Les actifs sous gestion de Hargreaves Lansdown ont fait un bond de 41% durant l’année au 30 juin pour s'établir à 24,6 milliards de livres, a annoncé la société dans un communiqué.Cette évolution résulte d’une progression de la collecte nette à 3,5 milliards de livres contre 3,3 milliards l’année précédente et d’un effet marché de 3,6 milliards de livres. La société de gestion a vu son bénéfice avant impôts faire un bond de 46% à 126 millions de livres.
Le forum britannique de l’investissement durable (UKSIF) a publié le 2 septembre son troisième rapport sur le traitement des problématiques de développement durable par les fonds de pension britanniques «Responsible Business : Sustainable Pension 2011").Deux ans après la publication du dernier rapport, la dernière enquête montre que les fonds de pension continuent d’approfondir leurs pratiques en matière de développement durable. Ne serait-ce qu’en termes d’intérêt pour le développement durable, la participation des fonds de pension à l’enquête s’est améliorée à un participant sur cinq, contre un sur huit il y a deux ans. L’investissement responsable s’applique désormais à un plus large éventail de classes d’actifs. Le capital investissement, l’obligataire et l’immobilier affichent une forte croissance du recours aux politiques de développement responsable par rapport à 2009. Près d’un tiers des fonds utilisent des mandats spécialisés pour mettre en œuvre leur politique d’investissement responsable. La proportion a doublé depuis 2009, souligne le rapport. Ces exemples d’amélioration, qui s’inscrivent dans le contexte plus large d’un meilleur encadrement des pratiques d’investissement responsable, notamment avec la publication l’an dernier du «Stewardship Code», sont autant de signes positifs qui ne doivent pas pour autant occulter le fait que la majorité des fonds de pension doivent encore forcer le train pour mettre en œuvre des pratiques d’investissement responsables susceptibles de répondre efficacement aux défis soulevés par les problématiques ESG. Le rapport décline une série de recommandations qualifiées d’urgentes, entre autres la gouvernance du développement durable qui implique notamment que les principaux fonds aient au moins un membre expert sur les questions de développement durable, la transparence sur les stratégies mises en œuvre, la signature des Principes pour l’investissement responsable des nations Unies (UN-PRI), ou encore l’intégration de l’investissement responsable dans les négociations sur les transferts de risques. En attendant, trois fonds ont atteint l’excellence, le BT Pension Scheme, le Co-operative Pension Scheme (PACE) et le F&C Asset Management Ltd. Pension Plan. Un seul fonds avait atteint ce niveau au cours des deux éditions précédentes de l’enquête.
Le britannique Barclays Wealth vient de recruter un ancien gérant de Goldman Sachs, Kevin Shone, qui va rejoindre l'équipe dédiée à la clientèle fortunée UHNW, rapporte Wealthbriefing.Kevin Shone devrait rejoindre l'équipe en qualité de managing director en novembre prochain. Il travaillait depuis 2008 en tant que managing director chez Goldman Sachs Private Wealth Management.
Selon Financial News relayé par Hedge Week, RiverCrest Capital, le nouveau spécialiste londonien de la performance absolue, compte lancer en octobre le Global Equity Fund (long/short, top-down) géré par Alastair McLeod et Peter Simon, deux anciens de Lansdowne.Il prépare aussi pour avant la fin de l’année le European Equity Alpha Fund (market neutral, bottom-up) confié à Giles Worthington et Tim Short, qui viennent de M&G Investments.
Selon des proches du dossier, rapporte la Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, le capital-investisseur Bridgepoint a acheté pour 550 millions d’euros le suisse Infront, spécialiste de la commercialisation des droits sportifs qui a réalisé en 2010 plus de 600 millions d’euros de chiffre d’affaires.Les vendeurs sont Andreas Jacobs et Nicole Junkermann, qui détenaient respectivement 60 % et 40 % du capital.
