Financial difficulties at the real estate fund MSREF VI International from Morgan Stanley, which faces a risk of losing USD5.4bn from a portfolio of USD8.8bn, will oblige the manager to sell the Sony Center in Berlin, a complex which is reported to have been acquired for EUR600m from Sony. The real estate management firm Corpus Sireo has acquired a 10% stake, which it intends to keep, Die Welt reports. The buyer is the National Pension Service of Korea (NPS, USD201bn in assets), which is reportedly prepared to spend EUR500m for the 132,500 square-metre property, according to a London broker. The MSREF VI fund also owns the new headquarters of the ECB in Germany.
ICBC Credit Suisse will on 15 April become the first fund management firm in China to launch a second QDII fund, the Global Enhanced Equity Fund, which will charge a management commission of 1.80%. The fund will invest 60% to 95% of its assets in equities. It will have the same portfolio manager as the first QDII fund from ICBC Credit Suisse, which is focused on Asia and which is currently trading below its initial net asset value of CNY100. According to the agency Z-Ben Advisors, the fund is an ambitious project at a time when E-Fund and China Merchants managed to attract only CNY592m and CNY553m for their latest funds. However, ICBC Credit Suisse has the advantage of size, and the sales force of its parent company ICBC, which, according to Z-Ben Advisors, will allow the firm to raise between CNY800m and CNY1bn during the initial offer period.
The Swiss firm SAM Sustainable Asset Management, an affiliate of Robeco, announced on Wednesday that it is launching its twelfth annual operation to evaluate the world’s major corporations in terms of economic, ecological, and social criteria. The questionnaire, which covers 100 topics, will be sent out to the 2,500 largest companies in the world on the basis of the volume of publicly traded capital. The analysis of the firms from a sustainable development standpoint will allow the firms which receive the highest scores to be included in the sectoral Dow Jones Sustainability Indexes (DJSI). SAM states that, in the period from 2001 to 2008, the “sustainability leaders” in its rankings earned performance on average 148 basis points p.a. higher than those of the “sustainability laggards.”
Schroders announced on 13 April that it is launching a fund dedicated to Asia, the Schroder Asian Income Maximiser, which offers retail investors a way to participate in growth in this region through exposure to equities from Asia ex Japan. The fund, which will be available to investors from June 2010, aims for gross initial returns of 7%, via active management of Asian high yield equities with an overlay (a hedged call option) on the shares in order to improve returns.
Denis Clough, a former star manager from Schroder Tokyo, who left the management firm in 2004, has joined the management team at Morant Wright specialised in Japanese equities, which is composed of six people. Morant Wright manages GBP1.86bn in assets.
After a three-year campaign in Spain (since September 2007), the private bank Sarasin is packing its bags, on the back of losses of EUR1.6m in 2009, Expansión reports. The firm had teamed up with Alén Gestión Patrimonial, and was known in Spain as sarasin Alén. The firm, which had offices in Madrid and La Coruna, managed as much as EUR200m, and had 14 professionals on it staff at the end of 2009.
Citigroup said it will sell its hedge-fund business to alternative-investment firm SkyBridge Capital, as it sheds yet another of its noncore assets. Financial terms of the deal, in which SkyBridge will buy Citi Alternative Investments’ hedge-fund, hedge-fund seeding and hedge-fund advisory businesses, weren’t disclosed. CAI’s investments under management and advisory total USD4.2 billion. SkyBridge said the deal will position it as «one of the leading global alternative asset managers» with USD5.6 billion in assets under management. Citi’s Raymond Nolte, who has led the businesses at CAI since 2005, will become chief investment officer and a managing partner at SkyBridge, bringing with him a team of 20.
La sortie de Natixis du capital-investissement pourrait être plus importante que prévu note la Tribune. La banque française est en train de vendre ses fonds émergents (Brésil, Inde et Chine). Il y a une quinzaine de jours, Natixis a sélectionné quatre candidats dont certains forment des consortium. Selon plusieurs sources proches du dossier, citées par le quotidien, les fonds de fonds Harbourvest, Coller Capital, Alpinvest et Paul Capital seraient encore en lice.
