The former head of the Santander infrastructure fund, Nicolás Merigó, has been appointed as CEO of Marguerite Admisor, the manager of the largest public fund in Europe dedicated to energy, the 2020 European Fund for Energy, Climate Change & Infrastructure. The fund, which is in the format of a Luxembourg Sicav, may have an investment firepower of EUR6.5bn, of which EUR1.5bn would be in cash.Founded in 2008 under the French EU presidency, the fund is “supported” by Spanish, Italian, German, French and Polish public lending institutions, each of which have contributed EUR100m, Cotizalia reports. Additional contributions of EUR100m each were provided by the Portuguese management firm Caixa General de Depósitos, the Bank of Valleta (Malta) and the European Commission. The partner-promoters have also created a “financing initiative” to issue EUR5bn in debt. The fund is planning to close with EUR1.5bn in capital at the end of this year.
The asset management firm for the German co-operative banks, Union Investment, on Monday announced the launch of an equities fund investing in shares from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. The product is registered in Luxembourg and denominated in Euros, is entitled UniEM Middle East & North Africa, and is managed by Omar Abu Rasheed, who insists on the need for diversification due to considerations of performance and risk distribution. The portfolio is constructed through stock-picking of shares from the Middle East, North Africa, and sub-Saharan Africa. Characteristics Name: UniEM Middle East & North Africa ISIN: LU0483176268 Front-end fee: 5% Management commission: 1.55% (maximum 1.75%) Depository banking commission: 0.10%
Despite an environment which remains difficult and more uncertain long-term outlooks, outlooks for ratings of money market funds remain stable in the United States and elsewhere in the world, Moody’s says in its annual report on money market funds, which finds that liquidity and the quality of credit improved last year. In the United States, regulatory changes likely to come by the end of the year may bring deep changes to the money market fund sector.
The index provider Stoxx on 12 April announced the launch of the Stoxx Europe 600 Daily Short Index, along with 19 sectoral indices which will replicate a daily douhble short investment strategy.
Citywire, which coined the term “Newcits” to describe UCITS III-compliant hedge fund strategies, has created a database of these funds. The database, which will be updated monthly, includes ratings of 276 funds using 13 strategies, of which the largest category is long/short, with 70 funds, followed by credit strategies (44), multi-strategy (36) and market neutral (25). Assets under management in these funds total about USD49bn. Three quarters of these products have a one-year track record, while 40% have a three-year track record.
US investors are finally starting to succumb to the charms of Ucits, says the Financial Times Fund Management. A number of US investors are now said to be looking at the new generation of Ucits III-compliant hedge fund strategies, known as Newcits, as an alternative to investing in Cayman or British Virgin Islands hedge funds.
GMAC has agreed to sell its USD12bn European mortgage business to Fortress Investment Group, says the Financial Times. The disposal involves about 40 per cent of the assets of Residential Capital, its mortgage finance unit, including USD1bn in mortgages that were originated by GMAC and nearly USD11bn in securitisations.
The default rate for European debt issuers in the speculative category has fallen to 12.8% as of the end of fourth quarter 2009, from 14.2% one quarter earlier, according to data from Standard & Poor’s. The agency estimates that the default rate will continue to fall, to a total of about 8.7% by the end of 2010. In total, 96 European issuers defaulted in 2009, representing total debt of EUR60.3bn. By country, Germany and the United Kingdom have the largest number of defaults (18 each), followed by France (16). In France, the default rate totalled 11.1% in 2009, compared with 2.7% in 2008. Contrary to the trend in Europe, the number of defaults increased significantly in fourth quarter 2009.
The largest bank in Singapore, DBS Bank, has announced the appointment of Tan Su Shan, currently head of private management at Morgan Stanley for South-East Asia, as head of private banking, including asset management, from 1 July, Asian Investor reports. She will be a member of the board of directors at the DBS group. One of her first tasks will be to recruit for the team in charge of high net worth clients.
Morningstar UK, the British affiliate of Morningstar, on 12 April announced the acquisition of the British independent research, ratings and fund advising provider OBSR (Old Broad Street Research), for a total of GBP11.95m. The British team from the provider (30 people), entitled “OBSR, a Morningstar company,” analyses and provides recommendations on about 500 funds, which may or may not be domiciled in the United Kingdom, as well as many other products, including retirement funds.
