As a part of the strategic alliance signed between Banco Popular and Allianz (see Newsmanagers of 25 March 2011), Popular Gestión (EUR5.885bn in assets as of the end of August) has absorbed the seven funds from Allianz Gestión (EUR52m), Funds People reports.The Allianz Selección Moderado, Allianz Selección Emprendedor, Allianz Selección Bolsa and Allianz Mixtofunds are absorbed into the Cartera Gestión Equilibrada fund from Popular Gestión, while the Allianz Renta Fija Ahorro, Allianz RF Corto Euroland and Allianz Selección Conservadora funds are absorbed into the Eurovalor Conservador Dinámico.
Principal Global Investors has announced the launch of a US value equity fund, which aims to single out the best opportunities in the large cap sector in the country, Citywire reports. The Edge Equity Income fund, registered in Dublin, will be managed by the group’s US affiliate, Edge Asset Management, and at that firm by Dan Coleman and David Simpson.
In August, the Gold Fund by John Paulson gained 11%, which has reduced losses since the beginning of the year to 15%, according to Bloomberg, cited by Investment Week. The Paulson Advantage and Paulson Enhanced fund have also gained ground.
In August, ETF/ETPs worldwide posted net subscriptions of USD12.1bn, compared with USD5.3bn in the corresponding month of last year, according to statistics from the BlackRock Institute, bringing the total in January-August to USD139.9bn, while asstes as of 31 August totalled USD1.763trn. According to ETFGI, the research agency founded by Deborah Fuhr, net inflows in the first eight months of the year and assets under management at the end of the period totalled USD143bn and USD1.762trn, respectively (see Newsmanagers of 7 September).The BlackRock statistics also show that net subscriptions were strongest in the United States (USD5.5bn in August, and USD98bn in January-August), and in Europe (USD4.4bn and USD15.4bn). By product category, net inflows in the first eight months of the year totalled USD50.8bn for bond products, USD54.8bn for equities from developed countries (of which only USD1.7bn went to European equity products), USD22.7bn for emerging market equities, and USD8.7bn for commodity ETPs.The ETPs which posted the strongest net subscriptions in the first eight months of the year were the Vanguard MSCI Emerging Markets fund (USD9.79bn), the iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond (USD5.75bn), and the iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond fund (USD4.92bn). The fourth fund is the Huatai-Pinebridge CSI fund (USD3.98bn for January-July).
In a document published in 21 languages, the European Securities Markets Authority (ESMA) has issued a warning to retail investors against the pitfalls of online investment over the Internet.ESMA finds that “sometimes high pressure and aggressive selling/marketing techniques are used to entice (...) to invest, or to use particular websites,” and that “Not all firms operating on the internet have permission to offer investments.” Additionally, the agency says, “ESMA, and the authorities in Member States, have observed an increase in investor complaints regarding unauthorised activities by firms on the internet. Although financial regulations apply to advertising, not all the advertising you see complies with these. For example, there may be no, or little, investor information; and sometimes the information provided is misleading.” ESMA’s key messages in the 4-page release are:•Be aware of the potential risks involved in online investing.•Check if the firm is authorised.•Be wary of promises of high returns.•Be aware of software that automatically generates transactions for you.•Take special care when you’re asked to provide your credit card details.•If you do not understand what’s on offer, do not invest.
With the Luxembourg-registered fund JB Emerging Markets Corporate Bond Fund, which complies with the UCITS IV directive, Swiss & Global Asset Management on 28 August extended its range of emerging market bond funds with a corporate debt product which offers higher returns and better fundamentals than comparable securities from industrialised countries.The new fund relies on a combination of top-down and bottom-up approaches; it is managed by Enxo Puntillo, head of fixed income emerging markets, and co-manager of the JB Emerging Markets Corporate Bond Fund, Dorthe Fredsgaard Neilsen, and Tania Minella.CharacteristicsName: Julius Baer Multibond – Emerging Markets Corporate Bond FundISIN code: LU0784392382Benchmark index: JPM Corporate Em. Markets Bond Index DiversifiedManagement commission: 1.20%
Due to the scale of subscriptions, Wells Fargo Asset Management will be closing its US All Cap Growth fund to new investors in 21 September, since the high volume of inflows limits the effectiveness of allocation by the management team to small caps, Investment Europe reports. The fund has attracted USD550m since the beginning of the year.As a substitute, Wells Fargo AM will be offering clients an opportunity to acquire shares in the US Premier Growth fund, which is managed by the same team, but which is positioned solely on mid and large caps.The two funds are sub-funds of the Luxembourg Sicav from Wells Fargo, Worldwide Fund.
