p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } ML Capital Asset Management (ML Capital) on 20 September announced that the first management firm to use the Irish-domiciled, UCITS-compliant Montlake platform will be Clareville Capital Partners, the hedge fund founded by David Yarrow. The fund on offer, a UCITS-compliant version of the Pegasus Fund (long/short UK equities strategy), launched 13 years ago, which will be available from 1 October, will be co-managed by David Yarrow and Angus Donaldson.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The New York-based alternative management firm Sandell Asset Management is planning to launch a UCITS-compliant merger/acquisition arbitrage fund in early October, Citywire reports. The fund, Castlerigg Merger Arbitrage, will be managed by the Swedish Tom Sandell, who founded the eponymous fund in 1998. The fund, domiciled in Ireland, will deploy a strategy which Sandell has been using for more than 12 years for its flagship hedge fund, Castlerigg International. The fund, which will invest in announced merger and acquisition transactions, aims for annualised returns of 10% to 12% over the long term. Assets under management at Sandell total about USD1bn.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } A council of ministers of the Federal government will pass a law this 22 September to strengthen investor protection and improve the functioning of capital markets, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. The proposed legislation imposes a two-year minimal investment duration for investments in open-ended real estate funds, except withdrawals of up to EUR5,000 per month per subscriber. The new rules would impose 5% and 10% withdrawal penalties in the third and fourth years. In addition, it relaxes rules for sales of properties in the portfolio.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The US multi-management firm Virtus Investment Partners has announced the launch of an international equities fund, the Virtus International Equity Fund. The new vehicle is advised by the London management firm Pyford International (Bank of Montreal), and proposes to invest in 15 to 20 developed and emerging markets. Stock-picking then follows a fundamental analysis process. As of 30 June 2010, assets under management at Cirtus totalled slightly over USD25bn.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Russell Investments on 20 September announced the recruitment of Kurt Zyla as CEO for publicly-traded derivatives. Zyla will be based in New York, and will be in charge of coordinating efforts to expand into new markets as well as expanding development and release of new products. Zyla previously worked for BNY Mellon as head of investment strategy for indices and ETFs at Mellon Capital Management.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The sales team at PIM Gestion France has recently made two additions. Florent Delorme joined the management firm as director of sales from 1 July this year. He previously served as director of institutional clients at Natixis Asset Management. Philippe Lorent joined PIM Gestion France on 9 August as head of commercial relations. Lorent, previously in charge of clients at the Paris office of Franklin Templeton, handled relations with multi-managers, private banks, and family offices. The arrivals follow the departures of their predecessors, including Thomas Couvret, who joined Uram, a management firm founded in 2007 by two managers specialised in natural resources, in Geneva.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The alternative management firm Partners Group Holding SA announced on 21 September in a statement that it had concluded the largest direct investment program in its history, “Partners Group Direct Investments,” after the upper limit of EUR650m was reached. The program was launched in 2009. At the end of second quarter 2010, the portfolio included 19 investments.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Wealthbriefing reports that UBS has set up a new division, the Global Family Office Gruop, a joint venture of the ultra high net worth (UHNW) international segment and the investment bank. The new unit, announced in an internal memo, will be co-managed by Joe Stadler, also head of the UHNW segment,a nd Jerry Wattenberg, a former managing director from Goldman Sachs, who worked at JTW International before joining UBS. The memo, obtained by Wealthbriefing, says that UBS would like to concentrate primarily on the 250 most important clients or prospects, who represent about 2% of the high net worth client base at UBS worldwide. UBS will provide more details about its plans in this area in late October.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asian Investor reports that State Street Global Advisors (SsgA) is planning to launch more ETFs dedicated to Asia, following the successful launch of SPDR FTSE Greater China ETF, listed in Hong Kong, which invests mostly in Hong Kong-listed equities, and not “A” class shares (for Chinese domestic investors). The Greater China ETF was housed at an umbrella company to facilitate the launch of other products of the same type in the future.