The Luxembourg-based management firm Alken Asset Management was Friday issued a license by the Spanish regulator, the CNMV, and will now be allowed to release the Alken European Opportunities fund, launched in January 2006 (EUR1.97bn in assets as of 26 February), in Spain. The product is managed by Nicolas Walewski.
Schroder Investment Management has announced the recruitment of Alexander Heidenfelder, who was previously senior sales manager for supra-regional banks in Germany at Fidelity. He joined Schroders on 1 April, as director of distribution of open-ended funds in South Germany. He will report to Joachim Nareike, director of distribution.
The Frankfurt-based sales team under Werner Kolitsch, head of Germany and Austria at Threadneedle, has now been strengthened with the recruitment of a sales executive for key accounts, a position which will be occupied by Anita Frießner, who has more than 20 years’ experience int he financial sector, and who was most recently sales manager at Principal Global Investors in Munich. The sales force of Threadneedle in Germany now includes seven people, and may be further strengthened. According to information obtained by Newsmanagers, a further recruitment is coming soon, and the finalisation of two others may follow. In Austria, the office of the British asset management firm employs two people.
The private wealth management team of Weberbank in essen, which includes six people led by André Weber, has joined BHF-Bank (EUR43bn in assets as of the end of 2009), and moved to the branch offices of BHF in Düsseldorf. By early July, the team will have new offices in Essen. The BHF network will then include 13 locations in Germany, including four int he Rhine-North Westphalia region. Weber becomes co-head of the Düsseldorf branch, alongside Hans-Joachim Höschel, and in this position will be responsible for the new location in Essen.
On Monday, Henderson Group, responding to rumours that have been reported in the media, confirmed that it is in talks concerning a potential acquisition of some of the activities of the US firm RIdgeWorth Capital Management Inc (USD63.1bn in assets), an affiliate of SunTrust Banks Inc. The British management firm emphasizes that the talks are still underway and that there is no guarantee that the negotiations will result in a deal.
ETF use among U.S. pension funds, endowments and foundations has grown to about 14%, according to the results of Greenwich Associates’ most recent annual study of the U.S. investment management market. Despite that relatively modest share, institutions actually represent roughly half the assets invested in ETFs in the United States according to recent industry estimates. Almost half the institutional users in the Greenwich Associates annual study say they employ ETFs for what they consider «tactical» tasks related to the management of their portfolios. Approximately 20% of institutional ETF users say they use the funds to implement «strategic or long-term» investment decisions, and an equal share report that they use ETFs for both tactical and strategic purposes.
The board of directors at DynCorp International on Monday accepted an acquisition offer from a fund of the private equity investor Cerberus Capital Management, for about USD1.5bn, including debt. Shareholders will receive USD17.55 per share, which represents a premium of about 49% above the closing share price of USD11.75 on 9 April, and slightly over 50% higher than the average closing price over the past 90 days. The acquisition of the defence group will be partly self-financed by Cerberus, which will also contract loans from Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Citigroup Global Markets, Barclays Bank and Deutsche Bank Securities. The transaction will be completed in third or fourth quarter, but DynCorp will retain the ability to entertain other acquisition offers from third parties for a period of 28 days, with a USD30m charge to cancel the Cerberus deal.
On Monday, Deutsche Bank announced the creation of Deutsche Gulf Finance, a joint venture in which the Saudi government owns 40%, and the remaining 60% are controlled by a group of Saudi investors led by Fahad Abdullah Abdulaziz Al Rahji. The firm will aim to finance the construction of housing which meets Sharia requirements. Initially, Deutsche Gulf Finance will have USD110m in capital, and will be limited to financing construction projects in Saudi Arabia. Activities will later be extended to Bahrain, Qatar and Kuwait.
On Monday, Skandia announced that it will be releasing its Skandia European Best Ideas Fund (EUR240m) on the British market, via its Skandia Investment Solutions platform. The Irish-registered product, managed by Skandia Investment Group (SIG), is managed by six external star managers, each of whom invest in 10 positions, corresponding to their “best ideas” (see Newsmanagers of 31 March). The lead portfolio manager is Lee Freeman-Short, and the performance of the fund has been 5.41 points higher than the MSCI Europe index over two years.
