Asset management professionals worldwide hold the optimistic opinion that no country will be leaving the euro zone this year, and that budgetary union will be formed in the next 10 years, according to the findings of a survey by the multi-management team at Aviva Investors, of 188 fund managers in major asset classes. While 41% of respondents say that some countries will be leaving the euro zone in the next 10 years, only one quarter of them (23%) think that it will happen this year. Among the remaining 36%, some don’t agree with this prediction, while others think that the exits will be offset by the addition of new countries, or will not occur at all. More than half of respondents (52%) are optimistic about the future of the euro zone, and feel that budgetarr union will be formed in the next 10 years. However, only 41% predict that the ECB or political leaders will take the necessary action to restore confidence in the euro zone during 2012. Mick Mansley, global head of multi-management at Aviva Investors, says that “no consensus is forming among managers as to the future of the euro. While we will continue to evaluate the ability of our managers to consider the consequences of a collapse of the euro zone, the findings show that over ten years, most managers are more optimistic and are predicting that a budgetary union able to assure the future of the euro will be created.” About economic outlooks in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany, 83% of respondents feel that the US economy will show the strongest growth in 2012, compared with only 17% for Germany. Although no managers reel that the United Kingdom would be able to turn in the strongest growth, 48% think that the British economy will have the highest inflation rate. As to their predictions for interest rate increases, half of managers (54%) predict that interest rates will be raised before the end of 2013. The highest and lowest probabilities went to the US and the EU. One third (33%) predict no increase in interest rates before 2014 at the earliest.
In a study entitled «What are the Risks of European ETFs?» which considers the “real” risks related to ETFs in Europe, Edhec finds that in counterparty risk, it is not logical to weigh physical and synthetic replication products against each other, nor to draw a distinction between financed and non-financed swaps. Both distinctions are not wholly relevant in practice, and give a false sense of “relative” security.After pointing out that the vast majority of European ETFs are UCITS-compliant and are therefore exposed to the same risks as any fund that complies with the mutual fund directive, Edhec adds that regardless of the replication techniques used, ETFs are exposed to counterparty risks. Securities lending and borrowing, which is common for physical replication ETFs, expose the fund to counterparty risks as surely as the use of over-the-counter swaps needed for the use of synthetic replication does.Investors “should pay closer attention to the top-priority questions which are determinant in the effective reduction of counterparty risks: the level of guarantee, the quality of assets, and the ability of the fund to enforce its rights on these assets in case of a counterparty default.” In these conditions, “massive marketing and public relations campaigns launched by some ETF providers in order to promote distinctions between types of replication on the basis of counterparty risks are thus misleading, and do not lead to better awareness of the risks on the part of investors,” the study says.
Distributors of financial products, particularly banking groups, are burning their bridges with external asset management firms, preferring to tout their own funds, an article in Financial Times Fund Management first published in Ignites observes. In Germany, Deutsche Bank is reported to have forbidden Postbank from selling third-party funds, in France, Crédit Agricole is said to have asked its regional networks to stop offering funds from outside providers and to focus only on Amundi, its asset management affiliate. Mandarine Gestion says for its part that some fund platforms have stopped working with independent asset managers. Rémi Leservoisier, CEO, says “that could become a problem for boutiques if it becomes systematic.”
Armando Senra, CEO of BlackRock for Spain and Portugal, is returning to the group’s New York headquarters, which he left in 2008, where he will be CEO for Latin America and the Iberian peninsula, and will also retain responsibility for Spain and Portugal, Funds People reports.For the management of day-to-day activities in Iberia, responsibility for the Madrid office is assigned to Iván Pascual for sales and Caridad Merlin for support. Ricard Comín has left the business. As of the end of September, BlackRock Iberia had assets of EUR5.1bn.
Luisa Gómez Bravo, who became head of asset management at BBVA in September 2009, will be moving to a new position in the group and leaving her position to Paloma Piqueras, who had already been head of management for Europe, and CEO of BBVA Asset Management, Funds People reports.In her new role, Piqueras will be responsible for management of the banking group’s assets in Europe, Colombia, Mexico, Peru and Argentina.