Aquila Capital has signed a cooperation agreement with the Italian group ECPI, which will provide extra-financial data for its investments in agriculture. The two firms will work together to determine environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria for products from Aquila Capital and adherence to these criteria.
The major real estate asset managers worldwide are increasingly excluding the peripheral European countries from their pan-European funds, the Financial Times reports. Groups like Fidelity Worldwide Investment and Standard Life Investments are creating funds which avoid Spain, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Greece. The withdrawal of institutional investors will be particularly painful for Spanish and Irish real estate markets, the FT observes.
A ferocious price war led by Vanguard has allowed its ETFs to attract net inflows of USD37.8bn in the first 8 months of this year worldwide, and to overtake BlackRock (USD35.3bn), Financial Times Fund Management observes, citing statistics from EFFGI. For ETFs where BlackRock and Vanguard are in competition, Vanguard has captured 71% of new business between July 2009 and July 2012, compared with only 21% for BlackRock, Bernstein says. “BlackRock lost market share for all products for which Vanguard has a similar substitute», says Luke Montgomery, an analyst at Bernstein.
The financial crisis of 2008 and the evolution of the regulatory environment have accelerated consolidation in the money market fund sector in the past few years, particularly in Europe. Overall, this consolidation trend has positive aspects for investors in money market funds, as it does for managers of the funds, the financial ratings agency Moody’s finds in a study published on 10 September. Moody’s predicts that this consolidation trend will continue as mergers and acquisitions of fund managers continue, due to considerations related to economies of scale, a low interest rate environment which bites into commissions, tougher regulations, and rationalisations of product lines which may lead some players to abandon this segment of activity.
With key European Central Bank and US Federal Reserve meeting ahead, investors remained defensive in the first five days of September. EPFR global-tracked equity funds surrendered a net USD9.9 billion during the week ending Sept. 5, with emerging markets equity funds accounting for USD1.8 billion of that total, and US equity funds posted outflows of over USD8bn, due to redemptions from large cap ETFs. Government bond funds underwent redemptions totalling over USD1bn, for all maturities. However, high yield bond funds attracted about USD1.6bn. Bond funds overall poasted inflows of USD3.19bn in the week to 5 September. EPFR Global reports that emerging market bond funds have seen inflows of over USD32bn since the beginning of the year. Money market funds finished the week to 5 September with net inflows of USD4.6bn. Commodity funds posted inflows of over USD1bn for the third consecutive week.
Franz Feldmann, head of product development at Union Investment, on 10 September joined Pioneer Investments KAG in Munich as head of product management & marketing, Fondsprofessionell reports.
SIX Swiss Exchange on 11 September announced that it is integrating ETF Securities as a new issuer of Exchange Traded Funds. The provider of products, founded in 2003, is based in London. That year, it gained international notoriety by creating the first ETP to replicate physical gold worldwide. Since 2008, ETF Securities has also launched ETFs, and is one of the top European issuers of exchange-traded prodcuts (ETP). According to Alain Picard, Head Product Management at SIX Swiss Exchange, “the eight new ETFs traded on SIX Swiss Exchange provide an attractive complement to the existing range of exchange-traded funds. Our ETF segment now includes 880 listed products.”
The Swedish asset management firm East Capital has signed a distribution agreement with the Italian platform FinecoBank, an affiliate of UniCredit, the Italian website Bluerating reports. The agreement specifies that FinecoBank will distribute two equity funds from the Scandinavian asset management firm: East Capital (Lux) Russian Fund and East Capital (Lux) Eastern European Fund.