Appel d’offres général pour la gestion des titres provenant notamment des fonds dormants, pour le compte du SPF Finance, Caisse des dépôts et consignations de Belgique. Gestion des titres dormants déposés à la Caisse des dépôts et consignations en exécution du chapitre V de la loi du 24.7.2008 portant des dispositions diverses (I) (M.B. 7.8.2008, p. 41.191). Pour lire l’avis complet: cliquez ici
Au premier semestre 2011, Swiss Life Assurance Patrimoine a continué à investir principalement sur des obligations. Nos achats sont répartis également entre les emprunts d’Etats européens ou supranationaux (51% des achats), et les émissions d’entreprises industrielles notées de A à BBB- (49% des achats). Ces dernières nous permettent de profiter de « spreads » de crédit importants par rapport aux emprunts d’Etat français ou allemand. Le portefeuille obligataire et monétaire représente 83% des investissements. Le portefeuille obligataire est composé à 83,1% de titres notés au moins A. Notre politique d’investissement favorisant le crédit, la part des obligations notées AA ou moins a augmenté de 2.8% du 31/12/2010 au 30/06/2011. Cette évolution traduit des achats d’obligations du secteur privé concentrés sur des grandes entreprises industrielles de qualité, souvent des leaders mondiaux ou européens sur leur secteur d’activité. La duration du portefeuille est passée de 6,60 à 6,40 tandis que le gap de duration s’est légèrement accru à 0,17 année. L’exposition brute du portefeuille « actions » a légèrement augmenté à 4,57 % à fin juin contre 4,38% à fin décembre 2010. Cette augmentation est due à la hausse des marchés sur la période. Malgré les divers évènements des six premiers mois de l’année (printemps arabe, crise de dette souveraine européenne, catastrophes naturelles et industrielles au Japon), les investisseurs restaient, fin juin, confiants en la poursuite de la croissance mondiale et les résultats des entreprises cotées en bourse. Le portefeuille actions est systématiquement couvert par des instruments dérivés. Le montant des investissements « alternatifs » a légèrement augmenté au cours du semestre. En effet, dans le cadre de nos engagements de « Private Equity », nous avons répondu à des appels de fonds complémentaires et investi dans un nouveau fonds.
Dans un article paru dans Option Finance le lundi 5 septembre 2011, David-Olivier Tarac, directeur des opérations financières et des participations d’Aéroport de Paris (ADP) revient sur la gestion des excédents de liquidité du groupe: Nous sommes très conservateurs concernant nos choix de support et de contreparties. Le groupe investit quasi exclusivement dans des OPCVM monétaires et sur des horizons de placement de 6 mois au maximum. De manière générale, nous ne plaçons pas directement notre cash en certificats de dépôts ou billets de trésorerie. Cette politique n’a pas particulièrement évolué avec la crise puisque le groupe ne prenait déjà aucun risque auparavant. A cette occasion, nous avons en revanche renforcé nos outils de suivi de la qualité de crédit de nos principales contreparties bancaires, à travers des tableaux de bord quotidiens permettant notamment de suivre les notations et les CDS des banques. Il nous est ainsi arrivé, lorsque nous percevions certaines fragilités, de procéder à des réallocations dans les supports ou dans le choix de nos contreparties.
The Swedish asset management firm RPM Risk & Portfolio Management AM (USD6bn in advised assets) has received a sales license from the Luxembourg regulator (CSSF) for the UCITS fund RPF Directional Fund, launched on 1 September in cooperation with Alceda Fund Management SA, Hedge Week reports. The multi-strategy fund will rely primarily on trend-following models and short-term fundamental strategies. Allocations of the portfolio will be subject to dynamic monitoring, and will be adjusted according to the evolution of the markets.
Hedge Week reports that the SEC has filed charges in the US District Court of New Jersey against James F. Turner II, his hedge fund management firm, Clay Capital Management, his brother-in-law, one of his friends, and a neighbour for illegally making USD3.9m off the use of insider information about the Moldflow Corporation, Autodesk and Salesforces.
The head of multi-management at Invesco AM discusses the causes of the crisis on the financial markets, and the outlooks for the most severely affected asset classes. Bernard Aybran notes in this regard that the equities markets of the euro zone are now much more attractive, both in terms of valuations and returns. Hence his reconstitution of positions on equities markets, via futures on the Eurostoxx 50 index and arbitrage bets on small and midcaps.