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } For the stock markets, the departure of Alessandro Profumo from the management at UniCredit will probably eventually result in a refocus on Italy for the bank, Il Sole – 24 Ore reports. The newspaper also expresses doubts that the sale of Pioneer is a certainty, as it would cost the group a major source of commissions and would bring in EUR1.2bn that the bank doesn’t really need, as its capital ratios are already above the Basel III requirements.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asesores y Gestores Financieros, an affiliate of EFG International, has recruited three seniors, Funds People reports. They are Pablo Nuñez (ex Merrill Lynch Private Banking), Javier Irondo, director of a branch of Popular Banca Privada, and Rubén Ayuso (AllfundsBank).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The crisis has ravaged the portfolios of some Spanish high net worth families, and the real estate collapse has brought down some family offices, at least four of which have been obliged to seek the assistance of lenders to maintain liquidity, Cinco Días reports. The EAFI association of financial advisers, says that the situation of technical bankruptcy for some high net worth families is related to excessive leverage and to investments made without risk controls.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Since the financial crisis has driven investors from the equity markets, assets in bond ETFs have exploded: they now total over USD130bn, compared with USD20.5bn at the end of 2006, according to statistics from Morningstar, reported by the Wall Street Journal. In this segment, iShares continues to dominate, with a market share of 70%, but the competition is intensifying, with the arrival of products from State Street and Vanguard, among others, often with lower fees. Among the new actors, there are also PowerShares (Invesco) and Pimco, the latter of which has an actively-managed bond ETF which has already attracted USD349m. In total, more than 30 bond ETFs are available, but iShares (BlackRock) is the provider which offers the most complete range by far, a spokesperson for the firm points out.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On the evening of 20 September, Eaton Vance Management, an affiliate of Eaton Vance Corp., announced the launch of the mutual fund Eaton Vance Global Macro Absolute Return Advantage Fund, managed by the bond group at the management firm, which is responsible for USD11bn (as of 31 August). The fund, which aims for absolute returns, will in normal periods invest in bonds, currencies and sovereign fixed income issuers, as well as in corporate bonds, equities, municipal bonds and investments related to commodities. At least 40% of its assets will be invested abroad. Michael Cirami, co-manager of the portfolio, says that it is a country picker fund, which seeks to identify divergences between the fundamentals of a country and the valuation of assets on its markets. Compared with the Global Macro Absolute Return Fund, the Advantage has two major differences: on the one hand, lower exposure to frontier markets, and on the other, higher performance objectives, coupled with acceptance of a higher performance volatility.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } DWS Investments on 21 September announced the launch of the DWS Top Dividende fund (ISIN code: DE0009848119) in France. The DWS Top Dividende fund proposes a global equities strategy, accompanied by an opportunity for regular returns. The fund invests in equities likely to offer higher dividends than the market average. The portfolio aims for returns from dividends of 4.5%. The DWS Top Dividende fund was launched by DWS Investments in 2003 in Germany, and has posted excellent returns, regularly outperforming its benchmark (MSCI World High Dividend Yield Index) over 1, 3 and 5 years.
Citywire reports that Brevan Howard has launched a UCITS-format fund dedicated to emerging market currencies. The fund, launched with about USD110m in seed capital, will be internally managed, with Filippo Cipriani as lead manager. The announcement is significant insofar as the largest European hedge fund has often been criticised for previously recruiting an external team (which reports to Philippe Lespinard) to manage the Absolute Return Bond Plus fund, which was not popular with investors.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 21 September, Cazenove Capital announced that it has submitted an application to the FSA to authorise it to launch the Cazenove Diversity Income Fund, a multi-asset class, multi-managed fund managed by Marcus Brookes and Robin McDonald, who already manage the Cazenove Multi-Manager Diversity Fund. The product will be launched in fourth quarter, and aims for performance equivalent to the evolution of the consumer price index in the mid-term, with average income of 4% per year. It will invest 40% in equities and 40% in bonds and cash, while 20% will be allocated to alternative investments. Minimal initial subscription is set at GBP1,000. Front-end fee will be 5%, and management commission 1%.