Calum Smith, who had most recently been director and senior fixed income strategist at BlackRock, is joining Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP) in Edinburgh in the newly-created position of head of global aggregate in the fixed income management unit. He will report to Graeme Caughey, global head of rates. He will be in charge of strategy and performance for global aggregate bond products from SWIP aimed at retail and institutional investors.
The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) has decided to create a working group to examine Libor, following the discovery of several manipulations of inter-bank lending rates, particularly the Euribor and Libor rates, it has announced in a brief statement released on 10 September. “The governors of the BIS have agreed to create a group of top heads to examine the case and to consult the market to contribute to the debate coordinated by the Financial Stability council,” Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England (BoE), says in the statement. The Libor scandal broke on 27 June, when the British bank Barclays revealed that it would pay about EUR360m to settle investigations by British and American regulators over a scandal involving manipulation of the British Libor and European Euribor inter-bank lending rates. Since then, the Libor scandal has widened to include other banks, and investigations have been opened in several countries. In the United States, the state of New York has subpoenaed seven banks, including JPMorgan Chase and Barclays, as part of their investigations of manipulations of the interest rates that make up the Libor. Citi, UBS, HSBC, RBS and Deutsche Bank are also among the banks that prosecutors in the two states have contacted for documents in their investigaton. The European Commission, meanwhile, on 5 September launched a consultation to determine whether it need to legislate on the composition of indices used as a basis for contracts, including financial contracts, in the wake of the Libor scandal.
Nearly GBP33bn in assets in the UK are invested in underperforming funds, according to the most recent survey by Chelsea Financial Services, Fund Web reports. The number of underperforming funds has increased from 84 at the last survey in February this year to 130 funds. Among the most underperforming funds highlighted by Chelsea Financial Services are UBS UK Smaller Companies (GBP12m in assets), Allianz Global Eco Trends (GBP8m), Neptine Japan Opportunities (GBP102m), Standard Life Investments UK Opportunities (GBP137m), and JPM Cautious Total Return (GBP426m).
On average, 62.1% of absolute return funds on sale in the United Kingdom which charge performance fees delivered positive 12-month rolling returns, which is lower than the percentage of funds which charge no performance fees which have posted positive returns (63.5%), a recent Lipper survey finds.Taking into account the fact that some funds have been in existence longer than others, the result is 67% for funds with performance fees, and 67.5% for funds which do not charge performance commissions.This finding may go to explain why the use of performance commissions by British funds (unit trusts and OEIC) have been on a falling trend since 2004, when the practice was once again allowed.In Lipper’s 2007 survey, 34 funds had adopted a performance fee structure, a number that had risen to 81 funds in our 2010 analysis, a 138% rise that showed a clear acceleration of interest. But the number of funds with these fees today actually stands at 80 – just 3% of the entire UK funds universe. This reflects not only a slowing of funds being launched with performance fees, but also the closure (or merger) of funds and the removal of performance fees. The result is that, while 112 funds had performance commissions at one time or another in their history, the total is currently 28.6% lower than that level.
Pending permission from the regulator, the British asset management firm Baring Asset Management on 10 September announced that it is planning to launch the Baring China Bond Fund, which will be managed in Hong Kong by Sean Chang, head of Asian debt, who has recently been recruited from HSBC Global Asset Management (see Newsmanagers of 3 May). The fund will invest in debt instruments related to China and denominated in offshore yuan (CNH).
The asset management firm Ashburton, based in Jersey, on 10 September launched a fund dedicated to Indian equities, Indian Equity Opportunities, which will be managed by the Asian equity specialist Jonathan Schiessl, Fund Web reports. The open-ended fund, domiciled on the island of Mauritius, will invest primarily in Indian companies, or companies which are active in other markets, but which derive a significant proportion of their growth from the Indian market. The minimal investment is USD100,000.