BlackRock Fund Advisors, Spruce ETF Trust and BlackRock Investments submitted a joint application to the SEC on 1 September, seeking an exemption from the Investment Company Act of 1940 to be allowed to launch a range of 13 actively-managed ETFs, which would be “non-transparent,” meaning that they would not publish the composition of their portfolio on a daily basis.The range would include the Large Cap Fund, Large Cap Value Fund, Large Cap Growth Fund, Large/Mid Cap Fund, Large/Mid Cap Value Fund, Large/Mid Cap Growth Fund, Large Cap Long-Short Fund, Large Cap Value Long-Short Fund, Large Cap Growth Long-Short Fund, Large/Mid Cap Long-Short Fund, Large/Mid Cap Value Long-Short Fund, Large/Mid Cap Growth Long-Short Fund et Large Cap Growth Active Insights Fund. Indicative intraday value for the funds would be published in real time, but shares would be tradeable at their net asset value only once a day. This formula would avoid significant divergences between the buy and sell prices for the shares and the net asset value.BlackRock claims that the format of the funds would not pose new regulatory problems, but on the contrary, would limit front-running and free-riding risks which other actively-managed ETFs which publish the composition of their portfolios are exposed to.Each of the non-transparent ETFs would invest in or take short positions mainly on the 1,200 largest US caps, as defined by the Frank Russell Company.
Funds sold by US asset management firms took 70% of total net subscriptions in Europe in the first six months of this year, equivalent to EUR63bn out of a total of EUR90.7bn, up from only 40% in 2010, Financial Times Fund Management reports, citing Lipper. Sales of global bond ETFs are the cause of the increase. Franklin Templeton (EUR16bn in net subscriptions) has been the most successful US asset manager in Europe, followed by BlackRock (EUR14.6bn) and Pimco (EUR7.5bn).
Hedge Week relays reports in Financial News that RiverCrest Cfapital, a new London-based absolute return specialist, is planning to launch the Global Equity Fund (long/short, top-down), managed by Alastair McLeod and Peter Simon, two former Lansdowne managers, in October.The firm is also planning the European Equity Alpha Fund (market neutral, bottom-up), managed by Giles Worthington and Tim Short, from M&G Investments, for launch by the end of this year.
The Western financial press editorialised considerably over the publication on 1 September in the Chilean official gazette, the Diario Oficial, of a decision by the pension fund regulator, the Comisión Clasificadora de Riesgo (CCR, www.ccr.cl). Following a downgrade of the credit rating for Ireland to the junk category by Moody’s, the CCR has decided to place 135 UCITS-compliant funds domiciled in Ireland on a list of restricted-access investments. This does not mean that pension funds will no longer be allowed to invest in these funds, or that they will have to sell off shares. But investments in these funds are now subject to stricter regulatory constraints.On the six-page list includes a total of 25 issuers, including 33 ETFs from iShares (19 of them equities funds), 14 products from BNY Mellon Global Funds, 12 funds from Pimco, and 12 sub-funds of the SEI Global Master Fund, 11 funds each from Axa Rosenberg Equity Alpha Trust, Invesco Funds, Legg Mason Global Funds and Baring, and eight products from Skandia Global Funds.Three Irish-registered funds from French issuers are also on the list: SPDR Europe Plc - Amundi ETF S&P Europe 350 Fund, the BNP Paribas GLF EUR funds, and BNP Paribas GLF USD from BNP Paribas Global Liquidity plc.
Enrique Chang, CIO, on 1 September announced that the American Century Growth, American Century Focused Growth and VP Growth funds, which represent a total of about USD14bn in assets under management, have been closed to new investors from 31 August.The move aims to protect the performance of these growth strategy products, but existing subscribers will be allowed to continue to acquire shares in the funds and to reinvest their dividends.American Century states that clients who had not been invested in the funds which have been closed to subscriptions, but who would like to take up positions on growth large caps may still invest in the American Century Select or American Century Ultra funds.
