As of 30 June, assets under management at Legg Mason were down to USD645.4bn from USD684.5bn as of the end of March, and USD681.6bn as of the end of December. They were also down from the USD656.9bn recorded at the end of June 2009.
According to a study by the law firm Sutherland Asbill & Brennan of disciplinary measures and fines mentioned in the monthly reports of the Financial Regulatory Authority (Finra), penalties levelled against mutual funds last year represented about USD12m, out of total funds of nearly USD50m (compared with USD28m in 2008), the Wall Street Journal reports. In addition, suitability allegations which in some cases have also affected mutual funds led to fines of USD11.9m. These results do not match up well with the publicly announced intentions of Finra to give top priority to cases related to elderly clients, hedge funds, and Ponzi schemes. However, Brian Rubin, a partner at Sutherland, says these themes were not at the top of the list of fines in 2009 since enquiries take one to three years to conclude. Finra was created in 2007, out of the former NASD and the regulation division of NYSE.
The Aegon group announced on 13 July that it had appointed Sarah Russell as CEO of its asset management activity Aegon AM, which represents about EUR200bn in assets under management. Sarah Russell, previously CEO of ABN Amro AM, succeeds Erik van Houvelingen, who is leaving to pursue other interests. She will begin in the position on 1 August.
The Moody’s ratings agency on 14 July announced that from 2 August it will be introducing a special indicator to signal the publication of ratings of structured finance instruments. The indicator will take the form of an abbreviation (“sf”) which will be added to the end of a rating (for example, “Aaa3 (sf)”). Moody’s, which announced its plans to introduce an indicator of this type in Autumn 2009, says in a statement that it is meeting the requirements of European regulations governing ratings agencies. The instruments concerned include ABPS, ABS, CDO, CMBS, RMBS, and dedicated vehicles (SIV).
Mirabaud Investment Management has recruited Alex Illingworth as an addition to its new international equities management team. Illingworth was laid off from his previous position at Insight Investment, where he managed the European ethical fund. The head of the international equities team will be appointed on 1 April 2011.
NYSE Euronext on 13 July announced the launch of a trading platform entitled Nyse Euronext London, which will aim to encourage foreign issuers to raise capital and list their stock on the transatlantic platform. The new platform has received permission from the British authorities, but a statement from the firm does not state the launch date for the platform, which will compete with the London Stock Exchange.
The London Stock Exchange on Wednesday at 6 PM published a statement in which Gartmore Group announced the resignation of Guillaume Rambourg, a senior analyst in its European large caps team, which will continue to be led by Roger Guy, assisted by Darrell O’Dea, Leopold Arminjon and Tomas Pinto. Jeff Meyer, CEO of Gartmore, says that Rambourg would like to dedicate more time to an investigation into his conduct by the FSA.
Ashmore Group on Wednesday announced that its assets have increased to USD35.3bn as of the end of June, from USD33bn at the end of March. This increase is due to net subscriptions of EUR2.9bn, and negative market effects of USD600m. Final results for the fiscal year to 30 June will be published on 14 September.
The Luxembourg-registered fund Mandarine Unique R (LU0489687243), which as of 12 July had assets of EUR18m, was granted a sales license for Germany by BaFin on 18 June. The fund, launched on 29 March 2010, invests in European small and midcaps, by selecting companies with unique business models which are present in niche markets with large global market share.
The former head of private wealth management for the Frankfurt region at Deutsche Bank has joined Credit Suisse Deutschland as director of activities serving ultra high net worth individuals (UNHWI). He succeeds Wulf Matthias, 65, and has been replaced at Deutsche Bank by Daniel Hoster, who had effectively already been active in the position since May.
The Cologne-based management firm Monega, a joint venture of DEVK, the Sparda banks and Sal. Oppenheim, founded in 1999, now has EUR5.1bn in assets under management in its custom open-ended funds for institutionals (Partnerfonds) and institutional funds (Spezialfonds). Monega currently manages 15 Partnerfonds, of which five were launched in the past 12 months, including a sustainable development product launched for Sparda Bank Munich, and advised by Sarasin.
