Barclays Suisse a fait état au titre de l’exercice 2011 d’une perte nette de 30,8 millions de francs, à comparer à une perte nette de 13,2 millions de francs l’année précédente, selon des informations divulguées par l’agence Bloomberg.Un résultat qui correspond aux attentes de la banque, car le développement de la gestion de fortune nécessite des investissements élevés, précise-t-on.Les actifs sous gestion ont augmenté l’an dernier de 2% pour atteindre 10,4 milliards de francs suisses.
The ETF provider iShares has launched a series of funds offering exposure to bonds from several European countries. The funds replicate indices from Barclays which invest in physical securities, and which offer exposure to government bonds denominated in euros, with the same rating as their country of origin. List of funds offered iShares Barclays Austria treasury bond, iShares Barclays Belgium treasury bond, iShares Barclays Finland treasury bond,iShares Barclays France treasury bond, iShares Barclays Germany treasury bond, iShares Barclays Italy treasury bond,iShares Barclays Netherlands treasury bond,iShares Barclays Spain treasury bond. All of these products will be listed on the London Stock Exchange and will charge 0.2%.
Roger Yates will step down as CEO of Pioneer Investments, the asset management unit of UniCredit, after two and half years. He will be replaced by Sandro Pierri, head of Western Europe & International, including Asia and Latin America, and CEO of Pioneer Investments, Italy."Roger Yates is going return home to London due to family commitments», according to a press release published by UniCredit on May 10. He will though remain on Pioneer Investments’ board as a non-executive director. This change will be effective July 24, 2012.At the same time, UniCredit announced the appointment of Sandro Pierri as the new head of Asset Management. A formal proposal of his appointment as CEO Pioneer Investments will be made to the Pioneer Investments’ board of directors in July. He will report directly to Federico Ghizzoni, CEO UniCredit.
M&G Investments has signed two distribution agreements for its funds in Italy, one with the wealth management division of Deutsche Bank, and one with Banca Sella, Bluerating reports. With these partnerships, M&G provides access to 27 funds registered in Italy for high net worth clients of the two banks. Among the products to be made available are M&G Optimal Income, M&G Global Macro Bond, M&G Dynamic Allocation, M&G Glboal Dividend and M&G Global Emerging Markets.
The Financial Services Authority (FSA) has announced that it has sentenced Martin Currie Investment Management Limited and Martin Currie Inc (Martin Currie) to pay fines of GBP3.5m. The regulator accuses Martin Currie of failing to resolve a conflict of interest between two of its clients. Martin Currie advised one of its clients to invest in a fund from another client, which rescued this client from «serious liquidity concerns», a statement from the British regulator says.
Aviva Investors on May 10 announced the appointment of Paul Abberley as interim chief executive of Aviva Investors following the departure of Alain Dromer. Currently chief executive of Aviva Investors London and Global Investment Solutions, he will assume responsibility for the global business immediately and will join the Aviva group executive committee.Paul Abberley joined Aviva Investors on its launch in September 2008 as chief executive of Aviva Investors London (AIL). Patrick Regan chairman, Aviva Investors and chief financial officer, Aviva said: "(...) his interim appointment will facilitate a smooth transition following the departure of Alain Dromer»."Over the coming months we will be working through the process of recruiting a permanent CEO and will be considering both internal and external candidates for this role,» he added.
Le fonds de pension de Total en Belgique a retenu Union Bancaire Privée (UBP) pour un mandat de 20 millions d’euros sur les convertibles avec un style de gestion passive. Le fonds de pension s’est appuyé sur le consultant bfinance. A terme, le mandat pourrait compter jusqu'à 30 millions d’euros, en arbitrant au détriment des actions et certains segments obligataires. L’allocation d’actifs (400 millions d’euros au total) est la suivante : 57% en obligations, 33% en actions et 10% en immobilier. Total Belgique a retenu BNP Paribas IP sur les actions et les taux, Aberdeen AM uniquement sur les taux, PIMCO sur les obligations d’entreprises, Dexia AM sur les actions, Blackfriars AM sur les actions émergentes, en particulier sur l’Asie et Petercam sur l’immobilier.
Parmi les actifs alternatifs, les Cats Bonds, nous intéressent beaucoup, ils pourraient être une voie de diversification, ils seraient logés dans la poche de performance. Il n’est pas exclu que nous en fassions dans le futur, selon l’analyse de Philippe Aurain, à Next Finance, peu de temps avant son départ. Nous voulons comprendre ce que nous achetons. Nous souhaitons augmenter lentement notre périmètre d’investissement, mais surtout, nous voulons à chaque fois bien maîtriser ce que nous prenons en portefeuille, avoir les inventaires, regarder ligne par ligne. Nous voulons bien prendre des risques, mais nous souhaitons avant tout comprendre les risques que nous prenons. Si nous investissons un jour dans des Cats Bonds, nous aurons besoin d’une totale transparence.