The exit of Naxitis from private equity may be a larger operation than predicted, La Tribune reports. The French bank is in the process of selling off its emerging market funds (Brazil, India and China). 15 days ago, Natixis selected four candidates, some of whom are forming consortiums. Several sources familiar with the matter, cited by the newspaper, say that the Harbourvest, Coller Capital, Alpinvest and Paul Capital funds of funds are forming consortiums.
As of the end of March, assets under management at Legg Mason totalled USD684.5bn, compared with USD681.6bn as of the end of December, and USD632.3bn twelve months earlier. However, as of the end of September 2009, total assets came to USD702.7bn. The strongest increase was for assets in equities funds, which came to USD173.8bn as of the end of March, compared with USD168.7bn as of 31 December, and USD126.9bn as of the end of March 2009.
The resignation earlier this week of Bruno Crastes, CEO and CIO of Amundi London and deputy director of the institutional and third-party distribution profession, followed by the announcement on Wednesday of the departure of Vincent Chaillet and Jean-Noël Alba, two other heads based in London (*), has led the asset management firm, an affiliate of Crédit Agricole and Société Générale, to reshuffle its UK teams. From 19 April, Pascal Blanqué, CIO of Amundi group and director of the institutional and third-party distributors profession, will also become CEO of Amundi London. However, Blanqué will exercise his functions from Paris, while Laurent Crosnier, currently deputy head of fixed income and credit management, who from next week will occupy the position of CIO of Amundi London, will be moving to the British capital. He will work alongside Hervé Leclercq, previously head of risk at Amundi Paris, who becomes deputy CEO and COO of Amundi London. In practice, the departure of Crastes will take place “gradually.” Thus, says Amundi, he will continue to be present in London for a while longer, in order to see the transition through. Some observers have doubts about the operation. “Bruno Crastes’ management style is characterized by the large degree of latitude he leaves to teams, and a management style based largely on ‘intuitu personae,'” one multi-management professional in Paris says. “It is also probable that fund selectors will express dissatisfaction with his departure,” he adds. As to what the near future holds for the outgoing managers, Amundi states that their departures were motivated by a desire to bring a new orientation to their professional careers. On Wednesday, Agefi suggested that they may team up again in the future to create an entrepreneurial project. (*) Vincent Chaillet is head of international bond and absolute performance activities, while Jean-Noël Alba is deputy CEO of CAAM London Branch.
ING Investment Management announced on Wednesday, 14 April, that its French arm has had net inflows of more than EUR300m in first quarter 2010, which brings total assets managed by ING Investment Management in France as of 31 March 2010 to EUR2.7bn. French investors largely went for High Dividend equities strategies (more than EUR120m in net inflows in the period under review), and for funds which invest in bonds from emerging markets, denominated in strong currencies and in local currencies (more than EUR50m), via the funds ING (L) Renta Fund Emerging Markets Debt Hard Currency and ING (L) Renta Fund Emerging Markets Debt Local Currency & Local Bonds, the asset management firm says in a statement. The rest of the inflows registered were largely for the money market sub-fund ING (L) LIQUID EURO, and the equities product ING (L) Invest Global Opportunities.
Net profits from asset management activities at JP Morgan Chase in first quarter totalled USD392m, USD168m or 75% higher than in first quarter of last year. This result is still below profits in fourth quarter 2009. Assets under management totalled USD1.2trn as of the end of the quarter, a 9% increase from the end of 2009. This increase is due to positive market effects, while net inflows to equities and bonds were largely offset by outflows from short-term products.