La Deutsche Börse a annoncé vendredi qu’elle a admis à la négociation sur le segment XTF de sa plate-forme électronique Xetra sept nouveaux ETF «de stratégie» de db -trackers (Deutsche Bank), tous de droit luxembourgeois. Les commissions de gestion sont échelonnées entre 0,35 % pour le Daily LevDax et 0,70 % pour le S&P 500 Daily 2x inverse.Quatre d’entre eux calquent avec double effet de levier les indices Euro Stoxx 50, LevDax, FTSE 100 et S&P 500 tandis que les trois autres répliquent, en short, également, avec un effet de levier du double, les indices Euro Stoxx 50, Dax et S&P 500. Avec ces sept fonds, la cote du segment XTF atteint à présent 651 références. Le lancement des ces nouveaux ETF «daily leveraged» vient compléter uyne gamme db x-trackers qui comprend déjà 16 ETF «short».db x-trackers souligne que ces nouveaux daily leveraged ETFs dont destinés à des investisseurs institutionnels «exigeants». De tels fonds sont destinés au négoce à court terme ou à la mise en œuvre de stratégies de couverture en temps réel pour pouvoir réagir à des fluctuations de marché intra-journalières. Les parts de ces fonds peuvent servir de succédanés pour d’autres dérivés de court terme comme les futures, les CFD ou les swaps.Les sept ETF seront cotés à Milan sur Borsa Italiana à compter du 14 avril et sur le London Stock Exchange à compter du 26 avril.db x-trackers Euro Stoxx 50 Leveraged Daily ETF Isin LU0411077828 frais de gestion 0,35% db x-trackers LevDAX Daily ETF LU0411075376 0,35% db x-trackers FTSE 100 Leveraged Daily ETF LU0412625088 0,50% db x-trackers S&P 500 2x Leveraged Daily ETF LU0411078552 0,60% db x-trackers Euro Stoxx 50 Double Short Daily ETF LU0417510616 0,50% db x-trackers ShortDAX x2 Daily ETF LU0411075020 0,60% db x-trakcers S&P 500 2x Inverse Daily ETF LU0411078636 0,70%
Si les quatre conseillers clientèle de Sal. Oppenheim qui rejoignent Credit Suissse à Berlin ne sont pas nécessairement de gros poissons, il a été confirmé par ailleurs que six personnes ont quitté le siège de la banque privée de Cologne, mais selon la rumeur il ne s’agit pas non plus de premiers couteaux, rapporte la Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.Il se dit aussi qu’un gros client de Sal. Oppenheim cherche à débaucher plusieurs personnes pour créer un family office.Le journal souligne aussi qu'à Berlin on ne croit pas que le restant de l'équipe locale de Sal. Oppenheim va rejoindre Berenberg, mais la banque privée hambourgeoise attend deux conseillers bien établis de Sal. Oppenheim, l’un pour Francfort, l’autre pour Düsseldorf.
Le capital-investisseur Triton a repris la totalité des parts du sous-traitant automobile Stabilus (environ 3.000 salariés) avec le soutien du management, rapporte la Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, précisant que le capital-investisseur Paine, qui avait acheté Stabilus pour 500 millions d’euros en 2008, perd la totalité de son investissement.Triton, qui va injecter 20 millions de fonds propres, a fait nommer Martin Huth président du conseil de surveillance de Stabilus en remplacement de Stephan Kessel.A noter toutefois que les fournisseurs du financement mezzanine, dont Axa Private Equity, avaient annoncé avant la transaction leur intention d’aller en justice en cas d’acquisition de la société.
Russell Investments vient de renforcer ses effectifs à Singapour et en Corée du Sud afin de répondre à une demande croissante dans la région. Selon Asian Investor, la société envisage par ailleurs de demander une licence pour démarrer ses activités à Séoul et espère ouvrir un bureau de représentation en Chine dans le courant du second semestre tout en obtenant le statut de QFII (investisseur institutionnel étranger qualifié).L'équipe coréenne, réduite à deux l’an dernier, est reconstituée avec notamment la nomination de Kim DongKi au poste de chief representative du bureau de Séoul. Kim DongKi était précédemment chez Korea Life.
