The US alternative management firm Mariner Investment Group on 15 January announced the acquisition of Concordia Advisors, an alternative asset management firm with offices in New York and London, and assets under management totalling about USD1bn. Following the complete separation of Concordia’s activities from Mariner, the investment teams at Concordia, and some support functions will join Mariner. Portfolio managers at Concordia, Arun Puri, John Eckert, James Wise, Chris Dillon and Jason Cheung, will continue to manage their respective funds under the Mariner brand name. The head of Concordia, Best Williams, becomes deputy chief investment officer at Mariner, and joins the investment board, as well as the board of directors at Mariner. Assets under management at Mariner in mid-2012 totalled about USD4.7bn.
BNP Paribas Wealth Management has appointed Florent Bronès as chief investment officer. He is responsible for establishing a global investment strategy and drawing up recommendations on specific investment themes in concert with the international network of chief investment advisors, which he coordinates.BNP Paribas Wealth Management is strengthening its investment strategy resources in order to meet the growing demand from its Private Banking clientele for market intelligence. Given the rapid and complex developments taking place in the financial marketplace, the ability to communicate a clear view of the markets is key for BNP Paribas Wealth Management to be able to provide clients with first-class advice on how to invest their assets. In order to meet this need, BNP Paribas Wealth Management is able, when drawing up its investment strategy, to call on Group-wide expertise in various specialist fields – including asset management, investment banking and real estate – in addition to Wealth Management’s own global and local analysis capability.Before joining BNP Paribas Wealth Management, Bronès served from 2008 as director of the buy-side research office for Global Equities and Commodity Derivatives (GECD), and concentrated on developing investment strategy.
Christian Pellis joined Amundi at the beginning of this year as global head of external distribution, a position that was before covered by the head of institutional clients.Pellis previously worked at LGT Capital Management, as head of distribution. He was also a member of the executive board (2010-2012).However, Pellis has spent the majority of his career at Threadneedle Investments, first in Frankfurt as regional director of sales for Europe (1998-2001), and then in London, where he served in a similar role as head of development for new markets in Europe and Latin America (2002-2004). He then spent six years as head of European distribution in London, specialised in institutional clients in Europe and Latin America (2004-2010).
The Californian pension fund CalSTRS has invested USD50m in the global macro strategy from the manager of the hedge fund MKP Capital Management in the quarter ending on 31 December, Pensions & Investments reports. MKP Capital is the third hedge fund manager to be selected by CalSTRS, whose assets under management total about USD154.3bn.
Fidelity Worldwide Investment has today announced that it is recruiting for its institutional team in France, with the arrival of Anne-Charlotte Aguttes as head of the Clients – Institutional and Corporate department. She joins Jean-Marc Didier, who is head of this activity, with whom she will work closely to strengthen Fidelity’s presence serving French institutional clients, a statement says. Before joining Fidelity, Anne-Charlotte Aguttes served as senior RFP Manager at State Street Global Advisors in Paris, where she had worked since 2006, as a specialist in institutional requests for proposals, covering all strategies and asset classes offered by the group.
The most popular investment criterion for institutional investors in 2013 will be the quality of results announced by businesses, before macroeconomic data is taken into account, according to the most recent European Corporate Survey by Crédit Agricole Cheuvreux, conducted between 23 October and 6 November, of 270 international investors in 28 countries. More than 50% of international investors, and 78% of US investors, say that profits at businesses will be the most important criterion in their investment decisions in 2013. Only 24% of investors estimate that macroeconomic criteria will be important, compared with 32% currently. The survey finds that 81% of investors surveyed estimate that the Euro Stoxx 50 index will rise until 30 June 2013, while 46% estimate that the index will remain in a range of 0 to +10%, and 35% predict that the index will gain at least 10%. One third of investors hope to increase the number of corporate meetings in 2012, as “corporate access” is now indissociable from the investment decision. 50% of US investors who participated in the study would like to increase the number of corporate meetings in the next 12 months. British and French investors value these contacts: 43% and 34%, respectively, meet with more than 60 companies per year (compared with an average of 27).
