In an improving market environment, investors are showing renewed confidence in international equities, according to the most recent BofA Merrill Lynch survey, undertaken between 3 and 9 February, of a sample of 277 respondents with total assets of USD783bn.Equity allocations in February have been at monthly highs since the beginning of 2011, with 26% of respondents overwight in equities, compared with 12% the previous month. Appetite for cyclical sectors (industrials, materials) has been accompanied by a disaffection for defensive sectors (pharmaceuticals, telecommunications). Overweight positions on cash have fallen to 13%, from 27% in January. Emerging markets are by far the favourite global region, with all other regions underweight. European investors are returning strongly to banking sector shares.
The general hedge fund index from Lyxor Asset Management (Société Générale) for January shows returns of 1.30% since the beginning of the year (and of 1.67% as of 7 February), at 952.Of the 15 strategies covered by the global index, only four show losses, including long/short equity short bias, with losses of 5.83%, and CTA short term, which has lost 1.02%.The most lucrative strategies have been long/short equity long bias (+4.76%) and special situations (+4.54%).
In 2011, for the first time, brand has become a decisive element for fund selectors in Europe, who represent EUR2trn in assets. The Berlin-based publication Fund Buyer Focus (FBF) has published its pan-European Fund Brand 30 rankings (see attached document), which surveys the preferences of these intermediaries. BlackRock and Carmignac Gestion have both gained one place in the rankings compared with last year, taking first and second place, dethroning JPMorgan.FBF estimates that the size of BlackRock was the determining element, while Carmignac benefited from a rise in business from intermediaries and demand from final investors. BNP Paribas and Amundi lost 18 and 16 ranks respectively.More generally, the authors of the study estimate that in the next few years, cost efficiency will be an increasingly important factor. Fund selectors are also attaching growing important to knowledge of local markets and to ability to respond to developments in these marktets, which would work to the advantage of asset management boutiques.
Of CHF5bn in assets under management in diversified products, Lombard Odier Investment Managers (LOIM) has CHF2.5bn in assets managed with a multi-asset class risk parity approach, and CHF400m in single asset class risk parity management. In 2011, LOIM took on a net total of CHF400m for the strategy, largely as part of a very large mandate from an Asian sovereign fund.The methodology, which complies with the UCITS directive and may use a short component, introduces genuine diversification in terms of the risk budget inherent in each asset class and sector, rather than setting an allocation and sticking to it.In addition, LOIM, which focuses exclusively on equally-weighted liquidity risks (2/5 equities, developped and EM, 2/5 govies, 1/5 commodities), is able to provide a tactical overlay in order to optimise the results of risk parity.The Swiss asset management firm is hoping to receive a license from the AMF in the near future, to allow it to release a Luxembourg-registered UCITS compliant fund in France which allies risk parity and tactical alpha.
Leland Clemons, head of US capital markets at iShares, has been appointed with immediate effect as head of EMEA iShares Capital Markets, a newly-created position. He will report to Joe Linhares, head of iShares, EMEA. Clemons joined BlackRock in 2005.In his new role, Clemons will be director of a team in charge of assisting intermediary clients, private banks and wealth managers to make ETP transactions more efficiently.
The British asset management firm Schroders has launched a fund dedicated to small caps in emerging markets of Asia ex Japan.The Schroder Small Cap Discovery Fund will invest in 70 to 100 businesses with the objective of generating returns above the index at a lower volatility level than the index.The fund will be managed by Matthew Dobbs, currently head of international and global small caps.
Henderson will close 12 funds as part of a restructuring of its product range for British retail clients. The products will be merged into other funds. At the same time, two funds will change their investment strategy. Among the funds to be merged, the Henderson European Value Fund will be absorbed into the Henderson European Growth Fund, managed by Richard Pease and Wimon Rowe. The Henderson US Opportunities Fund will be integrated into the Henderson US Growth Fund, managed by Tom Asico, Coralie Witter and Doug Rao. The Henderson European Smaller Commpanies fund will be merged into the Henderson European Focus Fund, managed by John Bennett. In terms of strategy changes, the Henderson Diversified Absolute Return Fund will become the Henderson Multi-Manager Diversified Fund, and the Henderson Higher Income Fund will be converted into the Henderson Global Equity Income Fund. The two-stage process, which follows the acquisitions of New Star and Gartmore, will begin in May 2012. It will eliminate redundancies and concentrate on a smaller number of strategies.
On Tuesday, in a notice to the SEC (13D filing), John Paulson refuted arguments by management at Hartford Financial Services Group, which is refusing to break up into two entities, and seeking to retain life insurance activities, on the one hand, and property and casualty insurance activities on the other, within a single business, the Wall Street Journal reports. The disagreement has swomewhat poisoned relations between the head of Paulson & Co (USD24bn in assets) and the company. Last week, the hedge fund manager asked the heads of Hartford to “do something drastic” to boost the firm’s share price.
The asset management firm Métropole Gestion, which offers an SRI fund, Métropole Value SRI, in partnership with the University of Auvergne, has announced that it is extending the agreement in question, and has announced that two new developments will soon be unveiled in this area.The two actors have developed a ratings system which provides Métropole Gestion with internal extra-financial criteria, which managers apply before financial criteria. Ultimately, the portfolio has both best-in-class and best in effort management.Isabel Levy, CIO, says that the SRI fund has held up well in periods of crisis, as in 2011. Métropole Value SRI, which has assets of about EUR15m, had losses last year of 20.47%, compared with 22.45% for its non-SRI alter ego, Métropole Euro. Also as of 31 January 2012, in the past month, as for the past three and six-month periods, the SRI-labelled fund shows better results.