Dans son dernier rapport trimestriel, la CNMV estime que les produits d'épargne et notamment les fonds d’investissement les plus conservateurs ont de bonnes chances d’attirer les souscripteurs espagnols maintenant que le taux d'épargne des ménages atteint son niveau le plus élevé avec 13 % du revenu et 18,8 % du revenu disponible, rapporte Cinco Días. Cependant, le régulateur reconnaît que les résultats provisoires des premiers mois de 2010 ainsi que la remontée de la volatilité sur les marchés financiers ces derniers temps ont introduit une dimension d’incertitude dans ces perspectives.
Avec la fusion BNP Paribas/Fortis, Juan Marín, directeur des ventes de Fortis Investments pour la péninsule ibérique, a rejoint Investec comme directeur commercial pour la France, le Luxembourg, l’Italie, l’Espagne et le Portugal, rapporte Funds People. Les gestionnaire anglo-sud africain a fait enregistrer en novembre sa sicav luxembourgeoise Investec Strategy Fund (32 compartiments) auprès de la CNMV, mais ses produits n'étaient jusqu'à présent distribués qu’au travers d’Allfunds Bank.
A fin 2009, l’encours des fonds espagnols se composait à 75 % de fonds monétaires, de fonds obligataires à court terme et de fonds garantis à majorité d’actions ou d’obligations contre 66,6 % fin 2006 et 80 % fin 2008, rapporte Cinco Días. La moyenne historique (76 % sur les 19 dernières années) montre cependant que l’investisseur espagnol a toujours été très conservateur, sauf en 2000, lors de la bulle technologique, où la proportion était tombée à 56 %.Sur les trois années 2007, 2008 et 2009, les remboursements nets ont atteint 89,47 milliards d’euros, ce qui représente à 97,5 % de la baisse des actifs sous gestion, qui se sont contractés de 31 % pendant que les recettes de commissions chutaient de 48 %.Sept des plus grands gestionnaires affichent plus de 80 % de leurs encours en actifs peu risqués, l’exception étant Ibercaja avec 57 %. En revanche, Gesmadrid et Ahorro Corporación ont plus de 87 % de leur encours investis en monétaire, obligataire court terme et produits garantis.
Le groupe spécialisé LCH.Clearnet a annoncé le 8 avril qu’il avait obtenu le feu vert de la Financial Services Authority (FSA) pour étendre son service de compensation sur les swaps de taux d’intérêt, SwapClear, à l’Irlande et à la Suisse.Ce changement de périmètre va ainsi permettre aux investisseurs institutionnels de compenser leurs transactions par l’intermédiaire de membres installés aux Etats-Unis, au Royaume-Uni, en France, en Allemagne, en Irlande et en Suisse.SwapClear traite environ 40% du marché mondial des swaps de taux d’intérêt..
Les portugais Espirito Santo (ESAF), en tant que promoteur, et Blue Activos Financeiros (BAF), comme conseiller, ont annoncé le lancement du fonds de droit luxembourgeois Dynamic Alpha Portfolio III qui investit de manière active dans des fonds, notamment alternatifs, coordonnés.L’objectif est de réaliser une performance de 400-800 points de base supérieure à l’euribor 3 mois avec une volatilité inférieure à 6 %, quelle que soit la tendance des marchés.Parmi les stratégies privilégiées figurent le long/short equity, le global macro, les CTA, les devises et la volatilité.
L’indice «Lyxor Hedge Fund Index» a enregistré un gain de 2,12 % en mars 2010. Sur le mois, les stratégies alternatives qui ont le mieux performé sont : la stratégie CTAs Long Term Index (+4,84 %), la stratégie L/S Credit Arbitrage Index (+3,85 %), et la stratégie Fixed Income Arbitrage Index (+2,73 %). La seule stratégie en perte en mars est celle L/S Equity Short Bias Index (-6,58 %). Sur le premier trimestre, le Lyxor Hedge Fund Index est en hausse de 2,03 %.A noter que les indices «Lyxor Hedge Indices» sont des indices alternatifs investissables. Leur performance est calculée sur la base de la performance et des actifs des fonds de la plateforme Lyxor.