The sale by Société Générale of its asset management affiliate TCW to Carlyle, made official on 9 August, is moving ahead, Les Echos reports. The operation is expected to be completed in first quarter next year, but a lawsuit against TCW, filed in Los Angeles on 21 August before a Federal court by the institutional investor EIG Global Energy Partner, may delay the sale. EIG claims it has a right of veto which it acquired during the creation of a joint venture with TCW last year, and which specifies that any change of control concerning one of the co-shareholders in the joint venture cannot act without the agreement of the board of directors of the joint venture, on which EIG controls a majority of seats. A hearing is scheduled for this morning in Los Angeles.
Warrenn Buffett’s group Berkshire Hathaway has announced the acquisition of the mail-order toy distributor Oriental Trading from KKR and a group of investors. According to sources familiar with the matter cited by the Wall Street Journal, the sale is estimated to have cost about USD500m.Meanwhile, Berkshire Hathaway has reported a 72% increase in its net profits in third quarter 2012, to USD3.92bn, due to gains on investments and an improvement in the derivatives portfolio.Operating profits, the variable on which Buffett focuses, has contracted by 11% to USD3.4bn. This decline is due to base effects, as reinsurance activities in July-September 2011 underwent a major upward revision in their reserves.
The Swedish firm SEB has opened a hedge fund for private clients, which had previously been reserved for institutional investors, the SEB Dynamic Manager Alpha fund, Privata Affärer reports. The fund invests in other equity funds, but protects itself from market risk by selling the benchmark indices of the various funds. The product, launched in 2005, has not had a negative year of results so far.
After opening an office in Hong Kong (see Newsmanagers of 2 November 2012), led by Michael Chang, Natixis Global Asset Management is expected to open another office in South Korea, Asian Investor reports. The office will be located in Seoul, and will open in December. It will be led by the Japanese Jung Tai-Hwan, who had previously served institutional clients from Japan.
Generali Assecurazioni has become the largest asset management firm in Italy in terms of assets, with over EUR310bn, putting it ahead of Intesa Sanpaolo (EUR220bn), Milano Finanza reports. This is the result of a reorganization of the insurance group, which has resulted in the integration of funds managed in France and Germany.
Jean-Baptiste Coiffet is a specialist in organisational missions, integration and project management, and is responsible for Asset Management & Fund Securities at the consulting firm Equinox Consulting. With Newsmanagers, he discusses the services offered by his business to asset managers in order to help them to confront an environment in which operational efficiency is becoming a key challenge.
As of 30 September, investment funds from Banesto posted assets of EUR4.222bn, 9.9% less than one year earlier, Funds People reports. This decline is due to the fact that clients “preferred other types of savings,” including bank savings accounts, whose volume increased by 0.1% to EUR45.540bn. The ratio of investment funds/savings stands at 9.27%, which is one of the lowest ratios in the industry.Assets in pension funds have fallen 0.5% in one year, to EUR1.223bn.Overall. Banesto has seen an 83.2% fall in its net profits in the first nine months of the year, to EUR50.1m, after EUR804.7m in provisions to cover real estate risks. The EUR682.5m in capital gains have offset a large part of those provisions.
Martin Gilbert, CEO of Aberdeen Asset Management, has called for a complete separation of retail and investment banking, and an introduction of risk-adjusted leverage in the sector, Financial News reports. The comments were made in a speech given Wednesday evening at the Imperial College Business School.
JP Morgan, BNP Paribas and State Street are the best-liked fund administrators in the UK, according to the ninth annual survey published by FundServices.net and GlobalCustody.net, and undertaken by R&M Surveys (“2012 Fund Accounting & Administrative Survey,”) covering fund managers based in the UK.Year on year, JP Morgan has taken the top spot from BNP Paribas, while State Street, which took sixth place last year, made significant gains. It is followed by Northern Trust and BNY Mellon, which hold onto their positions from last year.For BNP Paribas, the survey highlights the quality of personnel and its ability to provide key performance indicators and to respect its Service Level Agreements. The survey finds that reporting and performance measurement are among the points in need of improvement.
The European energy, climate change and infrastructure investment fund Marguerite on 31 October announced the acquisition of a 49.99% stake in wind farms in Poland from an Austrian-based firm, RP Global Group, which retains a majority stake in the project, and which provides the operational management of the farms. The transaction is the first investment by Marguerite in the Polish market. The fund has already invested in four projects in Belgium, France and Spain. The Marguerite fund was created in 2010 by the major European national financial institutions, with the European Investment Bank (IEB) and the European Commission, to invest in new infrastructure projects and projects to extend infrastructure in the transport, energy and renewable energy sectors in the 27countries of the European Union.