Assets in emerging market bond funds swelled by 42% in 2009, rising from EUR44.5bn to EUR63.2bn, yet such growth pales beside activity over the first seven months of this year, with a further rise in assets of 53%, reaching EUR96.4bn by the end of July, according to Lipper. This is mainly driven by the performance of the underlying asset class. The scale of the performance impact can be seen with record-breaking sales of EUR25.2bn from European investors accounting for a quarter of asset growth in 2010. Stellar returns help to explain investor appetite for these funds, which prompts the resulting question — are flows about to dry up, asks Lipper? Over the past three months flows have accelerated, so there is no clear sign of investors reaching the bottom of the well just yet. The top emerging market bond group by assets is Pictet, with EUR7,699.9m, ahead of Shroders, Ashmore, Franklin Templeton and GAM Holding.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The CNMV has issued a license for sale of the Credit Suisse Solutions (Lux) Prima Multi-Strategy fund in Spain. It is a UCITS-compliant multi-strategy fund of hedge funds, which replicates a non-UCITS III-compliant product. Assets in the product, launched in July, total EUR121m.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The team from Fortis Investments which recently joined J.P. Morgan Asset Management (Pierre-Yves Bareau, Alain Defise, Didier Lambert and Michal Wozniak; see Newsmanagers of 19 April 2010) has already made its mark. Assets under management total roughly USD1.5bn, including a special fund for the Spanish market (USD100m), a mandate for a US client (60% equities, 40% corporate bonds) worth USD268m, and corporate bond allocations from emerging markets teams for other funds. The most recent fund from the team is the sub-fund of the Luxembourg Sicav JP Morgan Funds (JP Morgan Funds -Emerging Market Corporate Bond Fund, which has no AMF license so far), with seed capital of EUR15m, launched on 22 July in Luxembourg (and already licensed in Germany), for which the portfolio managers are Bareau and Defise. The fund invests solely in US dollar-denominated debt, though there are also Euro-hedged shares available. The benchmark index is the JPMorgan Corporate Emerging Markets Bond Index (CEMBI) Broad Diversified.
En août, selon les données iShares pour L'Agefi, la collecte s’est élevée à 1,3 milliard d’euros, loin de celle de juillet. L'obligataire et les matières agricoles souffrent
J.P. Morgan Asset Management - Global Real Assets a annoncé le 17 septembre qu’en plus de sa nouvelle équipe à Paris (lire notre article du 17 septembre), une autre équipe de professionnels confirmés viendra renforcer son antenne francfortoise. Elle sera dirigée par Michael Ramm, co-head of acquisitions du groupe immobilier de JPMAM.Ce groupe immobilier est présent en Allemagne depuis 2005 et gère dans ce pays un portefeuille d’environ 300.000 mètres carrés.
A compter du 20 septembre, la banque directe munichoise DAB bank propose une sélection de plans d'épargne (minimum 50 euros mensuels) en ETF de db x-trackers et en ETC de db ETC sans aucun frais de transaction, ces frais étant pris en charge par la Deutsche Bank, qui les rembourse au titulaire. Cet accord de coopération a une validité initiale de cinq ans renouvelable et elle concerne aussi bien les plans d'épargne déjà signés que ceux qui le seront ultérieurement.Le démarrage de cette collaboration porte à 59 le nombre d’ETF de db x-trackers commercialisés au travers de DAB bank. Le programme de la banque directe inclut aussi pour la première fois sept db ETC.
Lundi 20 septembre, Source a précise que son nouvel ETF irlandais BofAML Hedge Fund Factor Source, qui est conforme à la directive OPCVM III (lire notre article du 20 septembre) est disponible en dollars et en euros. Ils répliquent l’indice de stratégie Merrill Lynch Factor Model qui a été spécialement conçu pour répliquer la performance d’un vaste univers de hedge funds au travers d’un portefeuille constitué de grands indices internationaux parfaitement liquides.Les nouveaux ETF de Source ont pour objectif d’offrir à l’investisseur une exposition large et exhaustive à l’univers de la gestion alternative, sans pour autant être investis dans aucun hedge fund en particulier.
