bn for Dax companies, and EUR18.1bn compared with EUR16.1bn for MDax companies.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Grégory Molinaro has joined the Investment Solutions Management at Groupama Asset Management as head of dynamic asset allocation, according to a statement released on 18 March (see Newsmanagers of 28 February). Alongside Sigma active/passive management (convex and asymmetrical management), the unit includes the third major element of the asset allocation range on offer to major clients of Groupama AM, in France and internationally, as part of its new organisation centred on investment solutions. In his new role, Molinaro will be responsible for development deployed for diversified funds and mandates with total assets under management of nearly EUR6bn. He will also oversee the evolution of the product range and diversified management processes. Molinaro began his career in 2000 as a portfolio manager in the mandated management team at Société Générale Private Banking. In 2005, he joined CPR Asset Management as a portfolio manager. In 2009, he became head of the beta allocation team, in the diversified management unit at CPR Asset Management.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } BlackRock is planning to cut about 300 jobs, equivalent to nearly 3% of staff, the asset management firm announced to its employees on Monday, the Financial Times reports. The objective is to remove the least well-performing employees. The group will meanwhile continue to recruit, and expects to have more employees by the end of the year than it does currently. Layoffs will affect all levels of the organisation.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Lyxor Asset Management (“Lyxor”) on 18 March announced that it is scaling up its commercial presence in Europe, with the appointment of Véronique Parizet as director of sales for French- and German-speaking Europe. Parizet will be based in Paris, and will report to Christophe Baurand, global director of sales.Parizet will be responsible for the commercial development of Lyxor serving all clients based in French- and German-speaking Europe (France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Monaco, Germany, Austria and Switzerland).“Her long experience with institutional clients will allow Parizet and her team to strengthen Lyxor’s position in these countries for its complete product range: alternative management, ETFs and passive management, multi-asset management and structured management,” a statement from Lyxor says.After beginning her career at the Banque du Louvre (now HSBC Group), Parizet in 1995 joined the BNP Paribas group, first in the insurance company BNPP-Paribas Cardif. In 2006, she joined BNP Paribas Investment Partners, where she served in several roles in the sales team. Before joining Lyxor, she was director of sales for major institutional clients in France.Following the appointment, the organisation fo the sales team has been structured as follows: Frédéric Bordas has been appointed as director of sales for asset management in France. Bordas and his team are based in France and report to Parizet. Julien Martin has been appointed as director of sales for asset management in Belgium, Luxembourg, Monaco and French-speaking Switzerland. Martin and his team are based in Paris, and report to Parizet. Effective immediately, Oliver Stahlkopf, director of sales for asset management in Germany, Austria and German-speaking Switzerland, based in Frankfurt, and his team, will report to Parizet.All ETF sales teams for this geographical region will also now report to Parizet.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Buyers, sellers and platforms for European funds estimate that the MiFID II directive will have the most significant impact of all upcoming regulations, according to a survey by Cerulli Associates and the Platforum on behalf of the European fund platform association FPG (Fund Platform Group).It is followed by UCITS IV for fund buyers and platforms, and Solvency II for fund sellers.The MiFID II and UCITS IV directives have also been identified as the regulations that will have the most significant impact in the future on fund buyers and sellers’ potential to generate revenue. Professionals on platforms, for their part, estimate that the AIFM directive will have a more marked impact on revenue.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } Asset management firms are up in arms against European plans to enforce a maximum 1:1 ratio of bonus to salary for fund managers, the Financial Times reports. The plans, which would also require up to 60 per cent of the variable pay element to be deferred and largely paid in units of the funds the asset manager runs, focus on Ucits. Some executives of asset management firms are concerned that it will lead to job losses. The parliament’s main parties support inserting the curbs into a year-old reform proposal for Ucits funds, the Financial Times reports. All political blocs are expected to support the limit in a formal vote on Thursday.