Sous programme d’aide européenne et du FMI depuis le printemps 2011, le pays a placé 2,5 milliards d’euros de titres à 5 ans et rencontré une forte demande.
Selon la Commission européenne, l’indice mesurant la confiance du consommateur dans les 17 pays qui composent la zone euro a progressé à -23,9 en janvier contre -26,3 (chiffre révisé) en décembre. Le chiffre est meilleur que celui de -26 qu’attendaient les analystes. Dans l’Union européenne, la confiance s’est elle aussi améliorée, l’indice atteignant -21,9 contre -23,9 le mois dernier.
Le gouverneur de la Banque du Canada Mark Carney a estimé que la nécessité de relever les taux d’intérêt devenait moins urgente en raison du rythme plus lent pris par l’économie canadienne pour atteindre sa pleine mesure. La Banque du Canada a maintenu son taux benchmark sur les prêts au jour le jour entre banques commerciales à 1%, un niveau affiché depuis septembre 2010. L’inflation devrait s’établir à 0,9% ce trimestre, selon le rapport de politique monétaire.
Une récession persistante en zone euro et une économie fragile au Japon pèseront sur la croissance économique mondiale cette année avant un rebond en 2014, prélude à l’expansion la plus rapide depuis 2010, a annoncé le Fonds monétaire international (FMI) mercredi. Le FMI a revu à la baisse sa prévision de croissance mondiale à 3,5% contre 3,6% dans ses projections d’octobre, mais il dit s’attendre à une croissance de 4,1% en 2014 si l'économie de la zone euro se redresse effectivement. En 2012, la croissance mondiale a été de à 3,2%, selon les données du FMI. Pour ce qui est de la France, le Fonds ne prévoit plus que 0,3% de progression du PIB cette année, soit un demi-point de moins que le gouvernement.
Alcoa, Sonoco Produts, PepsiCo and six other US bisinesses rank among the global leaders in sustainability, according to the Zurich-based sustainable investment firm RobecoSAM, which reports that Europe no longer has an exclusive monopole in social responsibility. Nine US businesses have been distinguished with a gold medal for their business sector in the Sustainability Yearbook 2013, published by RobecoSAM and KPMG International for the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, which is beginning this Wednesday, 23 January. Germany and South Korea take second and third place in the ranking for number of gold medals, with six medals each. Among the firms winning the award are Siemens, SAP and Henkel from Germany, GS Engineering, Amorepacific and SK Telecom from Korea. These countries are followed by the United Kingdom and France with five medals each, including Air France-KLM, Suez Environnement and Sodexo. More than 2000 businesses worldwide were evaluated, in 58 sectors. Overall, 67 received gold medals. On the basis of a detailed study, each one received a rating that might be based on up to 120 ecnomic, financial, environmental, social and governmental criteria in their own business sector. The results allow investors to identify firms which make the most effort to deal with risks and opportunities inherent in sustainabile development, RobecoSAM says. The Netherlands-based Unilever (foods and cosmetics) is the only business to have been named as a leader in its sector in every edition of the study since its inception in 2004. The number of North American firms participating in the sustainability evaluation has virtually doubled since 2004, from 111 to 194 in 2012. In Asia, also, large groups now stand out for sustainable development.
The hedge fund Core Macro, founded by Cantab Capital in Cambridge, has reduced its fees from 0.5% of capital invested each year and 10% of gains, compared with a standard rate of 2% and 20% in the sector, the Financial Times reports. The fund uses the same strategies as Man Group, Winton Capital and BlueCrest. The FT reports that hedge funds will need to revise their fee structures in coming years, under pressure from institutional investors.
Muzinich & Co has recruited the emerging market debt manager Warren Hyland in London, Citywire reports. He joins from Schroders, where he had worked since 2001.
An equity trader at Schroders, reported to be Damian Frank Clarke, and four others, were arrested on Tuesday morning as part of an investigation into insider trading by the Financial Services Authority, the Financial Times reports. The asset management firm confirmed the arrest, and stated that it has immediately suspended the individual. It adds that the FSA had told it that “the allegations relate entirely to this individual’s personal actions. Schroders is not subject to any investigation. There is no indication of any detrimental impact on our clients or financial results.”
The Times reports that Invesco Perpetual has led an investor coup, which has replaced the longstanding chairman at the transport firm Stobart, Rodney Baker-Bates, with Avril Palmer-Naunack, former CEO of Autologic. Palmer-Baunack becomes full-time executive chairman, and now runs the firm with CEO Andrew Tinkler.Stobart one week ago announced a profit warning and that its chilled distribution activities would be discontinued.Invesco Perpetual holds 37% of capital in the firm, whose non-executive chairman, David Beever, is also leaving his job.
Investment Week reports that David Barron, head of investment trusts, has left J.P. Morgan Asset Management, where he had been responsible for 21 products, with assets of GBP6.6bn. His successor will be named “in due course,” says Jasper Berens, head of UK funds.