Janus Capital International has announced the recruitment of Steven Bilodeau for its financial institutions sales team serving the German-speaking countries of Europe (Germany, Austria, Switzerland). Bilodeau, who will be based in Munich, was previously sales manager at Threadneedle for Germany. He will work with Thomas Doring, and will report to Michael Jones, head of financial institutions for Europe. He will be in charge of client development for fund of fund managers, insurance companies, savings banks, co-operative banks and private banks.
The asset management arm of the Liechtenstein LGT Group, LGT Capital Management, on Wednesday opened its first sales office in Europe outside Switzerland in Frankfurt. The office is led by Marcus Perschke, who was previously head of distribution for M&G International Investment in Germany.
Jörg Knaf, managing director of Natixis Global Associates (NGA) for Germany and director of distribution for Germany, Austria and Switzerland, Benelux and Scandinavia, is getting reinforcements. NGA has recruited Viktor Paul Pospiech, who was head of distribution and spokesman for the Zurich-based hedge fund management firm FiveT Capital, as director of institutional distribution for Germany. He will work with Tina Reinle, head of wholesale distribution.
Fund Strategy reports that Epic Asset Management has launched a UCITS III-compliant international bond fund which aims to invest in corporate, international and government bonds. The vehicle, listed in Dublin, is the first open-ended fund available to bond retail and institutional investors. The two managers of the fund, Adam Tyrell and Achilles Sofroniou, will invest in debt from OECD countries in particular. The allocation to currencies other than pounds Sterling not hedged for currency risks may not exceed 15% of the value of the fund. Gross returns may come to about 4%, and returns at maturity 3.3%, on the basis of a portfolio duration of 3.7 years. Front-end fees have been set at 3%, and management commission at 0.95% per year.
According to statistics from the European asset management federation (Efama), UCITS funds in May saw net outflows of EUR23bn. For the first time since March 2009, long-term funds (excluding money markets) finished the month with net outflows of EUR8bn. In the first five months of the year, long-term UCITS funds posted net inflows of EUR108bn. In another first since March 2009, long-term funds (excluding money markets) finished the month with net outflows of EUR8bn. In the first five months of the year, long-term UCITS funds posted net inflows of EUR108bn. Also a first since March 2009, equities and bond funds finished the month with net outflows of EUR11bn and EUR2bn, respectively. This development is related to fears about investments in European government debt and the risks of contagion for the global economy. Diversified funds and dedicated funds nonetheless continued to attract investors, with net inflows of EUR3bn and EUR4bn, respectively. Money market funds lost EUR14bn in May, after outflows of EUR7bn in April.
Bolsas y Mercados Españoles (BMA) on Tuesday announced that it has admitted nine ETFs from Lyxor Asset Management (Société Générale) to trading, bringing the number of funds listed on the corresponding segment of the Madrid stock exchange to 41, of which 33 are Lyxor products, and the other 8 are products from BBVA. The average management commission for the newly-listed funds is 0.35%. The new products are the following: Lyxor ETF Stoxx Europe 600 Telecommunications Lyxor ETF Stoxx Europe 600 Health Care Lyxor ETF Stoxx Europe 600 Utilities Lyxor ETF Stoxx Europe 600 Oil & Gas Lyxor ETF MSCI World Lyxor ETF MSCI Europe Lyxor ETF MSCI USA Real Estate Lyxor ETF MSCI Ac Asia Ex Japan Real Estate Lyxor ETF Euromts AAA Government Bond
On 9 June, UBS registered the Irish-domiciled UCITS-compliant Sicav fund LSAM SF 1 Plc with the CNMV, including the V10 Enhanced FX Carry Strategy Fund (IE00B613ZC61), a specialised carry-trade sub-fund which invests in currencies of G10 countries and may take long and short positions on a basket of currency futures with a volatility feature which alerts managers in extreme situations. The product replicates the evolution of the UBS V10 Fund TR index. Minimal subscription is 10 EUR100 shares for retail investors, and 1,000 shares for institutional investors. Management commission is 2.25% for retail clients and 1.25% for institutionals.