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } With the Liquid Alternative Beta fund from the Credit Suisse One (Lux) Sicav, Credit Suisse is offering a UCITS IV-compliant fund whose objective is to replicate the performance of hedge funds with liquid instruments. The management team may use short positions, derivatives, and leverage.The new product, which is available in six share classes (R class shares in USD, CHF and EUR, I class shares in USD, and S class shares in CHF and EUR), is part of a range of liquid, UCITS-compliant hedge fund products which already has assets of USD500m, and Credit Suisse points out that its UCITS-compliant hedge fund and fund of hedge fund platform has over USD1.5bn in assets.R shares carry fees of 1.40%; I and S shares 1%. The fund is already registered in Germany, Austria, Spain, France, Italy, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, and Switzerland.CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta B USD LU0858674822 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta R CHF LU0858675043 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta R EUR LU0858675126 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta I USD LU0858675399 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta S EUR LU0858675472 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta S CHF LU0858675555
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } According to reports in the Sunday Times relayed by IFAonline, more than 20 fund managers are preparing to submit bids to acquire 315 bank branches which RBS is being required to sell. They will have until Thursday to do so. Among the potential buyers are Schroders, Invesco, Henderson and F&C.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { } The hedge fund firm SAC Capital, with USD15bn in assets under management, on Monday warned investors that a payment of USD614m to settle civil insider trading suits will not prevent further legal action by regulators, the Financial Times reports. In a 20-minute telephone conference with clients, Tom Conheeney, chairman of SAC, called the agreement “an important first step,” but added that he didn’t want to give the impression that everything was settled.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Dario Prunotto, currently head of private banking at the UniCredit group, may be leaving the bank to join Banca Esperia, ilmonde.it reports. The bank was created as a joint venture of Mediobanca and Mediolanum, led by Andrea Cingoli.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Italy’s Generali has announced that its group board of directors is now complete, following the recruitment of a CIO and a COO.Generali has recruited the Singapore native Nikhil Srinivasan, group CIO for Allianz Investment Management (see Newsmanagers of 29 November 2010) as group chief investment officer (CIO). Srinivasan joined the Allianz group in 2003.Carsten Schildknecht, who on 31 March will leave his position as chairman of the supervisory board at Sal. Oppenheim (where he will be replaced by the head of DWS, Wolfgang Matis), and who had been global COO of the asset and wealth management (AWM) division for Germany at Deutsche Bank, will join Generali on 1 April as COO.The two appointments have yet to be approved by the board of directors at Assicurazioni Generali.
L’agence d'évaluation financière Fitch Ratings a publié le 18 mars ses critères de notation des fonds fermés qui servent de plus en plus de véhicules de financement alternatif dans un contexte où les banques réduisent la taille de leur bilan. Cette tendance devrait se poursuivre, estime l’agence.Les actifs tels que les financements maritimes, les prêts à effet de levier, les prêts dans l’immobilier commercial ou encore les prêts dédiés au financement de projets exigent des banques davantage de fonds propres, d’où la tendance des banques à se concentrer de plus en plus sur l’origination, les investisseurs institutionnels assurant le financement par le biais de mandats ou de fonds, selon l’approche «syndicate to originate».
La nouvelle sicav luxembourgeois Franklin Templeton Shariah Funds (FTSF) comprendra initialement, à partir du 25 mars, trois compartiments destinés aux investisseurs désireux de se conformer aux principes islamiques : Franklin Templeton Global Sukuk Fund, Templeton Shariah Global Equity Fund et Templeton Shariah Asia Growth Fund.Le Global Sukuk Fund est géré par Mohieddine (Dino) Kronfol, CIO for MENA fixed income & global sikuk, basé à Dubaï et Stephen Dover, international CIO du Franklin Templeton Local Asset Management Group. Le portefeuille sera centré sur des titres à taux fixe ou variable conformes à la charia émis par des Etats, des agences gouvernementales ou des entreprises, en catégorie investissement ou spéculative, avec des allocations tant aux pays développés qu’aux marchés émergents.Le Global Equity Fund est confié à Alan Chua, executive vice president, gérant de portefeuilles et research analyst du Templeton Global Equity Group, tandis que le Asia Growth Fund est géré par Mark Mobius, executive chairman, assisté de Dennis Lim et Allan Lam, senior managing directors et gérants de portefeuille du Templeton Emerging Markets Group. Ce portefeuille sera investi au minimum à 80 % en titres de sociétés de la région Asie hors Australie, Nouvelle-Zélande et Japon.Les trois nouveaux fonds charia de Franklin Templeton font l’objet d’une analyse indépendante et d’une labellisation par l’Amanie International Shariah Supervisory Board, qui donne d’abord son aval aux objectifs d’investissement et à la stratégie, et assure ensuite la surveillance en continu pour garantir le respect des principes et normes internationalement reconnues de la charia.Dans un communiqué, Franklin Templeton précise qu’il gérait déjà au 31 décembre 2012 plus d’un milliard de dollars en actifs conformes à la charia.