The US asset management firm Neuberger Berman (USD199bn in assets) has announced the launch of the Neuberger Berman Long Short Fund, whose acronyms for various share classes are NLSAX, NLSCX and NLSIX.The product, which offers daily liquidity, is available with an initial subscription of USD1,000. The portfolio is managed with a fundamental approach, and a way to invest long as well as short. It uses a bottom-up approach in all cap sizes, and also is able to invest in bonds issued by US and foreign firms.The fund will be managed by Charles Kantor, managing director of Neuberger Berman and director of Kantor group (USD850m in assets) with the assistance of William Muller, Charles Nguyen and Marc Regenbaum, three analysts from Kantor Group.
The British asset management firm Threadneedle has released its Threadneedle US Contrarian Core US Equities Fund in Spain. The product is a Luxembourg-registered clone of the US fund Columbia Management Contrarian Core fund (USD1.6bn), managed by the firm’s sister company based in the United States, Expansión reports (see Newsmanagers of 18 October 2011). The managers, Guy W. Pope and Harvey Liu, will select US large caps which are already in the bottom end of their 52-week price ranges. The holdings selected will be undervalued businesses.
Axa Private Equity is entering the capital of Enovos, a specialist in the transportation of electricity and gas in Luxembourg and Germany, Agefi reports. The Axa affiliate acquired its 23.48% stake in the capital of the firm from Arcelor Mittal for EUR330m. Axa PE has made the investment via its third infrastructure fund, which has been in a fundraising phase for one and a half years. The new vehicle hopes to bring in about EUR1.5bn.
In line with indices previously published, the Hennessee Hedge Fund Index has posted losses of 0.38% for April. Since the beginning of the year, the index shows gains of 4.02%.
On 10 May, the SPDR Citi Asia Local Government Bond ETF (IE00B7GBL799) from State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) became the 970th ETF to be listed on the XTF segment of the Xetra electronic trading platform (Deutsche Börse). The bond fund, which replicates the Citi Asian Government Bond Investable Index, charges fees of 0.50%.
The Premiumsphere fund (A share class: FR0010509877) from Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management (EDRAM), managed by Adeline Salat-Baroux and Valérie Guelfi of the international equity team, has been issued a sales license for Germany by BaFin. The fund, which focuses on major global premium brands, posted outperformance as of 29 February 2012 of 113% compared with the MSCI AC World index, EDRAM reports.
In April, European ETPs suffered net outflows of USD5bn, according to BlackRock, which reduced net subscriptions in the first four months of this year to USD2.2bn. Of this total, USD4.3bn in net outflows have been from ETFs investing in German equities.In April, the top three providers all suffered net redemptions, totalling USD4.3bn from iShares (BlackRock), USD1.3bn from db x-trackers (Deutsche bank), and USd0.7bn for Lyxor Asset Management (Société Générale). In January-April, iShares has posted net outflows of USD0.4bn, db x-trackers has posted net redemptions of USD0.8bn, and Lyxor has posted net redemptions of USD0.2bn. The heaviest net subscriptions in the first four months of the year were from Source (USD1.5bn) and UBS Global Asset Management (USD1.1bn).However, all the major asset management firms have posted increases in their assets since the beginning of the year, with the largest increases at iShsres (USD8.5bn), db x-trackers (USD3bn), UBS GAM (USD2.4bn) and Lyxor (USD2.2bn).As of the end of April, iShares remains the far-and-away leader by assets under management, with USD114.3bn, followed by db x-trackers (USD46.1bn) and Lyxor (USD40.3bn).
The new chairman of the board of directors at UBS, Axel Weber, is planning to respond to criticism by some shareholders of the group’s pay policies, by adjusting the bonuses paid to senior executives. At a conference held on Thursday in London, Weber announced that he has commenced talks with the goal of balancing management pay scales and the needs of shareholders in a manner that the latter would consider fair. “From day one, I initiated a broad process with shareholders and our employees.” The objective is to reach a model which would balance the interests of employees and shareholders. Last week, at the firm’s general shareholders’ meeting, many shareholders had lively criticism for the bonuses paid to heads of the firm, and no less than 40% of shareholders voted against a report on pay scales. Last year, 36% voted against it.