11 countries in the European Union obtained permission from the other member states to set up a tax on financial transactions on 22 January in Brussels at a meeting of European finance ministers. This was the last clearance the 11 countries needed to establish the tax, following permission from the European Commission in October last year, and from European Parliament in November. This is the first strengthened co-operation between the European countries in the area of taxation. France, Germany, Belgium, Portugal, Slovenia, Austria, Greece, Italy, Spain, Slovakia and Estonia will be the first signatories.
The UK asset management firm Neptune has recruited Nick Webb as head of intermediated sales for central England and East Anglia, Money Marketing reports. Webb worked at Skandia until the end of 2012 as sales manager.
The commodity ETF specialist ETF Securities is seeking a successor to Nigel Phelan, is head of sales for the Asia-Pacific region, who is leaving the firm to return to his native Australia for personal reasons, Asian Investor reports. The firm, based in London, is also planning further recruitments during the year. Assets under management at ETF Securities last year rose 17% to a total of USD28.9bn.
The firm affiliated with Legg Mason dedicated to emerging markets, Esemplia Emerging Markets, has recruited two investment specialists in London, and is planning recruitments in Hong Kong, Asian Investor reports. Steve Triantafilidis, previously of Vontobel Asset Management, is joining Esemplia as principal, in charge of investment. Michael Bourke, preivously of FPP Asset Management, is joining the firm as a portfolio manager for long-only strategies for global emerging market equities. Both will be based in London. Esemplia is also planning recruitments in Hong Kong, where the former CIO of Esemplia, Aquico Wen, is leaving the firm during the first half of 2013. As of the end of December 2012, assets under management at Esemplia totalled USD2.5bn.
BNP Paribas Real Estate has formed an alliance with the Robertson company to extend its range of services in Hungary. Robertson is one of the largest providers of real estate services in Hungary, able to assist clients throughout the territory. The new partnership includes Transaction, Consulting and Expertise in the areas of office and commercial property, a statement says.
JP Morgan Asset Management has launched share classes which pay a periodical coupon (of a predefined amount in euros) for three of its products: JPM Global Strategic Fund, JPM Italy Flexible Bond Fund, and JPM Income Opportunity Fund, Bluerating reports. The coupon will be distributed on a quarterly basis.
Eric Helderlé, CEO of Carmignac Gestion, on Tuesday, 22 January at a press conference in Paris discussed the asset management firm’s plans for 2013. Internationally, the firm is planning to create a physical presence in Switzerland, in the form of a branch office in Zurich. Developing institutional clients is also one of the firm’s top priorities, which it is planning to make a core area of development, via its specialised funds. The head also states that Carmignac Gestion, which has 200 employees, is expected to recruit 20 more people in first quarter. Helderlé also provided detailed information about inflows to the asset management firm and their distribution. The director welcomed the news that of EUR4.5bn in net subscriptions, Carmignac Patrimoine, the flagship fund of the range, with EUR2bn, represented than 50% of the total. For its part, Carmignac Emerging Patrimoine has seen net inflows of EUR1.5bn, he also announced. Helderlé also expressed satisfaction that the Feri 2012 distribution rankings for Europe place Carmignac Gestion in eighth place for flows, and in tenth place by assets under management.
The German Linde group announced in a statement to the market on 22 January that on 18 January, it received a notification from BlackRock Advisors Holdings that the US asst management firm had on 14 January fallen below the 5% threshold in the capital of Linde AG, and that its stake on that date totalled 4.996%.
Bianca Salzer, who had been institutional business director for Germany at Allianz Global Investors, is joining the distribution team at Métropole Gestion in the country as director for institutional clients. She will report directly to Markus Hampel, country head.
The Berlin-based asset management firm Laransa AG on 22 January announced the creation of Laransa Private Wealth Management GmbH, an independent wealth management firm aimed at high net worth clients with at least EUR500,000 in savings to invest.The new affiliate will aim to provide complete and personalised service according to the propensity of each client to risk. It will also assist clients with the selection of external advisers.Laransa PWM will charge 0.9% plus VAT on the average assets of the client, while all fees and kickbacks will be reimbursed or transferred to the client.
Timo Wolf, who for the past four years has been CEO of Polares Real Est Asset Management GmbH and a board member at TAG Gewerbeimmobilien AG, will on 1 March join Lloyd Fonds Real Estate Asset Management GmbH as CEO. He succeeds Hanno Weiß, who had been director of the real estate unit since 2006 and is retiring. The Hamburg-based Lloyd Fonds has 11 closed real estate funds, whose properties are all wholly leased.
Pierre Andurand, co-founder of BlueGold Capital Management, has founded Andurand Capital Management, which already manages a managed acount, and will launch a fund in February, Financial News reports. His hedge fund will specialise in oil derivatives.
The open-ended real estate fund WestInvest InterSelect from Deka Immobilien has resold a 16,400 square metre warehouse, office and production complex, located at Lindberghstraße 2 in Hallbergmoos (30 minutes from Munich), to a private investor. The entire area is leased to BMW.Deka Immobilien has not disclosed the sale price, but states that the fund made a gain. In addition, this allows the fund to renew its portfolio, as Lindberghstraße 2 was delivered in 1996.