Avec le compartiment Liquid Alternative Beta Fund de la sicav Credit Suisse One (Lux), le Credit Suisse vient de lancer un fonds coordonné (OPCVM IV) dont l’objectif est de répliquer la performance de hedge funds avec des instruments liquides. L'équipe de gestion pourra utiliser des ventes à découvert, des dérivés et un effet de levier.Le nouveau produit, disponible en six classes de parts (parts R en USD, CHF et EUR, parts I en USD) et parts S en CHF et EUR) s’inscrit dans une gamme de fonds alternatifs coordonnés liquides qui représente déjà un encours de 500 millions de dollars et Credit Suisse souligne que sa plate-forme de hedge funds et fonds de hedge funds coordonnés pèse près de 1,5 milliard de dollars. Les parts R sont chargées à 1,40 %, les parts I et les parts S à 1 %. Le fonds est déjà enregistré en Allemagne, Autriche, Espagne, France, Italie, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Suisse.CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta B USD LU0858674822 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta R CHF LU0858675043 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta R EUR LU0858675126 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta I USD LU0858675399 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta S EUR LU0858675472 CREDIT SUISSE SICAV One (Lux) Liquid Alternative Beta S CHF LU0858675555
Les trois principales sociétés de gestion contrôlent plus de la moitié des 300 milliards d’euros d’actifs qui transitent via les plates-formes en Allemagne, Italie, Suède et les Pays-Bas, selon le Financial Times fund management qui cite les données de The Platforum. En France et en Espagne, la proportion est de 40 %, tandis qu’en Suisse et en Autriche, elle monte aux deux-tiers. Seulement au Royaume-Uni la part est plus faible, autour de 24 %. Dans ce contexte, il est difficile pour les petites sociétés de gestion de drainer des souscriptions, analyse le FTfm.
La société de capital investissement AXA Private Equity a annoncé lundi avoir levé 1,75 milliard d’euros pour son fonds AXA Infrastructure Fund III. «Ce chiffre comprend 1,45 milliard d’euros d’engagements et plus de 300 millions d’euros de co-investissements», indique un communiqué. Il s’agit de la levée de fonds la plus importante réalisée par la société pour le secteur des infrastructures. L’équipe Infrastructure d’AXA Private Equity compte désormais plus de 3 milliards d’euros sous gestion. Un quart de ce nouveau fonds a déjà été engagé sur quatre transactions dont la prise de participation dans le fournisseur d’énergie Enovos auprès d’ArcelorMittal, ainsi que l’acquisition des fermes éoliennes françaises de Poweo auprès de Verbund.
Le fonds souverain libyen est dans les « limbes », selon Mohsen Derregia, son patron, rapporte Les Echos. Chargé de superviser l’audit du fiasco du fonds sous l'ère Kadhafi, de le remettre sur les rails et le restructurer, il a été remercié par le Premier ministre, officiellement faute de résultats. Celui qui aura tenu moins d’un an à ce poste, a expliqué à l’agence Reuters que « tout retard dans la restructuration du portefeuille et dans les démarches légales pour obtenir réparation auprès des banques nous coûte des centaines de millions de dollars ». En effet, la Libyan Investment Authority (LIA) a certes 60 milliards de dollars, ce qui en fait, devant l’Algérie, le premier fonds par la taille du continent africain, mais certains de ses placements recèlent de fortes moins-values, voire ne valent plus rien. Le fonds va devoir hiérarchiser ses objectifs : stabilisation du budget, épargne pour les générations futures, développement local… Le remplacement brutal de Mohsen Derregia à la tête de LIA par l’adjoint du gouverneur de la banque centrale tendrait à montrer que cette dernière reprend la main et que l’objectif de stabilisation prend le dessus.
BlackRock a l’intention de supprimer environ 300 emplois, soit près de 3 % de ses effectifs, a annoncé lundi la société de gestion à ses salariés, rapporte le Financial Times. L’objectif est de se défaire des collaborateurs les moins performants. Parallèlement, le groupe continuera à embaucher et devrait donc compter plus d’employés à la fin de l’année qu’aujourd’hui. Les suppressions de postes devraient intervenir à tous les niveaux.
Pour un montant non divulgué, la Deutsche Bank vend à US Bancorp son municipal bond trustee business qui couvre un encours de 57 milliards de dollars sur 1.100 contrats, rapporte le Handelsblatt. La transaction sera bouclée dans le courant du troisième trimestre.