According to the most recent statistics from Lipper FMI, European funds in May saw net redemptions of EUR17.7bn, due to net outflows from equities and money market funds. The agency notes in particular EUR6bn in net redemptions from French money market funds, related to cyclical withdrawals which came sooner than usual. Net outflows for equities funds were limited to EUR1.6bn, due to the good health of the sector in Germany. European equities funds were the worst affected, with outflows of EUR4.8bn, while China and Japan funds were next on the list of redemptions. Lipper FMI states that BlackRock was the fund management firm that saw the most net subscriptions, with EUR5.5bn. It also leads for net inflows to its equities products, with EUR4.7bn. In terms of bond and diversified funds, the two managers to have seen the largest net inflows were Franklin Templeton and Carmignac, respectively.
The New York management firm Global X Funds on 8 July launched the Global X Brazil Consumer ETF (acronym BRAQ) on the Arca platform from NYSE. The product claims to be the first ETF to provide targeted access to shares of the Brazilian consumer goods sector. It replicates the Solactive Brazil Consumer Index, whose three largest components are AmBev, JBS and Natura Cosmeticos. The Brazilian ETF range from Global X includes five other products. The new product charges a management commission of 0.77%. For its part, HSBC ETF Plc on 13 July launched the Irish UCITS-compliant fund HSBC MSCI BRAZIL ETF (IE00B5W34K94), a physical replication ETF with a TER of 0.60%. As its name indicates, the new product replicates the MSCI Brazil index. It is listed in US dollars, and is licensed for sale in the United Kingdom.
The hedge fund index calculated by Hennessee was up 0.20% in first half, as markets had their worst half since 2008. The S&P 500 was down 7.57%, the Dow Jones by 6.27%, and the Nasdaq Composite by 7.05%. Among the various strategies, the Arbitrage/Event Driven index gained 3.21% since the beginning of the year, while Long/Short Equity was down 0.14%. Fixed income gained 5.69% in first half, while the European index lost 6.46%.
Since the beginning of the year, hedge funds have posted average returns of near zero, according to the specialised consulting firm Eurekahedge. Funds specialised in distressed bonds and debt, however, did well. In first half, funds specialised in recycling distressed debt, such as debts thought to be unrecoverable, gained 6.42%. Bond funds did not disappoint, with gains of 3.73%. However, macro funds earned nearly nothing this year, and long-short funds lost 1.75%. Meanwhile, according to Eurekahedge, Asia ex Japan hedge funds lost 3.13% in first half. The worst performance for all the regional indices and the global index remains virtually unchanged at -0.02%. Hedge Fund Research reports that Latin American funds posted the worst returns, with losses of 3.67%, compared with losses of 2.41% for Asia ex Japan funds. Newedge hedge fund indices were also oriented downward in June. The CTA index lost 19% in June, but shows gains of 1.75% since the beginning of the year.
Skandia Global Funds on 13 July announced that it has awarded a management mandate to Janus Capital International Limited for USD125m from its Skandia technology Fund. Janus Capital Group manages overall assets of USD165bn, of which USD20bn are invested in the tech sector, in the broad sense of the term. The management team, led by Barney Wilson, is developing another free fundamental approach, which will work bottom-up, and will allow the manager to select the best-performing shares from a universe of technology and related shares. Janus replaces Wellington Management Company (LLP), which had managed the allocation since the creation of the fund, in April 2006.
On Tuesday, the Swiss firm Partners Group announced that in first half it has registered net subscriptions of CHF3bn, compared with CHF2.2bn in July-December 2009, and CHF1.4bn in the corresponding period of last year. Assets as of 30 June, for their part, totalled CHF26.5bn, as negative currency effects due to the depreciation of the Euro against the Swiss franc accounted for CHF1.8bn. Though Partners Group accounts are denominated in Swiss francs, 70% of activities are undertaken in Euros, compared with 25% in US dollars, and 5% in other currencies. Urs Wietlisbach, co-founder and vice chairman, says that Partners Group, which has already announced plans to open an office in Dubai (see Newsmanagers of 28 May 2010), is also planning to open an office in Latin America, and one in Asia.