After seven years as deputy CEO of SBI Fund Management, a joint venture of the State Bank of India and Amundi, Didier Turpin has moved to Madrid as CEO of Amundi Iberia, which provides distribution management and advising to Amundi in Spain, and serves as the development platform for the group in Portugal, Andorra, and Latin America, with a total of EUR5bn under management.Turpin will be assisted by Nuria Trip, who joined Crédit Agricole Asset Management (CAAM) in 2001, as deputy CEO in charge of sales, marketing and products.Alexandre Lefebvre, who joined Amundi Iberia in 2010 as director of controlling and development, is promoted to deputy CEO, in charge of controlling and development. He left IDEAM in 2005 to join CAAM.
On 1 September, the CNMV registered the former BBVA Propriedad real estate fund as its ninth “real estate investment firm” (SII), the Spanish equivalent of REITs (see Newsmanagers of 14 June). The new entity, managed by BBVA Asset Management (ES0108933005), was created on 13 July, and starts up with capital of over EUR1.03bn. Annual management commission is set at 1.5%.
The pension fund APG Group, which manages about EUR275bn in assets, and the ministry of Internal Affairs have announced that on 1 November, Tjerk Kroes will become director of strategy at APG Group (APG, Cordares and Loyalis), IPE reports. For the past nine years, Kroes has been employed at the ministry of Social affairs and Labour, for the past six years as director of the labour market and socioeconomic affairs.
The CNMV has recently issued a sales license for Spain to the Euro Covered Bonds (LU0629527333) sub-fund of the General Investments Sicav, Funds People reports.The product, launched on 6 July, has assets of EUR85m. It invests primarily in investment-grade covered bonds denominated in euros, excluding German Pfandbriefe (which reduces the universe to about 500 securities), but the manager, Guido Favaretto, may also adopt tactical positions on other UCITS-compliant funds (up to 10%), interest rate derivatives, currencies, cash, government bonds, money market instruments, or savings accounts, up to a maximum of 30% of assets.Generali Investments manages about EUR24bn in covered bonds. The benchmark index for the fund is the BofA Merrill Lynch Euro Non-Pfandbriefe Covered Bond Index.
BaFin has issued a license for the sale in Germany of a fund from the Swiss firm Bellevue Asset Management, focused on shares in Asian publicly-traded entrepreneurial businesses. The fund is the BB Entrepreneur Asia (Lux), which was launched on 30 April 2011, and whose portfolio includes 50 to 70 positions. It comes as an addition to a product range which already includes the BB Entrepreneur Europe and the BB Entrepreneur Switzerland funds.Bellevue Asset Management will be assisted for the management of the Asia fund (whose currency of reference is the US dollar) by the HSZ Group, a management boutique based in Hong Kong.CharacteristicsName: BB Entrepreneur Asia (Lux) FondsISIN codes: LU060528926 (shares in US dollars)LU0605289775 (shares in euros)Benchmark index: MSCI AC Asia ex JapanFront-end fee: Maximum 5%Management commission: 1.60%Performance commission: 10%, with high watermark
Investors discouraged by slowing growth on both sides of the Atlantic are remaining interested in emerging markets, and in hedge funds dedicated to this asset class. Hedgeweek reports that the most recent statistics from Hedge Fund Research reveal that hedge funds dedicated to emerging markets have seen an increase in their assets of USD1.4bn in second quarter, due to net inflows of USD300m and gains of USD1.1bn due to positive returns. After three consecutive quarters of rising levels, assets in hedge funds dedicated to emerging markets have reached a record USD123bn. Macro hedge funds with an emerging markets bias have performed particularly well in second quarter, with gains of 9%, while global macro strategies lost 1.67% in the same period. However, in the first six months of the year, hedge funds dedicated to emerging markets have not performed outstandingly overall. The HFRI Emerging Markets (Total) Index, which showed zero gains as of the end of June, as of the end of July showed gains of only 0.22%.
Ulrich Hax, who had spent 22 years at Sal. Oppenheim, most recently as director of alternative investments, has been recruited as director of the private equity team at UBS Germany, Das Investment reports.