The German insurer Allianz on 15 January confirmed its operating projections for 2012, despite EUR455m in charges due to Hurricane Sandy in the United States. “Despite the impact of hurricane Sandy, we continue to predict an operating profit for 2012 of over EUR9bn,” the CFO of Allianz, Dieter Wemmer, says in a statement. The insurer at the end of October announced the operating profit outlook of over EUR9bn at the end of October, but had warned that this figure included a merely provisional evaluation of damages related to hurricate Sandy, which was not disclosed at that time. Stating that the figure remains provisional, Allianz now estimates the damage at USD590m, or EUR455m, the total cost of reimbursements to clients and of their associated expenses.
As of 30 April, Peter Ebertz will be leaving his job as managing partner of Bankhaus Lampe KG (a business owned by the Oetker family), for personal reasons. The private bank states that Ebertz is responsible for branches and relationships with high net worth private clients, as well as business clients.Nicholas Blanchard, who joined Lampe on 1 March 2012 from Bayerische HypoVereinsbank (HVB), will be appointed as a managing partner alongside Stephan Schüller and Ulrich Cosse. He will be responsible for all market activities of the bank.The Düsseldorf institute also reports that Ute Gerbaulet (formerly of Commerzbank) was recruited on 1 January 2013 as head of the capital markets & advisory unit; she also joins the extended executive board of Bankhaus Lampe.
The Norwegian asset management firm Odin has reshuffled its teams, following its decision to repatriate the management of its funds to Oslo, Citywire Global reports. Management had previously been divided between Oslo and Stockholm. Vegard Søraunet will take over as manager of the Odin Sverige/ODIN Sverige II, and Carl Erik Sando will take over the ODIN Eiendom/ODIN Eiendom I, following the departure of Tomas Ramsälv. Søraunet will no longer manage the Odin Global/ODIN Global II and Odin Global SMB funds, which will be taken over by Oddbjørn Dybvad and Harald Nilssen.
According to one of its executives, Mutuelle Médicis (EUR2.5bn) has recently called off plans to launch a cross-border pension financing organisation (OFP) in Belgium, “because that is not any more in line» with its strategy, IPE reports.
The Australian asset management firm AMP Capital has announced recruitments for its alternative management team, with the appointments of Alistair Rew and Celine Nguyen as portfolio managers. Rew previously worked at XL Group, where he was most recently managing director. Nguyen, for her part, was an analyst at EIM Management, where she led due diligence missions for investments in hedge funds.
The European Commission will by this summer set out proposed legislation to et up a joint mechanism to resolve banking crises, the president of the Commission, José Manuel Barroso, announced on 15 January. “Following the adoption of the single supervision mechanism, the Commission will make a legislative proposal for a shared resolution mechanism for the banking sector before summer. I consider that an absolute priority,” Barroso said. Barroso, who was speaking before the European Parliament in Strasbourg, welcomed the compromise reached in December between European finance ministers to set up a joint banking supervision mechanism for the euro zone and other countries of the European Union (EU) that wish to participate. “Talks over the bill are in progress with Parliament, and I hope that the final step in its passage is coming within a matter of weeks, not months,” he said.
The asset management firm ECM Asset Management, an affiliate of the Wells Fargo banking group, has appointed Jens Vanbrabant as co-manager of two of its largest funds in the Sicav range, Citywire reports. Vanbrabant becomes the third manager of the European Credit Fund Sicav-Elbe, whose assets under management total EUR467m, and co-manager of the European Credit Fund Sicav-Danube (EUR82m). The managers in place for these strategies, Henrietta Pacquement and Derek Hynes, will retain their positions, but will now be supported by Vanbrabant. Despite these new duties, Vanbrabant will continue to manage the three funds that he currently manages, one European bond fund (European Credit Fund Sicav-Interlaken), one corporate bond fund (European Credit Fund Sicav – European Corporate), and one European bond mandate for Universal Investment.