Although last year it had adopted a negative attitude to the UK due to its rising budget deficit and the deteriorating condition of its public finances, the US management firm Pimco (Allianz Global Investors) has now changed its position: it is now neutral on gilts, rather than underweight, the Financial Times reports. The about-face is all the more significant as Bill Gross, co-head of Pimco, was one of the fiercest critic of the United Kingdom. Since the beginning of the year, returns on 10-year gilts has fallen 16%, while returns on bunds have fallen by 20%.
Mardi, le suisse Partners Group a annoncé avoir enregistré pour le premier semestre des souscriptions nettes de 3 milliards de francs contre 2,2 milliards pour juillet-décembre 2009 et 1,4 milliard pour la période correspondante de l’an dernier.L’encours au 30 juin est ressorti pour sa part à 26,5 milliards de francs suisses, contre 25,7 milliards fin décembre, en dépit d’une augmentation brute de 12 % des actifs sous gestion, car les pertes de change du fait de la dépréciation de l’euro contre franc suisse ont représenté 1,8 milliard de francs. Bien que les comptes de Partners Group soient libellés en francs, 70 % de l’activité s’effectue en euros contre 25 % en dollars et 5 % en d’autres monnaies.Actuellement, l’encours se subdivise en 19,9 milliards de francs (contre 20,2 milliards fin décembre) pour le private équity, tandis que la dette non cotée (private debt) représente 2,6 milliards contre 2,7 milliards. La poche immobilier non coté se situe à 0,7 milliard contre 1,4 milliard. En complément, Partners Group affiche 0,7 milliard de francs dans les infrastructures non cotées et 0,8 milliard dans les filiales.Urs Wietlisbach, co-fondateur et vice chairman, a indiqué que Partners Group, qui a déjà annoncé son intention de s’installer à Dubai (lire notre dépêche du 28 mai), compte ouvrir un bureau en Amérique latine et un autre en Asie.
Au 30 juin, les actifs gérés par Legg Mason avaient diminué à 645,4 milliards de dollars contre 684,5 milliards fin mars et 681,6 milliards fin décembre. Ils sont également en baisse par rapport aux 656,9 milliards de fin juin 2009.
Citigroup va transférer la gestion et certains de ses actifs «propriétaires» dans des fonds de fonds et des fonds de co-investissement en private equity à StepStone Group et Lexington Partners, indique The Wall Street Journal.Lexington acquiert les 1,1 milliard de dollars investis par Citigroup dans les fonds tandis que StepStone prend en charge les 4 milliards de dollars de fonds de fonds, de fonds nourriciers et de fonds de co-investissement.
Mercredi soir, GSO Capital Partners (29 milliards de dollars d’encours), le pôle «crédit» de The Blackstone Group, a annoncé la clôture finale du fonds GSO Capital Solutions avec des engagements d’investissement supérieurs à 3,25 milliards de dollars.Ce fonds a pour objectif de fournir hors marché des solutions en capital à des entreprises qui sont confrontées à des besoins de liquidités ou qui doivent faire face à des mutations importantes de leur structure de capital du fait de violations de convenants, d’arrivée à échéance de dettes ou de ralentissements cycliques de leur activité, par exemple.Jusqu'à présent, le fonds a investi environ 600 millions de dollars dans sept sociétés. Parmi les investisseurs, précise Blackstone, on trouve un groupe assez bigarré de fonds de pension américains et internationaux, de fonds souverains, de fondations et de family offices.
Blackstone Group et Carlyle Group seraient intéressés par l’acquisition de NBTY (ex Nature Bounty), une société qui fabrique des vitamines et des compléments alimentaires (marques Solgard, Rexall et MET-Rx), rapporte The Wall Street Journal. Le montant de la transaction pourrait dépasser les 3 milliards de dollar, mais on ne sait si les deux capital-investisseurs finiront par faire équipe ni si d’autres repreneurs sont en lice. La capitalisation boursière de NBTY est de l’ordre de 2,4 milliards de dollars et sa dette se monte à environ 450 millions de dollars tandis que son chiffre d’affaires s’est situé à 2,6 milliards de dollars, dont 60 % proviennent des ventes à des distributeurs comme Wal-Mart et Target. NBTY exploite aussi des magasins en direct, dont 440 sous l’enseigne Vitamin World aux Etats-Unis et 537 magasins Holland & Barrett en Europe.