The Financial Stability Board (FSB) on 10 May announced the creation of a working group dedicated to improving information from financial institutions about exposure to risk and risk management practices, known as the Enhanced Disclosure Task Force (EDTF). The co-chairmen of the working group are Hugo Bänziger, chief risk officer and member of the board of directors at Deutsche Bank, Russell Picot, group general manager and group chief accounting officer at HSBC Holdings, and Christian Stracke, managing director, member of the investment committee and global head of credit research group at Pimco. The working group also includes 25 heads and experts representing financial establishments, analysts, ratings agencies and external auditors. These 25 members also include Gérard Gil, senior adviser at BNP Paribas. The top objectives of the working group are to develop principles to improve published information, including the compatibility of this information, and to identify major information about risk presented in 2011 annual reports. The working group’s recommendations will be published in October 2012.
The European Court of Justice has announced a verdict. On 10 May, the Court announced that “the law of the Union opposes French regulations which impose national withholding taxes on dividends when they are earned by mutual funds domiciled in another EU country, when these dividends are exempt from tax for mutual funds domiciled in France.” Ten Belgian, German, Spanish and United States-domiciled OPCVM funds, which invest largely in shares in French businesses, and which earn dividends on these shares which are subject to withholding tax, had challenged the French regulation, which stipulated that dividends paid to non-French domiciled funds would be subject to a withholding tax of 25%, while the same dividends would not be taxed when paid to a French-domiciled fund. The estimated cost to the French budget is estimated at about EUR4.2bn as of the end of 2011.
The heads of OFI AM unveiled yesterday major plans for the short to mid-term, which will include additions to its range of asset managemnet products and development internationally and in France. In terms of investments, after pointing out the firm’s three-way approach, with a product range managed either internally, or via multi-management, or through partnerships, Gérard Bourret, CEO, has announced that his asset management firm would soon be offering its institutional clients a range of alternative multi-management products. “To that end, we will in the next few weeks announce a partnership with an English-speaking firm larger in size than ourselves,” Bourret confirmed. Bourret plans to provide a clearer product range for investors, with a segmented range that offers value products that also deliver returns, as well as European growth products and proximity management of investments in growth small and midcaps in France and the euro zone. Another desire expressed by management is to bring more regular and higher performance to these equity products. As the French market offers limited opportunities, the group is now planning to make itself heard elsewhere in Europe. “We are going to hire the services of a third-party marketer (TPM). The fund range will be selective, focused on niche products where the firm has excellence to foreground.” But that’s only a beginning, says Bourret. “In three years, we will be able to say that we have begun.” In terms of inflow objectives, Bourret says that in a closed and virtually saturated French market, OFI AM in 2012 had planned to earn total net inflows of EUR1.5bn to EUR2bn. As of the end of the month of March, assets at the OFI group totalled EUR50.6bn, up 7% compared with the end of last year (EUR47.23bn).
In first quarter 2012, earnings from asset management at Axa (Axa IM and AllianceBernstein) have fallen 10% to EUR771m, largely due to a decline in management commission and commissions for institutional research activities at AllianceBernstein, and lower commissions on real estate transactions at AXA IM, a statement says. Assets under management are up by EUR18bn compared with 31 December 2011, and total EUR865bn. Net outflows total EUR5.4bn in first quarter. These outflows included -EUR2.7bn from AllianceBernstein, largely to institutional clients, partly offset by net inflows of EUR2bn for an advising mandate for AXA Japan, and -EUR2.7bn at AXA IM, largely due to the voluntary withdrawal of unprofitable employee shareholding plans (-EUR4bn), and net outflows at Axa Rosenberg (-EUR1bn), partially offset by a positive net inflow at AXA Fixed Income, Axa Private Equity and Axa Framlington. A market effect of +EUR37bn has also been shared by AllianceBernstein and AXA IM.
Despite a persistently difficult market environment, the savings management professions in the asset management, insurance and private banking unit of Amundi have maintained their total assets under management of nearly EUR1.042trn as of the end of March 2012. This total is a slight decline of 1.9% year on year, but a 3.5% increase compared with the end of December 2011, as inflows have begun to pick up again in first quarter 2012, particularly at Amundi. Excluding assets counted twice, total assets in the unit totalled over EUR836bn as of 31 March 2012.In first quarter 2012, Amundi contiued to post good operational performance, and has also made a one-time capital gain of EUR60m from the sale of a minority stake in the United States. Not counting this one-time gain, net banking proceeds are down 4.4% year on eyar, penalised by a decline in assets in this period, but are up by nearly 7% compared with fourth quarter 2011, largely due to an increase in performance commissions.