Global investors have started 2012 with a reawakened sense of optimism towards the global economy and greater appetite for risk, according to the BofA Merrill Lynch Survey of Fund Managers, undertaken between 6 and 12 January, of a sample of 286 participants representing a cumulative total of USD818bn in assets under management.Is this the result of the year-end truce? Only a net 3 percent believe the world economy will weaken in the coming 12 months down from a net 27 percent in December - the biggest one-month improvement in the growth outlook since May 2009.As an illustration of this newfound appetite for risk, have fallen to their lowest levels since July 2011. Cash now makes up, on average, 4.4 percent of a portfolio, down from 4.9 percent in December. The proportion of investors taking lower than normal levels of risk has improved to a net 33 percent of the panel, compared to a net 42 percent in December.One concern that investors have highlighted is geopolitical risk. The proportion of respondents viewing geopolitical risk as «above normal» has jumped to 69 percent from 48 percent last month. This has, in the past, been correlated with a spike in the oil price."Investors are tip-toeing rather than hurtling toward higher risk exposure,» says Michael Hartnett, chief global equity strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research. The U.S. market and high quality cyclical sectors, such as energy and tech, have been the main beneficiaries of lower cash holdings. Despite improvement in global and European growth expectations asset allocators remain deeply skeptical towards European equities, especially banks.A net 28 percent are overweight U.S. equities, up from a net 23 percent in December. A net 31 percent remain underweight eurozone equities, an improvement from a net 35 percent a month ago but the second-worst reading on record. Technology has regained its status as the most favored global sector, highlighting the uptick in risk appetite after the defensive positioning at the end of 2011. The net percentage of investors overweight technology rose to 39 from a net 31 percent in December, overtaking Pharmaceuticals. U.S. fund managers are returning to banks while Europeans continue to reject them. The proportion of U.S. fund managers underweight banks has fallen to a net 16 percent from 32 percent last month. European fund managers have extended their underweights - a net 50 percent are underweight banks.
Stefan Becker, who has spent seven years at J.P. Morgan Asset Management in Frankfurt, joined UBP Asset Mangement Deutschland as head of wholesale activities, in which role he reports to Peter Richters, head of the German affiliate of the Swiss asset management firm.
The fixed income manager Rogge Global Partners has decided to open an office in Frankfurt in order to respond to increasing demand from German, Austrian and Swiss clients, Fonds professionell reports.The new office, which will target institutional investors as its top priority, will be led by Claudia Otremba, who for the past two years had been managing director at Augur Capial. She had previously been head of Gartmore for Germany.As of the end of November, assets at Rogge Global Partners totalled USD32.6bn.
After five years, db x-trackers, the ETF arm of Deutsche Bank launched on 17 January 2007, has assets of EUR32bn (as of the end of December), in over 200 funds, listed 750 times on nine stock markets in Europe and Asia (47 in Singapore and 30 in Hong Kong).In terms of assets, db x-trackers has become the second-largest European ETF provider, after iShares (BlackRock), and the fifth-largest provider worldwide, after iShares, State Street Global Advisors (SSgA), Vanguard and PowerShares/Deutsche Bank.
Jeff Munroe, currently chief investment officer, is to step down in order to lead Newton’s global equities effort. Newton is redefining the role of CIO to ensure its focus on execution of the investment process and effectiveness of the firm’s idea generation. Simon Pryke, who has been responsible for private clients and charities at Newton since November 2009, will assume this new role.Caroline Tye will assume responsibility for Newton’s Private Clients business. She joined Newton in 1998 and is currently head of UK private clients. Subject to regulatory approval she will join Newton’s Board.Finally, Jon Bell, currently investment leader, global equities, will be joining Newton’s multi asset team in a new role.