La société de gestion A Plus Finance vient d’annoncer le lancement d’A Plus Rendement 10, un Fonds d’investissement de proximité (FIP) investi dans les obligations convertibles et les obligations à bon de souscription d’actions (OBSA). Compte tenu de la composition de son portefeuille, A Plus Rendement 10 pourra bénéficier tout au long de la période d’investissement, d’une part du rendement des titres obligataires et d’une autre de la plus-value associée, en cas de conversion des obligations en actions, ou de la prime de non conversion.L’univers d’investissement d’A Plus Rendement 10 privilégie des secteurs reconnus aujourd’hui pour leur forte croissance comme les Technologies de l’information, l’Environnement et le E-business. Enfin, le FIP A Plus Rendement 10 investira dans 4 grandes régions françaises : IDF, Bourgogne, Rhône-Alpes et PACA. Caractéristiques :Code Isin : FR0010923797Souscription ouverte jusqu’au : 30/06/2011Commissions de souscription : 5 % max.Frais de gestion : 3,95 %Montant de la part : 100 eurosMontant minimum à la souscription : 1 000 eurosDurée : 5 ans
L’appellation d’investissement socialement responsable (ISR) est «totalement illégitime» pour une majorité des produits d'épargne commercialisés sous ce nom par les banques et les assurances, estime l’association Les Amis de la Terre dans un rapport publié le 20 septembre («Investissement socialement responsable : l’heure du tri»). «Avec l’"Investissement socialement responsable», banques et assurances entrent dans la valse du «développement durable». Malheureusement, elles n’ont pas changé leurs pratiques réelles et se sont limitées à promouvoir un affichage qui n’a pas de sens. Elles vendent à leurs clients des fonds soi-disant socialement responsables mais il s’avère qu’ils ne le sont pas. Détenir des actions de Total, Shell, Areva ou de BNP Paribas est-il socialement responsable? Pour les Amis de la Terre, la réponse est clairement «non». L’appellation «ISR» est donc totalement illégitime pour une immense majorité des produits d’épargne ainsi nommés par les banques et les assurances elles-mêmes», explique Soisic Rivolan, rédactrice du rapport dans un communiqué.Parmi les 89 fonds analysés dans le rapport, pas moins de 71 fonds contiennent dans leurs portefeuilles d’actifs au moins une des quinze entreprises controversées sélectionnées par Les Amis de la Terre (GDF Suez, BNP Paribas, Axa, Bayer, France Télécom, Royal Dutch Shell, Novartis, BMW, Nestlé, BP, Total, Deutsche Bank, Rio Tinto, Andritz et Areva) parce qu’elles ont eu des comportements socialement irresponsables dans une période récente.Deux éléments majeurs expliquent la présence d’entreprises controversées dans les fonds «socialement responsables», selon le rapport: les fonds sont investis presque systématiquement dans des entreprises multinationales, par nature plus promptes à avoir des pratiques contestables. Par ailleurs, la notation extra-financière, telle que pratiquée par l’agence de notation extra-financière Vigeo est qualifiée de «défaillante». «La démarche d’analyse de Vigeo, par exemple, consiste uniquement en une compilation de données publiques, provenant essentiellement de l’entreprise. L’agence ne mène aucune enquête propre et ne vérifie pas ses informations», indique le rapport.Les fonds ISR drainent pourtant de plus en plus de capitaux. En 2009, le volume des encours ISR a fait un bond de 70% pour atteindre 50,7 milliards d’euros, soit 1,9% des actifs sous gestion en France. Parallèlement à ce rapport, Les Amis de la Terre proposent un guide à l’attention des usagers des banques «Environnement : comment choisir mon épargne ?», classant les produits d'épargne, du livret A à l’assurance-vie en passant par le livret développement durable, «selon leurs impacts et leurs risques sociaux et environnementaux».
Acropole AM vient de recruter Anne-Sophie Pacot en tant que directrice clientèle grands comptes. Agée de 36 ans, Anne-Sophie Pacot aura pour mission de conquérir de nouvelles parts de marché et de promouvoir les fonds d’Acropole AM auprès d’une clientèle française diversifiée : institutionnels, entreprises, comptes propres de banques, etc. Elle rapportera à Nathalie Sabathier, directeur général d’Acropole AM et responsable du développement. Avant de rejoindre Acropole AM, l’intéressée était depuis dix ans chargée de relations auprès des investisseurs institutionnels et des distributeurs chez CPR Asset Management (2000-2009).
Avec sa nouvelle gamme Global Markets, Barclays Wealth lance une gamme de cinq portefeuilles OEIC profilés et gérés activement (pour la pondération) qui sont investis principalement en ETF -surtout des iShares (BlackRock)- et qui sont surtout destinés à une clientèle de CGPI alors que la maison se focalisait plutôt sur les clients de banque privée. Ces produits multi-classes d’actifs auront une exposition supérieure à la normale en obligations d’Etat.Ils comportent un droit d’entrée de 4 %, une commission de gestion de 1 % dont 0,5 % de rétrocommission (trail commission). La souscription minimale est fixée à 3.000 livres sterling.
Selon fundstrategy, Colin Beveridge, investment director des actions internationales chez Swip (Scottish Widows Investment Partnenrship), a décidé de quitter le groupe à compter de la fin septembre.Cette démission fait suite au départ de son ancien patron, Ian Vose, qui a quitté Swip en avril dernier pour rejoindre Investec Asset Management.