Algebris Investments has confirmed the launch of its Algebris Financial Credit Ucits fund, specialised in debt securities and financial instruments issued by major banks worldwide, the Italian website Blueating reports. The product is the first long-only fund from the alternative management firm, and will invest in Tier 1 and Tier2 hybrid subordinate bonds, CoCo bonds, preferential equities and senior bonds, the expected total return is from 6% to 10%.
Like many other asset management firms, GLG will be introducing 0.75% shares with no trail commission and platform fee for 11 of its funds domiciled in the United Kingdom, Investment Week reports.British retail investors will also have access to institutional share classes in UCITS-compliant funds from GLG and Man Group domiciled in Luxembourg from next year.
The trial of a former UBS trader accused of causing losses of USD2.25bn, Kweku Adoboli, began on Monday with jury selection, the Financial Times reports. The 32-year-old man has pleaded not guilty to charges of unauthorised trading. He faces up to 10 years in prison.
The Swedish asset management firm Öhman Fonder has recruited Sven Elowson as head of fixed income and credit management. Elowson previously worked at Swedbank, where he had been head of treasury investment. He has also worked at DnBNOR Asset Management, Skandia and Carlson Investment Management.
The US firm Vanguard Investments has recruited Linda Luk as head of intermediated distribution for Asia, Asian Investor reports. Luk, who left PineBridge Investments a few months ago, is based in Hong Kong, and will work to develop Vanguard’s activities in the region. In early September, Vanguard also recruited Jackson Loi as associate director for institutional sales. He previously worked at Syz in Hong Kong.
Asian Investor reports that Axa Asia is hoping to increase its alternative investments to 7% to 8% of Asian assets under management, to the detriment of allocation to equities in the region. Currently, the French group dedicates about 1% of its assets from the general life insurance account (USD12bn in assets) to hedge funds, infrastructure, private equity and real estate. The current allocation, which stands at about USD120m, may increase to USD800m, distributed between real estate (4%), private equity/infrastructure (2%) and hedge funds (1%). The objective is to reach this new distribution within two years, says Arnaud Mounier, chief investment officer at Axa Asia.
At the Barclays Global Financal Services Conference, Laurence Fink, CEO of BlackRock, has announced that commissions for some large and liquid core portfolio ETFs will be cut during, and probably early in, fourth quarter, Mutual Fund Wire reports.The move is thought to be a response to price cuts by Vanguard, which has gained market share from BlackRock and its iShares brand ETFs.However, these price cuts will not be across the board, as there is no competitive pressure on smaller and less liquid products.
La Française AM and La Française AM International have received permission from the Luxembourg (CSSF) and French authorities (AMF) to launch a cross-border master-feeder fund, which they claim will be the first UCITS IV-compliant product of this kind in France. The fund will be operational from 2 October 2012.The firm plans to establish a Luxembourg-registered master fund, which will be associated with a French-registered feeder fund. This move will allow the firm “to adapt the product range to the constraints and needs of investors, depending on their country of domicile,” a statement says.LFP Trend Opportunities, the master fund domiciled in Luxembourg, will be aimed at international institutional clients, while the LFP Multi Trends feeder fund, domiciled in France, will be aimed both at institutional and retail clients, primarily in France. As a part of the deal, LFP Multi Trends, formerly a fund of funds, would become a directly-managed fund as a feeder of the equity fund LFP Trend Opportunities, a Luxembourg-registered fund specialised in themes associated with new challenges related to globalisation.Patrick Rivière, CEO of La Française AM, says in a statement that “Luxembourg is a base for international development.” Other projects are under study.Primary characteristics of LFP Multi Trends:French-registered LFP fundMinimal initial subscription: noneSubscription commissions: Maximum 4% including taxes, not reinvested in the fundWithdrawal penalties: noneOther fees: 3.65% total including taxesISIN code: FR0010834390
Claire Rodrigue, a former manager at Comgest, who left that firm at the end of June, according to information obtained by Newsmanagers, has joined Montségur Finance, apparently as CIO. She is expected to present at a conference on 19 September in Aix-en-Provence, organised by Finaveo et Associés, with three asset management firms, on the subject of “management of European growth equity funds.”