About 32% of fund managers are planning to outsource back office functions in the next twelve months, a level double last year, according to a study which has recently been undertaken by the fund sector service provier Kneip of 130 companies worldwide. Last year, only 18% of managers cited such a possibility.Among the functions which are liable to be outsourced are functions related to UCITS and KIID regulations. About 17% of candidates for outsourcing say they are planning to use external providers to produce Key Investor Information Documents (KIID). 22% and 16%, respectively, say they would be outsourcing distribution and treatment of KIID documents.
Assets under management in the wealth management unit of RBS fell by GBP1.1bn in third quarter, the British group has announced at the publication of its quarterly results. Quarterly outflows, which totalled GBP1.5bn, were only partially offset by a positive market effect of GBP0.4bn. The banking group has also reported a net loss of GBP1.384bn, or EUR1.7bn, compared with a net profit of GBP1.226bn one year earlier.
More than 85% of alternative managers are unprepared for regulatory changes in Europe, according to a survey by PwC, FundWeb reports. The study funds that fund managers have not yet launched programmes to implement the AIFM directive. This is a genuine subject for concern, says PwC, in that the AIFM directive will come into effect in July 2013, in an environment in which investors are increasingly attentive to the alternative option, in light of chronically weak returns.
Hermes Fund Managers, managing nearly GBP25 billion of assets on behalf of its clients, has announced the launch of its Emerging Asia UCITS fund. The fund, which invests in Asia excluding Japan, has a focus on China, Korea, Taiwan and India. The fund is managed by Jonathan Pines, who has led the Emerging Asia strategy since its inception on 31 December 2009. The Hermes Emerging Asia strategy is a contrarian, value-biased, high conviction strategy with an emphasis on stock selection. It is benchmarked against the MSCI Asia ex-Japan Index. Since inception the strategy has returned an annualised 15%, beating its benchmark by an annualised 10%. The Emerging Asia UCITS Fund will be available to discretionary managers, multi-manager fund selectors and wealth managers in the UK. The fund is available at an annual management charge of 1%, with a minimum investment of GBP1,000.
Liontrust will be launching an Irish-domiciled offshore version of its Special Situations unit trust next month, Investment Week reports. The British equity fund is managed by Julian Fosh and Anthony Cross, and has attracted GBP550m. With the offshore version, Liontrust is aiming to meet demand on the part of foreign investors.
The Swiss private bank Sarasin has lost its head of private banking, Werner Rüegg, according to a report on the website finews confirmed by the bank. Rüegg, who joined the bank in September 2008 from Credit Suisse, reportedly decided to leave the bank to enter a new phase in his career. Some speculate that the departure could be related to difficulties encountered by the bank since the Brazilian firm Safra recently took control of Sarasin. Meanwhile, Eric Sarasin will serve as interim head of private banking for the Swiss market. Lukas Stückelberger will become head of the Basel unit.
The Swiss responsible investment foundation Ethos on 2 November announced the appointment of Christophe Hans as Corporate Communications Manager. Hans will also serve as secretary general of the Ethos Academy association, the foundation says in a statement. He will begin in January 2013.
Lyxor has lowered its total expense ratio (TER) in Italy for seven ETF funds from 22 October, Bluerating reports. The products concerned are the following: Lyxor ETF EURO STOXX 50, Lyxor ETF Japan, Lyxor ETF MSCI AC Asia-Pacific Ex Japan, Lyxor ETF MSCI Emerging Markets, Lyxor ETF MSCI EMU, Lyxor ETF MSCI Europe and Lyxor ETF MSCI USA.