As of the end of December, Austrian funds had EUR134.59bn in assets under management, compared with EUR133.2bn one month yearlier, and EUR145bn one year previously. Assets in 2011 fell by EUR10.66bn, or 7.34%, of which EUR4.68bn were due to net redemptions, EUR2.2bn to dividends, and EUR3.79bn in capital losses (market effects), the VÖIG association of management firms reports.The 24 asset management firms in the country as of the end of the year had 2,159 securities funds, of which 1,137 were retail funds, 265 were funds dedicated to groups of large investors, and 757 were institutional funds. Overall, 131 funds were liquidated, and 20 were merged, while 122 were launched.Assets at the five real estate fund management firms increased last year by EUR478.42m, or about 20%, to a total of slightly over EUR2.9bn. Net subscriptions totalled EUR427m, while dividends represented EUR47m, and average annual returns totalled 3.1%.
According to the Portuguese investment fund, pension and wealth association (Associação Portuguesa de Fundos de Investimento, Pensões e Patrimónios, or AFPIPP), liquid assets in Portuguese real estate funds as of the end of December totalled only EUR11.2762bn, 1.1% more than at the end of November, and 2% less than the EUR11.4918bn observed twelve months earlier. Real estate assets, for their part, totalled EUR14.3283bn, up 1.2% in November, and 1.5% compared with the end of December 2010.The three largest firms are Fundimo, with EUR1.565bn (-7% year on year), Interfundos, with EUR1.1295bn (+0.6%), and ESAF-FI, with EUR1.110bn (-14%).
The asset management firm Ossiam, specialised in the development of ETFs based on strategy indices, today released the FTSE 100 Minimum Variance ETF. The fund, which is listed on the London Stock Exchange, is reserved exclusively for British investors. The product thus is constructed similarly to the “Minimum Variance” range. By simultaneously applying liquidity filters – in this case, 95% of the most liquid shares of the FTSE 100 index are used as the selection universe – and also limiting the maximum weight of any single stock in the portfolio to 4.5% and of any sector to 20%, while ensuring diversification of shares and undertaking a quarterly rebalancing of the index, volatility is reduced by more than 24% on average, compared with the benchmark index. Drawdowns are also significantly reduced.With the launch of this ETF, Ossiam is also for the first time offering a product that uses physical replication. Isabelle Bourcier has told Newsmanagers that the choice was a commercial one above all. “The FTSE 100 index is an indicator which is commonly used in the UK by private banks, wealth managers, etc., who are highly attached to physical replication.” The product has another particularity: shares held by Ossiam are not lent out. Clearly, physical replication has a cost: higher tracking error, averaging 0.25% per year, due to the cost of trading shares on the London Stock Exchange.
The hedge funds that earned the largest inflows in 2011 were CTA or managed futures funds and macro funds, with a net total of USD19bn and USD17bn, respectively, Eurekahedge reports. In total, hedge funds have posted net subscriptions of USD51bn for the year, while they have lost 4.15% overall. However, 500 funds have made more than 10% in the twelve months under review. Despite an inglorious year, the pace of fund launches was sustained in 2011, with more than 1,100 new products on the market.
Lazard has launched a fund which aims to earn returns in line with the market, but with volatility 20% to 40% lower than the MSCI World index, Investment Week reports. The Global Controlled Volatility fund, based in Dublin, is managed by a team led by Susanne Willumsen in London and Paul Moghtader in Boston. The portfolio will include 250 to 350 shares, and will have a turnover of 40% to 60% per year.
The British asset management firm Liontrust will launch an Asian income fund in early March, Investment Week reports. It will be managed by Mark Williams, who recently joined the group when Linotrust acquired the specialist emerging markets boutique Occam. The fund, which will aim to earn high returns from capital appreciation and revenues, will have an objective of returns about 10% higher than the MSCI All-Country Asia ex Japan index. The fund will be domiciled in the United Kingdom, with a minimal investment of GBP1,000 and management fees of 1.5% per year.