For the AGM of Partners Group to be held on 6 May 2010, the fourth point on the agenda authorizes the board of directors to proceed with a public share buyback program, which will aim to buy back up to 10% of the floated capital or voting rights in the company over a period of three years. The equities will then be cancelled. The volume of repurchases will be determined on the one hand by available liquidity, and on the other by the board of directors’ estimation of market conditions. The ensuing reduction in capital will be subject to approval by vote at subsequent general shareholders’ meetings. Partners Group is also proposing to pay out a dividend for 2009, on 14 May, of CHF4.50 per share, up from CHF4.25 in 2008.
On Thursday, the Chinese National Council for Social Security Fund (NCSSF) announced the names of foreign management firms selected in 2009 to manage an offshore portfolio of more than USD5bn. The NCSSF announced 13 active equities mandates, and the names of the 12 winning managers, all of whom are multi-asset class management firms, but only two of which (Martin Currie and Bosera) were previously known to have ties to the NCSSF, which as of the end of 2009 managed about CNY776.9bn, or USD113.7bn, in assets. For Chinese equities traded abroad, the winning bidders were Schroders, Bosera and Barings. For Asia-Pacific ex Japan equities, the NCSSF retained Martin Currie, JF and principal, while for emerging markets equities, the winners were Batterymarch, Morgan Stanley and Schroders. For European equities, the management firms selected were Fidelity and Newton, while for global equities, the two management firms selected were Prudential and Wellington.
More than one year after the acquisition of Dresdner Bank by Commerzbank, the transaction has now been completed in Luxembourg also, where Dresdner Bank Luxembourg has merged with Commerzbank International SA Luxembourg (Cisal), the Börsen-Zeitung reports. The transaction means that Commerzbank makes the Grand Duchy a key axis and centre of expertise for international wealth management.
Le fonds Perusa Partners I (155 millions d’euros) du capital-investisseur munichois Perusa a acquis pour un montant non divulgué, avec le management de l’entreprise, la société Werner Kammann Maschinenfabrik de Bünde (Rhénanie du Nord-Westphalie) qui avait déposé son bilan et appartenait précédemment au capital-investisseur Arcadia. La société, qui prend le nom de Kammann Maschinenbau, abandonne son activité dans le domaine des machines pour décorer les cédéroms et les DVD mais poursuit ses activités «Optical Disc», «Container», «Web» and «Service and Parts». Les 150 salariés restants conserveront leur emploi.Kammann est la cinquième PME allemande achetée par Perusa.
Thomas Meyer, directeur général de Wertgrund Immobilien, a annoncé pour le 20 avril le lancement du premier fonds immobilier offert au public investi uniquement en immeubles résidentiels situés en Allemagne, le Wertgrund Wohnselect D, dont l’objectif de collecte est d’environ 300 millions d’euros, rapporte la Börsen-Zeitung. Cela correspond à un volume de 4.000-5.000 logements.
Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management (EDRAM) vient d’annoncer que Lavin Mok rejoint la société en tant que responsable des ventes pour l’Asie. Lavin Mok aura la responsabilité des ventes et du marketing de EDRAM Hong Kong, avec pour objectif de développer les relations commerciales à travers l’Asie, de promouvoir EDRAM et de distribuer la marque et les produits gérés à Paris et à Hong Kong. Il va ainsi poursuivre la stratégie de développement et de commecialisation des fonds en Asie, notamment à Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapour et au Japon, auprès de clients institutionnels et de réseaux de distribution.Lavin Mok était depuis 2006 chez Tremont Capital Management où il avait pris la direction de la commercialisation des fonds de hedge funds dans plusieurs pays asiatiques.Au 31 mars 2010, Edmond de Tothschild Asset Management gérait quelque 1,9 milliard d’euros sur l’Asie et les pays émergents.
Barclays Wealth vient d’annoncer le recrutement de Helen Pun en tant que director, market head à Hong Kong. Dans ses nouvelles fonctions, Helen Pun, qui était précédemment chez UBS à Hong Kong, aura la responsabilité de l'équipe de banquiers privés couvrant Hong Kong ainsi que du développement des activités sur ce marché.Ces derniers mois, Barclays Wealth a déjà recruté plusieurs responsables pour la zone Asie-Pacifique.Fin 2009, les actifs sous gestion de Barclays Wealth s'élevaient à 151,2 milliards de livres. La répartition géographique n’a pas été divulguée.