The Norwegian Government Pension Fund - global (GPFG), one of the largest sovereign funds in the world, has profited from a rebound on the global stock markets in third quarter, and has continued to reduce its exposure to a crisis-hit Europe, the Norwegian central bank, responsible for its management, announced on 2 November.In the past quarter, the fund, which invests in international equities and bonds, has posted returns of 4.7%, which brings its assets to NOK3.723trn, or about EUR507.1bn.Returns on investments in equities totalled 6.5%, and as much as 9% on the European continent, where the Norwegian fund is a top investor. Returns on bond assets total only 2.2%, however. At the end of third quarter, the fund was 60.3% invested in equities, 39.4% in bonds, and 0.3% in real estate.The real estate portfolio has earned returns of 2.7%. After transactions with Generali in third quarter, the fund has invested in the United Kingdom aince the end of the quarter with British Land, and in Germany with AXA France.In the quarter under review, the fund has continued its announced rebalancing, reducing its proportion of investments in Europe, particularly of government bonds from southern European countries, to increase its presence in North America and particularly Asia.The fund has reduced its investment in French and Spanish government debt. It has also increased its investments in US and Japanese government bonds, and has increased its assets in government bonds denominated in emerging currencies in markets such as South Korea, Mexico, and Russia, it says.Accross equities and bonds combined, the Norwegisn fund, supplied by the country’s enormous oil revenues, now holds 47.8% of its investments in Europe, 37.8% in America, and 14.4% in Asia-Pacific. Eventually, in order to reflect the geographical distribution of the real economy, the objective is to increase this market share to 41%, 40% and 19%, respectively.
La fondation suisse pour l’investissement responsable Ethos a annoncé le 2 novembre la nomination de Christophe Hans en qualité de Corporate Communications Manager. Christophe Hans occupera également la fonction de secrétaire général de l’association Ethos Académie, précise la fondation dans un communiqué. Il entrera en fonction en janvier 2013.
Après l’ouverture d’un bureau à Hong Kong (lire Newsmanagers du 02/11/2012), sous la direction de Michael Chang, Natixis Global Asset Management devrait en ouvrir un autre en Corée du Sud, selon Asian Investor.Basé à Séoul, le bureau devrait être inauguré en décembre. Il sera dirigé par le Japonais Jung Tai-Hwan, qui s’occupait jusqu’alors des clients institutionnels depuis le Japon.
Le suédois SEB vient d’ouvrir aux clients privés un hedge fund qui était jusqu’ici réservé aux investisseurs institutionnels, le SEB Dynamic Manager Alpha fund, rapporte Privata Affärer. Le fonds est investi dans d’autres fonds actions mais il se protège du risque de marché en vendant les indices des différents fonds. Lancé en 2005, le produit n’a pas connu d’année négative jusqu’à présent.
Le directeur de la filiale luxembourgeoise de la Banque Privée Edmond de Rothschild, Frédéric Otto, quitte la banque. Il part à sa propre demande pour se consacrer à d’autres défis, a indiqué la banque genevoise dans un communiqué publié le 2 novembre. Le conseil d’administration réglera sa succession dans les prochains jours.
Syz & Co a remanié sa gamme luxembourgeoise Oyster, révèle Citywire. Plusieurs fonds ont été fusionnés, fermés ou repositionnés, selon une note lue par le site Internet. Les changements vont affecter sept fonds couvrant les actions américaines, les actions européennes, les actions latino-américaines et les actions émergentes.
Le fonds de pension public norvégien, l’un des plus gros fonds souverains au monde, a profité du rebond des Bourses mondiales au troisième trimestre et continué à réduire son exposition à une Europe en crise, a annoncé le 2 novembre la banque centrale norvégienne chargée de sa gestion.Au cours du trimestre écoulé, le fonds investi en actions et obligations internationales a enregistré un rendement de 4,7%, ce qui a porté son encours à 3.723 milliards de couronnes, soit environ 507,1 milliards d’euros. Le rendement des investissements en actions s’est élevé à 6,5%, atteignant même 9% sur le Vieux Continent où le fonds norvégien est un investisseur de premier ordre. Le rendement de l’allocation obligataire s’inscrit en revanche à seulement 2,2%. A la fin du troisième trimestre, le fonds était investi à 60,3% en actions, à 39,4% en obligations et à 0,3% en immobilier. Le portefeuille immobilier a dégagé un rendement de 2,7%. Après des transactions avec Generali au troisième trimestre, le fonds a depuis la fin du trimestre investi au Royaume-Uni avec British Land et en Allemagne avec AXA France. Au cours du trimestre écoulé, le fonds a continué son rééquilibrage annoncé, en réduisant la part de ses investissements en Europe --surtout dans les obligations d’Etat des pays du sud-- pour renforcer sa présence sur le continent américain et surtout en Asie. D’ailleurs, il a confié un mandat de 300 millions de dollars à la société de gestion coréenne Truston AMC pour investir dans des actions locales, selon AsianInvestor. Le fonds a notamment réduit ses avoirs dans les dettes souveraines française et espagnole. Il a par ailleurs augmenté ses investissements dans les obligations d’Etat américaines et japonaises et accru ses actifs dans les obligations d’Etat libellées en devises des économies émergentes comme la Corée du Sud, le Mexique et la Russie, précise-t-il. Actions et obligations confondues, le fonds norvégien, alimenté par les énormes recettes pétrolières du pays, détient aujourd’hui 47,8% de ses investissements en Europe, 37,8% en Amérique et 14,4% en Asie-Pacifique. A terme, pour mieux refléter la répartition géographique de l'économie réelle, l’objectif est de faire passer ces parts à respectivement 41%, 40% et 19%.