The Austrian-German asset management firm C-Quadrat Investment and its largest shareholder, the German AmpegaGerling Investment, on 10 May announced that on 1 June, they will initiate Ampega-C-Quadrat Fondsmarketing GmbH, a 50/50 joint venture which will focus on distribution of products from the two firms to institutional clients. The new joint venture will be headquartered in Frankfurt, and will be led by Winfried Stürzbecher and Jörg Bernd Hudemann, who are already the heads of institutional distribution at AmpegaGerling and C-Quadrat respectively.
In January-March 2012, the German financial services provider MLP has posted a net profit of EUR9.4m, compared with EUR4.7m for the corresponding period of 2011. Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) were up 44% to EUR12.4m, which the group attributes to the positive effects of its “efficiency programme,” which in first quarter of last year resulted in a one-time charge of EUR3.2m.As of the end of March, largely due to positive evolution of assets under management by its affiliate Feri, total AUM came to EUR20.5bn, compared with EUR20.2bn three months earlier.
The Hong Kong stock market regulatory authority yesterday unveiled proposed reforms which would significantly toughen sanctions against business banks which were underwritten for an initial public offering (IPO) by a firm which falsifies its accounts, Les Echos reports. By the proposed regulations, which have been submitted for consultation for a two-month period before being debated by Parliament, various actors supporting the IPO process for Hong Kong businesses may not only be subject to civil, but also to criminal charges. Individuals who recommend an IPO which turns oiut to be fraudulent may face up to three years in prison. This would bring local legislation into line with regulations in place in the United States, but would put the Hong Kong stock market ahead of its major rival, the Singapore stock exchange.
Barclays Switzerland has reported a net loss of CHF30.8m for 2011, compared with a net loss of CHF13.2m the previous year, according to reports from the news agency Bloomberg. This result is in line with the bank’s projections, as the development of wealth management requires high levels of investment, the firm says. Assets under management last year increased by 2% to a total of CHF10.4bn.
As of 30 April, Franklin Templeton Investments has posted a slight increase in its assets under management, of the four major asset management firms regularly monitored by Newsmanagers: assets have increased to USD7267.4bn, from USD725.7bn as of the end of March, due to bonds (+USd3.7bn, to USD320.3bn) and money markets. Elsewhere, assets at Legg Mason have fallen slightly, by USD4bn in one month, to USD639.3bn, while Invesco has seen a decline of USD4.4bn to USD668.4bn. Lastly, assets under management at AllianceBernstein have fallen by USD1bn, to USD418bn.
The Austrian Philip Baar-Baarenfels has been appointed as director of the new representative office of Axa Investment Managers Germany in Vienna, from 7 May 2012. He had most recently been head of distribution at Henderson Global Investors (HGI) for Austria and the countries of central and eastern Europe, after serving as head of distribution for Baring Asset Management in Austria, Liechtenstein, the Czech Republic and Hungary.The new recruit will report to Uwe Diehl, head of distribution of Axa IM for Germany and Austria.
The US alternative management firm AlphaHedge Capital Partners has announced the launch of a managed accounts platform, which offers a range of long/short equity strategies to investment advisers, consultants, family offices, broker dealers and institutional investors. The initiative is a response to growing furstration on the part of investors after a decade of high volatility and low returns on equity markets. Long/short strategies may allow financial advisers to reduce the equity risk profiles of their clients without reducing their underlying allocations.
Since the beginning of the year, the Euronext IEIF REIT Europe index has gained 10.3%, after losses of 11% in 2011, while the Euronxt IEIF SIIC France index has gained 9.2%, following a decline of 12.2% in 2011. Real estate indices continue to outperform benchmarks. In the same period, the Dow Jones Stoxx 50 index has gained only 3.6%, while the CAC 40 index has gained 2.3%. The negative evolution of the European stock markets has been attenuated for European real estate indices. In the month of April, the Euronext IEIF REIT Europe index has lost more than 1%, while the Euronext IEIF SIIC France index has lost more than 3.5%. The Dow Jones Stoxx 50 has posted negative performance of 3.2% in the same period, while the CAC 40 index has lost more than 7.2%. “At a time when stock markets have been unsettled in April, publicly-traded real estate has once again proven its merits as a refuge asset in a context of increased volatility,” the real estate and property savings institute (IEIF) argues.
Bellecapital International, an affiliate of the Swiss Bellecapital group, has recruited Jochen Vogler. He joins the US team from Rothschild Bank in Zurich, where he had been co-director in charge of US clients of the bank, finews reports.