The chairman of Proxinvest, Pierre-Henri Leroy, is calling for more transparency about management pay scales. France may once have been a leader in areas of governance, but it “still has a long way to go to catch up,” says Leroy, announcing the publication of the 13th Proxinvest annual report on management pay scales in the SPF 250, and the first ECGS report on European management pay scales.In order to restore trust between shareholders and management, Proxinvest proposes three priorities, and suggests that voting should be annual on management pay scales (so-call “say on pay”), or else a remuneration report at general shareholders’ meetings. This annual vote, whether it be informational or binding, has gradually become a legal requirements, in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Sweden and Norway. Proxinvest suggests that France should be inspired by the Dutch model, which has led to good elvels of dialogue between issuers and investors.Another priority would be to provide information on the pay tables about the individual cost of additional supplementary retirement schemes in addition to the complementary plan, in line with the transparency of major European firms. The quality of performance conditions also need to be improved, with the introduction of more long-term criteria, for example, looking over at least three years for option or equity plans, and quantifying the objectives in order to allow shareholders to verify performance.
Christian Haake, who has been director of distribution via IFAs of retirement planning products in southern Germany since April 2006, has been promoted to the position of senior relationship manager in the team handling distribution to insurers at DWS led by Harald Salzgeber, Das Investment reports.
Philip Hinrichsen, who had previously been responsible for investor relationship management at Fundmatrix, is joining KBC as head of distribution for investment concepts specialised in the areas of equities and bonds. Hinrichsen will report to Nunzia Thiriot, head of asset management at KBC Bank Deutschland. He will be in charge of advising fund of fund managers, wealth managers and institutional investors in Germany.
More than 50% of acquisitions planned in emerging markets founder on due diligence issues, according to a PwC study of mergers and acquisitions in emerging markets (“Make your acquisitions succeed in emerging countries.”) For successful acquisitions, the impact in terms of value created or destroyed is far higher than that observed on mature markets. On the basis of our sample, the most unfavourable acquisitions resulted in losses for the investors of an average of half the initially invested capital.In an analysis of over 200 transactions, PwC has identified seven areas of difficulty in the processing of transactoins in high-growth countries: lack of transparency in terms of financial information, difficulty in justifying high levels of valuation, risk associated with con-compliant commercial practices, post-acquisition integration difficulties, the emergence of conflicts between partners, and the intervention of public bodies.To confront these difficulties, PwC proposes several measures to manage risks and increase the odds of success in emerging countries. Among the measures PwC quotes are identifying a strategic rationale, upstream transactions, on-site visits and the establishment of best practices in terms of conduct in transactions, which should be adapted to the specificities of local markets, in order to confront high market risks.
Jesús Martín del Burgo, director of the products department for the Iberian peninsula and Latin America, has been promoted to the position of head of sales for Chile and Peru at DWS Investments, Funds People reports.Del Burgo will be based in Santiago, Chile, and will report to Pedro Dañopbeitia, CEO of DWS Investments for Iberia and Latin America. He joined DWS in 2006 from Previgalia Gestión.
The German asset management firm Deka Immobilien has announced that it has sold a 16,000 square-metre office property locate din Milan to the Italian institutional real estate fund Inarcassa RE de Fabrica Immobiliare SGR. Deka acquired the property in 2004 for one of its institutional real estate funds.
Janus Capital International Limited is launching the Janus Asia Fund, a sub-fund of its Irish Sicav. The fund will be available to institutional and retail investors.
Les députés de la Commission des finances proposent d’exempter les petites opérations et l'épargne salariale. Le texte doit encore être débattu en séance.
Cantor Firtzgerald cherche à lever des fonds d’incubation destinés à fournir environ 20 à 25 gestionnaires d’actifs des marchés émergents une mise de départ de 25 à 50 millions de dollars, selon le quotidien. Ce dernier souligne que Cantor Fitzgerald a acquis il y a deux mois le gestionnaire de fonds de hedge funds Cadogan.
Le directeur général d’Hermes Real Estate, Chris Taylor, souligne que le groupe vient d’acquérir auprès de l’australien Westfield sa participation à 50% dans un portefeuille de 400 millions de livres lui octroyant le contrôle notamment de deux centres commerciaux dans le Sud de l’Angleterre et à Belfast. «C’est le bon moment» de se consacrer à l’immobilier commercial selon le dirigeant.
Le ralentissement de l'inflation, à 6,55% en janvier, et la hausse de 8,2% de la roupie contre dollar, ouvrent une fenêtre de tir pour la banque centrale
L’agence canadienne de la concurrence a fait savoir cette nuit qu’elle enquêtait auprès de certains établissements financiers concernant des soupçons de manipulations des taux interbancaires. L’autorité se joint ainsi au cortège déjà formé par ses homologues en Suisse, aux Etats-Unis ou au sein de l’union européenne.
L'endettement vertigineux des municipalités et la montée des crédits non performants des entreprises exportatrices confrontées à une demande internationale en berne vont peser sur les bilans des banques. Celles-ci voient leur marge de manoeuvre réduite pour accorder de nouveaux prêts à l'économie au pire moment pour elle.
La Belgique a adjugé mardi 3,21 milliards d’euros de bons du Trésor, le rendement moyen des titres à 12 mois tombant à son plus bas niveau depuis septembre 2010, à 0,892%, contre 1,162% lors de la précédente adjudication comparable il y a un mois, selon l’agence de la dette. Le montant adjugé est très légèrement supérieur à la fourchette annoncée, entre 2,5 et 3,2 milliards d’euros.
La Grèce a émis 1,3 milliard d’euros de bons du Trésor à trois mois. Athènes a consenti un rendement de 4,61% contre 4,64% lors de l'émission du 17 janvier. Le ratio de couverture est ressorti à 2,7 contre 2,9 auparavant.