Spécialiste des missions d'organisation, d’intégration et de gestion de projet, Jean-Baptiste Coiffet est responsable Asset Management & Fund Securities Services au sein du cabinet de conseil Equinox Consulting. Il revient pour Newsmanagers sur les services offerts par son entreprise aux asset managers pour les aider à affronter un environnement où l'efficacité opérationnelle devient un enjeu crucial.
Presque une multiplication par deux. Quelque 32% des gestionnaires de fonds envisagent d’externaliser des fonctions de back office au cours des douze prochains mois, selon une enquête que vient de réaliser le fournisseur de services au secteur des fonds Kneip auprès de 130 sociétés dans le monde entier. L’an dernier, seulement 18% des gestionnaires avaient évoqué une telle possibilité.Parmi les fonctions identifiées susceptibles d'être externalisées figurent notamment des fonctions liées à la réglementation Ucits et au DICI (document d’information clé pour l’investisseur ou KIID en anglais). Environ 17% des candidats à l’externalisation ont indiqué qu’ils entendaient recourir à des prestataires externes pour leur production de DICI. En outre, 22% et 16% respectivement ont précisé qu’ils externaliseraient la diffusion et le traitement de leurs DICI.
Depuis le 1er novembre, six nouveaux fonds de droit néerlandais de BNP Paribas Fund II N.V., BNP Paribas Fund III N.V., and BNP Paribas OBAM N.V. ont été admis à la négociation sur Fund Service de NYSE Euronext.Il s’agit de:BNP EUR OBL FONDS P (NL0010261475) chargé à 0,57 %, qui réplique le Ctitigroup WGBI EMU (RI),BNP GL PROP SEC FD P (NL0010261483) sur le FTSE EPRA NAREIT Global (NR) (Dutch tax rate) chargé à 0,87 % BNP HIGH INC PR FD P (NL0010261491) sur le FTSE EPRA NAREIT Global Dividend + (hedged in EUR) (NR) BNP GL HIGH IN EQ P (NL0010261509) sur le S&P High Income Equity World (hedged in EUR) (NR) et BNP AS PAC HI INC P (NL0010261517) sur le S&P High Income Equity Asia Pacific (hedged in EUR) (NR), tous trois également chargés à 0,87 %ainsi que du BNP OBAM P (NL0010261525) sur le MSCI World (RI), dont le TFE est de 0,60 %.Au total Euronext Funds Service cote désormais 192 fonds.
La société de gestion SwissLife AM qui concourt au sein des mandats d’amLeague s’est impliquée dans la mise en place de portefeuilles investissables à destination des investisseurs institutionnels. Le fonds de Swiss Life AM qui se réfère à une stratégie dite SL amLeague actions euro TOP3 construite suivant une approche systématique et exploitant les données de la plateforme amLeague, sélectionne chaque mois trois asset-managers dont la gestion a été retenue et agrégée en fonction des résultats d’un algorithme. Une pondération fixe est attribuée à chacune des trois sociétés retenues : 4/9 pour la mieux considérée, 3/9 pour la suivante et 2/9 pour la dernière. Pour ce mois de novembre, les trois sociétés de gestion retenues sont respectivement Alliance Bernstein, Mandarine Gestion et Federal Finance Investissements.Le mois dernier, Allianz GI, Dexia AM et Ecofi Investissements avaient été retenues, permettant à l’indice de progresser de 0,38 %.
Lyxor a abaissé les frais sur encours (TFE) de sept ETF à compter du 22 octobre, rapporte Bluerating. Les produits concernés sont les suivants : Lyxor ETF EURO STOXX 50, Lyxor ETF Japan, Lyxor ETF MSCI AC Asia-Pacific Ex Japan, Lyxor ETF MSCI Emerging Markets, Lyxor ETF MSCI EMU, Lyxor ETF MSCI Europe et Lyxor ETF MSCI USA.