A research chair for equity investments and benchmarking in the area of infrastructure has been created in Singapore by the Edhec-Risk Institute with Meridiam Infrastructure (EUR2.8bn in assets) and Campbell Lutyens. It will employ up to three senior researchers at the Edhec campus in Singapore in the next three years.
With the Kresge Foundation (USD3bn) and the Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC), Morgan Stanley is participating in the first investment fund (with USD100m in capital) to allow those with low income and limited economic resources to gain access to health care and affordable housing. The fund also aims to finance services to help achieve these objectives in more deprived areas.The fund has sufficient capital to construct 500 housing units with integrated health care services, as well as eight health care centres with Federal permits to serve 75,000 people. The structure will put health care providers and residential developers in contact, since these groups have not often worked together previously, even though they frequently serve the same low-income populations in the same areas.The fund ia managed by New Markets Support Company, an affiliate of LISC, and is expected to contribute initially to the creation of 2,200 jobs in particularly deprived areas.
The British firm M&G is planning to merge two UK equity funds, the UK Select, whose assets under management total GBP81m, and the UK Growth Fund (GBP546m), Money Marketing reports. The two funds are currently managed by Mike Felton, who took over as manager of the UK Growth Fund in December last year. Pending the approval of shareholders, the two funds will merge on 15 March this year.
At the end of 2012, short bets by hedge funds on Spanish equities represented only 0.376% of capital overall, compared with 0.475% when a prohibition on short-selling was introduced on 23 July. That represents a decline of 20.8%, Cinco Días reports.The newspaper stresses that the Spanish securities commission (CNMV) has already published its annual report on the financial markets in 2012, only two weeks after the year ended. In this the influence of the new chairwoman of the CNMV, Elvira Rodriguez, who decided to strengthen the communication and transparency policies of the regulator, may be discerned.
Le Parlement européen a adopté la nouvelle réglementation sur les agences de notation dont les défaillances et l’influence avaient été pointées du doigt après l'éclatement de la crise financière de 2007. Le texte, qui résulte d’un compromis trouvé entre le Conseil, la Commission et le Parlement européens, devrait entrer en vigueur cette année.
Les prix à la consommation ont augmenté de 0,4% en décembre dans la zone euro, en raison de la hausse des prix de l’alimentation principalement, selon des données publiées mercredi par Eurostat. Le taux d’inflation sur un an est ressorti à 2,2%, comme en novembre, a ajouté Eurostat en confirmant son estimation préliminaire communiquée le 4 janvier.
La banque suisse UBS a ouvert une filiale en nom propre en Chine mercredi, ce qui lui permettra de mener des opérations en yuans dans des domaines clefs comme la gestion de fortune. Une quarantaine de banques étrangères, dont JPMorgan Chase & Co, Morgan Stanley et HSBC ont déjà créé des filiales en Chine pour tirer parti de la croissance de la seconde économie mondiale.
La Chambre des représentants a approuvé mardi un plan d’aide de 50,5 milliards de dollars pour indemniser les victimes de l’ouragan Sandy et financer la réparation des dégâts commis lors de son passage sur le Nord-Est des Etats-Unis fin octobre dernier. La Chambre a ensuite approuvé l’allocation de 33,5 milliards de dollars affectés à des projets de reconstruction à long terme.
Le ministre de l’Economie et des Finances, Pierre Moscovici, a confirmé lors d’un entretien sur RTL mardi matin que le taux du Livret A passera bien de 2,25% aujourd’hui à 1,75% à partir du 1er février prochain. Cette annonce était attendue alors que le gouverneur de la Banque de France, Christian Noyer, avait recommandé un jour plus tôt d’adopter ce taux de 1,75% qui ne reflète que partiellement la baisse de l’inflation.
La société vient de mettre sur pied un fonds de «loans» pour financer les entreprises, et prévoit d'étendre cette offre à d’autres compartiments en 2013.
La députée Karine Berger, qui doit remettre, avec Dominique Lefebvre, un rapport au gouvernement sur l'épargne financière, a relativisé les besoins de financement des PME et ETI lors des Etats généraux de l’Epargne hier. Ils se limiteraient à quelques dizaines de milliards d’euros.