Banque Alterantive Suisse SA on 2 September announced the appointment of Martin Lukas Rohner as its CEO, from 1 January 2012. He had previously been director of the Max Havelaar foundation, a statement from the bank says. Rohner succeeds Sven Thali, who left the bank in March due to differences over the strategic direction and positioning of the bank. Assets under management at the bank as of the end of December 2010 totalled CHF935m.
According to sources familiar with the matter cited by the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the private equity investor Bridgepoint has acquired the Swiss firm Infront, a specialist in sales of broadcast rights for sporting events, which in 2010 made more than EUR600m in revenues, for EUR550m. The vendors are Andreas Jacobs and Nicole Junkermann, who had held 60% and 40% of capital in the firm, respectively.
UCITS funds in second quarter posted a net inflow of EUR18bn, compared with EUR30bn in first quarter, according to statistics from the European Fund and Asset Management Association (EFAMA). This development is largely due to redemptions from money market funds totally EUR30bn in second quarter, compared with EUR9bn in first quarter.Long-term UCITS funds, or all funds excluding money market funds, however posted a net inflow of EUR48bn in second quarter, compared with EUR39bn in first quarter, with net subscriptions for all categories of long-term funds. Net inflows to equities funds totalled EUR8bn, compared with EUR5bn in first quarter. Net inflows to bond funds totalled EUR10bn (compared with EUR7bn), while diversified funds posted inflows of EUR23bn (compared with EUR20bn).In the first six months of the year, net inflows to UCITS funds totalled EUR48bn, compared with EUR55bn in first half 2010. Long-term UCITS funds attracted EUR87bn in first half, compared with EUR142bn in first half 2010. This development is the result of a loss of investor confidence due to ongoing destabilising events (such as the Arab spring, the Japanese earthquake and tsunami, and concerns about government debt).EFAMA reports, however, that UCITS funds domiciled in France saw a net outflow of EUR23bn in second quarter, largely due to redemptions from money market funds totalling EUR20bn. In the first six months of the year, outflows totalled EUR37.6bn. However, Ireland finished the half with inflows of over EUR39bn, and Luxembourg had inflows of EUR31.6bn.
First State Investments has announced that it has decided to limit access by new investors to five funds specialised on Asia-Pacific and emerging markets, in order to protect the interests of existing investors. The funds affected are the First State Asia Pacific (GBP229m), First State Indian Subcontinent (GBP293m), First State Global Emerging Markets Sustainability (GBP161m), First State Latin America (GBP117m), and First State Greater China Growth (GBP623m).
Fidelity has launched the FF European Dynamic Value Fund. The new fund fills a gap within its European equity product range and offers investors the opportunity to invest in a European equity value fund. It will be managed by Neil Madden, who has been at Fidelity for nine years. FF European Dynamic Value Fund seeks to identify cheap and disliked stocks with improving fundamentals. Stocks in the portfolio have an asymmetric return profile: downside is limited because bad news has at least already been priced in; upside potential is significant as even a marginal improvement will trigger earnings upgrades and an improvement in sentiment and valuation. Neil Madden aims to hold between +3% to +5% overweight holdings in his high conviction ideas and at least +1% active position in his other holdings. The fund will be concentrated, with between 35 - 50 names.
US money market funds reduced their exposure to euro zone banks for the second consecutive month in August, the Financial Times reports. Some funds have begun to completely avoid French institutions. Legg Mason says that its money market teams have considerably reduced their exposure to euro zone banks due to headline risks and not credit issues.
Guillaume de Corbiac, gérant du fonds AXA WF Framlington Emerging Markets Talents, a quitté la société de gestion. Son fonds a été repris par Charles Firmin-Didot, fondateur et CIO des fonds Talents, a indiqué un porte-parole d’Axa Investment Managers à Newsmanagers.Guillaume de Corbiac avait rejoint l’équipe Talents, dédiée à la fois à la recherche d’entrepreneurs, en mars 2004 après deux années d’expérience professionnelle en France et à Singapour. Il était gérant du fonds AXA WF Framlington Emerging Markets Talents depuis début 2009, après l’avoir suivi en tant que gérant back-up entre sa création en septembre 2005 et fin 2008.