Since 2011, the number of money market UCITS funds has declined steeply in the euro zone (519 over two years), partly due to their new definition under the ECB/2011/13direcgive, which is better suited to surveillance ends, the European Central Bank has announced, in parallel with the publication of statistics about Monetary Financial Institutions (MFI), of which UCITS-compliant funds are a subsector. The central bank has also observed that the contraction in the UCITS fund subsector continued in 2012, more particularly in Luxembourg (-128) and in France (-84). As of 1 January 2013, the vast majority of MFIs in the euro one consisted of credit establishments (commercial banks, savings banks, postal banks, credit cooperatives, etc.) which represent 85.5% of the total (6,019), while money market UCITS funds represent 14% (987). Central banks (18, including the ECB) and other institutions (35) represent a combined 0.2% of all MFIs in the euro zone.
On 6 December, La Banque Postale Asset Management (LBPAM) launched the French-registered FCP fund LBPAM Obli Crossover, which has already passed EUR120m in assets, without cannibalising its elder sibling, LBPAM Obli Crédit, whose assets now total over EUR400m, said Samir Bederr, head of credit and convertible management. The fund has already been well-received by institutionals, multi-managers and private managers.The portfolio is at least 50% invested in securities denominated in euros rated investment grade, and up to 50% in junk (BB) bonds, with an extension limited strictly to 10% for single B-rated securities. The average rating is BBB-, and CIO Vincent Cornet insisted at a press conference on 22 January that the management team will be required not to raise risk excessively. With this in mind, allocation to triple-B rated securities is limited to 5-year maturities, while double-B securities are limited to three years.For the fund, LBPAM has increased its “5B,” or crossover, management capacities, with the recruitment of a specialist manager (Arnaud Colombel), and an analyst focused on high yield. The firm has created a universe of 280 private issuers for up to EUR650bn.The objective is to outperform a benchmark composed 50% of the Barclays Euro Aggregate 500 MM corporate BBB 1-5 year, and 50% of the Barclay Euro High Yield BB 1-3 year, by 0.50%, after management fees.CharacteristicsName: LBPAM Obli CrossoverISIN code: FR0011350685Initial net asset value: EUR10,000Real internal and external management fees: 0.50% (I share class)Minimal initial subscription: EUR1mMinimal recommended investment duration: 3 years
IDFC Asset Management Company, an affiliate of Natixis Global Asset Management (NGAM), on 22 January announced the launch of the IDFC India Equities Fund, an equity fund of all cap sizes belonging to the Natixis International Funds (LUX) I, the UCITS-compliant Luxembourg Sicav of NGAM. The fund (USD14bn in assets under management as of 31 December 2012) uses a strong conviction-based investment strategy for equities of all cap sizes, with the objective of profiting from long-term growth trends in the Indian economy. It will invest in a portfolio of 35 to 45 top calibre equities as well as business in sectors with strong potential for growth in India. The fund identifies major themes and macro trends with a top-down approach coupled with bottom-up stock-picking.
Private banks in Switzerland have continued to post inflows in recent year, but at a much more modest pace, and their profits are not what they once were, according to a survey by the agency PwC, Agefi Switzerland reports. Since 2007, earnings for private banks in Switzerland have declined sharply, largely due to a decline of an average of about 20% in assets under management from their peak in 2007 to the end of 2011. With considerably lower trading volumes and rising mistrust on the part of clients of overly complicated investment products, gross margins on assets under management are far lower (122 points in 2007, 104 in 2010 and 101 in 2011). The Swiss private banking market is increasingly under tax pressure. In this context, average income per employee has fallen 40%, from CHF656,000 in 2007 to CHF395,000 in 2011, PwC reports. A collapse in assets under management since 2007 is also a cause of negative investment performance in 2008 (-22.9%), 2010 -6.1%) and 2011 (-6.3%). Annual growth in net assets did not exceed an average of 1.4% from 2009 to 2011.
UBS is developing its Global Family Office (Gfo) activities in the Americas. GFO activities take the form of a joint venture between the Investment Bank and Wealth Management. The development strategy for GFO activities on three continents (Europe, Asia, and the Americas) has been completed, UBS announced on 22 January. UBS has GFO hubs in Zurich, Geneva, London, Hong Kong, Singapoore, Sydney and New York. GFO activities are managed in a manner similar to those serving institutional investors. Assets under management by these activities currently total USD50bn.
Peter Fanconi, former head of wealth management at Vontobel, is joining the microfinance specialist BlueOrchard as CEO, according to a statement released on 22 January by the Swiss firm. Fanconi will begin in his new role on Wednesday, 23 January. The current CEO, Wolfgang Landl, has decided to return to his advising activities. He will continue to be associated with BlueOrchard as an adviser for marketing and sales.