Atlas Capital Gestión de Patrimonios gérait fin mars 1,3 milliard d’euros d’encours pour 2.276 clients, soit respectivement 20 % et 3 % de plus que fin 2009, rapporte Expansión. La société vient de nommer président de son activité banque privée Jaime Espinosa de los Monteros, qui rejoint l'équipe dirigée par Jorge Sanz. Il a été auparavant chez Kepler Capital Markets et Espinosa Partners.
Le manque de liquidité frappant les actions de sociétés de private equity cotées sur Euronext Amsterdam a poussé HarbourVest, l’un des plus gros fonds de fonds de private equity au monde, à lancer une offre secondaire de titres à Londres. Le groupe, basé à Boston et gérant plus de 30 milliards de dollars, va ainsi devenir le sixième membre du Specialist Fund Market.
Vendredi, la CNMV a accordé son agrément à Merchant Funds Plc, ce qui permet au britannique Merchant Capital de commercialiser en Espagne son hedge fund coordonné Merchant European Equity, conseillé par l’espagnol Tressis (lire notre dépêche du 26 mars). Ce produit, dont l’univers est l’Euro Stoxx 600, est un long/short actions européennes qui vise une performance de 12 % avec une volatilité inférieure à 6 %.
Gam Holding, le gestionnaire d’actifs séparé de Julius Baer depuis septembre dernier, continue sur sa lancée du second semestre, avec une progression au premier trimestre des actifs sous gestion de 5% par rapport à fin 2009 à 119,1 milliards de francs. Les encours de Swiss & Global AM se sont accrus de 7% à 77,9 milliards de francs alors que ceux de GAM affichent un gain de 6% à 54,1 milliards de francs.
Confié à Agnes Deng (head of China equities), qui est basée à Hong-Kong, le nouveau Baring A-Share Fund Plc a été lancé mardi et affiche d’ores et déjà 200 millions de dollars promis par des investisseurs institutionnels, la pleine capacité de ce produit était de 285 millions de dollars. Agnes Deng gère déjà le Baring Hong Kong China Fund (4,74 milliards de dollars au 26 février).Ce fonds de droit irlandais, avec 40-70 lignes, doit permettre aux souscripteurs, des investisseurs institutionnels, d’accéder à des sociétés établies en République populaire de Chine ou y opérant. Au moins 70 % de l’encours seront investis en actions «A» cotées sur les Bourses de Shanghai et Shenzen. La souscription minimale est fixée à 25.000 dollars. Baring Asset Management dispose d’un contingent Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII) de 200 millions de dollars.
La banque Triodos lance une Sicafi dédiée à l’immobilier pour seniors, à savoir les maisons de retraite, les maisons de soins, les résidences- services, etc., rapporte L’Echo. Selon les informations du groupe Sud Presse, les Belges pourront d’ici juin 2011 investir une partie de leurs avoirs dans un produit financier spécialement dédié à ce segment d’activité. Triodos mise à un horizon de cinq années sur un capital de 250 millions d’euros.
Bruno Crastes ne quitte pas Amundi seul, révèle L’Agefi. Vincent Chaillet, responsable de l’activité obligataire international et performance absolue ainsi que Jean-Noël Alba, directeur général adjoint de CAAM London Branch, ses plus proches collaborateurs, partent aussi. Le premier a passé quinze ans chez Crédit Agricole Asset Management (CAAM) et le second dix ans. Leurs départs seront effectifs dans quelques mois.Selon un observateur cité par le quotidien, les trois gérants laissent 22,5 milliards d’euros d’encours et devraient se lancer ensemble dans un projet entrepreneurial.