The French financial management association AFG on 17 January announced that the chief investment officer at CPR AM, Arnaud Faller, has become chairman of the technical management committee at the professional association. He succeeds Bernard Descreux, who is leaving La Banque Postale AM. At the core of AFG’s activities the technical management committee relies on several specialist working groups. The main themes in the past few months have been work on transposing the UCITS IV directive and the MiFID II directive for markets and complex products, responses to consultations by ESMA about ETFs and structured funds (particularly about methods for calculating liabilities for formula funds), response to a European commission consultation on ratings, responses to consultations from the Financial Stability Board on money market funds and ETFs, and the measurement of global risk and risk management in relation to the AMF. THE AFG reporter for the committee is Adina Gurau-Audibert.
The Association nationale des sociétés par actions (ANSA) on 17 January announced the appointment of Christian Schricke as deputy CEO. In this position, he replaces Robert Baconnier, who had served in this position since January 2005, and who is retiring. Baconnier nonetheless remains as chairman of the association until the next meeting of the board of directors on 9 February 2012, when a new chairman will be elected. Schricke, who has been advisor to the chairman of the Société Générale group since September 2009, has been a member of the AMF college since May 2011.
The Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems (CPSS) of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and the technical committee of the International Organisation of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) on 17 January published their final report on the operation of registries that would centralise and redistribute information about over-the-counter (OTC) derivative instruments. Some questions remain regarding how best to address current data gaps and define authorities’ access to TRs. As requested by the G20, two internationally coordinated working groups will address these questions in the coming year. The FSB will establish an ad hoc group of experts to further consider means of filling current data gaps, while the CPSS and IOSCO will establish a joint group to examine authorities’ access to trade repositories.
Standard and Poor’s a décidé de ne pas dégrader la Banque européenne d’investissement. Elle juge que la qualité de son portefeuille de prêts est bonne et que son capital reste suffisant. Un bon signe pour le futur Mécanisme européen de stabilité, qui aura une structure similaire.
Le plus important fonds de pension américain, celui des employés du secteur public californien, a signé selon le quotidien un accord pour la cession d’un portefeuille immobilier pour un montant de 500 à 600 millions de dollars. Il s’agit d’un ensemble de vingt-huit communautés de logements qui est cédé à une association entre le promoteur californien Newland Real Estate et une filiale du numéro un japonais de la construction de logements Sekisui House. Calpers a acquis ces actifs sur une période de cinq ans à partir de 2002 et pourrait selon le quotidien subir une perte à l’occasion de leur cession comprise entre 30 et 50%.
Le quotidien, qui cite des sources proches, croit savoir que la banque américaine est disposée à acquérir pour environ 1,1 milliard de dollars le plus important centre commercial de Saint-Pétersbourg. Cela par le biais du fonds Morgan Stanley Real Estate Investing (MSREI). La transaction, qui devrait être entérinée d’ici quelques semaines, serait la plus importante dans l’immobilier russe pour un actif unique.
Le Fonds de garantie américain des dépôts a proposé que les banques détenant plus de 10 milliards de dollars d’actifs conduisent eux-mêmes des tests de résistance chaque année. La FDIC soumettrait ainsi avant mi-novembre trois scénarios économiques auxquels les établissements seraient tenus de se confronter. Ils renverraient alors un rapport en début d’année. Cette proposition, soumise à consultation, fait écho à un dispositif du même type présenté par la Fed l’an dernier.
Le conseil d’administration du FMI, qui dispose actuellement d’une capacité de 350 milliards de dollars, a évoqué hier l’augmentation des ressources du fonds, a déclaré hier sa directrice générale Christine Lagarde. Ce matin, le Chancelier de l’Echiquier britannique a déclaré avoir discuté avec son homologue japonais des moyens d’une contribution des deux pays à la crise européenne.
La croissance manufacturière dans l’Etat de New York s’est accélérée en janvier, pour atteindre son niveau le plus élevé en neuf mois dans un contexte de progression à la fois des commandes et de l’emploi, a fait savoir la Réserve fédérale de New York. L’indice dit «Empire State» est ressorti à 13,48 contre 8,19 (révisé) en décembre et un consensus le donnant à 11. Il est au plus haut depuis avril 2011.