Le fonds de pension à prestations définies United Technologies Corporation Master Retirement Trust a confié à Mellon Capital Management (BNY Mellon Asset Management) la gestion d’une stratégie active de 100 millions de dollars qui investit dans des obligations d’entreprise de qualité à long terme.Ce nouveau mandat porte le montant des actifs gérés dans les stratégies actives de credit corporate à plus de 800 millions de dollars.
Pimco vient de recruter Mikael Angberg en tant que senior vice president et responsable du développement dans les pays nordiques. Basé à Londres, il sera subordonné à Micheal Burns, executive vice president et responsable de l’activité nordique de la société de gestion. Auparavant, Mikael Angberg était responsable des ventes de dérivés actions aux institutionnels pour BNP Paribas. Avant, il était executive director pour les ventes institutionnelles dans les pays nordiques chez Goldman Sachs. Il a aussi travaillé chez Axa Investment Managers.
Citywire rapporte que le gérant de Jupiter Asset Management Philip Gibbs consacre actuellement plus de la moitié de l’actif de son fonds Jupiter Financial Opportunities, soit 1,2 milliard de livres, à des liquidités comme le précise le dernier rapport de gestion. A côté des 52,45 % en cash, le portefeuille est composé, pour près de 37 %, de dix lignes de titres. Quant au solde - 11 % environ - il est réparti sur dix-huit lignes, représentant 136,2 millions d’euros.
Angus Duncan, l’ancien responsable de la distribution de Smith & Williamson, a été nommé responsable de la distribution pour le compte du fonds d’investissement Invest & Give.Selon Fund Strategy, Angus Duncan a la responsabilité d’une campagne de marketing pour le fonds qui a été lancé l’an dernier.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has fined the hedge fund Lake Dow Capital USD4m for fraud in the management of the Aurora Investment Fund, a commodity pool and hedge fund, Hedge Week reports.
Robert Moffat, a former senior vice-president at IBM, admitted on Monday he provided inside information to Danielle Chiesi, a person involved with the Galleon Group hedge fund insider trading scandal, says the Financial Times.
Assogestioni, the Italian association of management firms, is taking its time to release the names of candidates for the board of directors at Generali, Il Sole - 24 Ore reports. Its choices will be made known on 6 April. The idea is to propose a list of candidates likely to please both the Bank of Italy, which owns 4.46% of capital in the business, and foreign management firms. The largest foreign shareholder is BlackRock, with nearly 3%.
Asset management firms should pay their star portfolio managers better and part sooner with the ones who perform poorly, according to a study by Cass Business School’s Pensions Institute, cited by Financial Times Fund Management. The study finds that funds which perform less well and see large-scale redemptions and then part with their managers tend to see an improvement in performance afterwards.
The British government is planning to require institutional investors to disclose their voting policies for general shareholders’ meetings. In the draft budget submitted last week, the government says that it would like to study the possibility of requiring institutional investors to publish all information about their votes, Responsible Investor reports. The government has also launched a consultation on the role of pension funds and insurers in the determination of pay scales in the finance sector.
Capital Strategies Partners has added products from the French management firm Schelcher-Prince (EUR2bn in assets), whose range includes six funds, to its product offerings in Spain, Funds People reports. The key product from the management firm is Schelcher-Prince Convertibles, which has about EUR200m in assets.
Angus Duncan, former head of distribution at Smith & Williamson, has been appointed as head of distribution for the investment fund Invest & Give. Fund Strategy reports that Duncan will be in charge of a marketing campaign to promote the fund which was launched last year.
Citywire reports that the Jupiter Asset Management manager Philip Gibbs is now putting more than half of the assets of his fund, Jupiter Financial Opportunities, or GBP1.2bn, in cash, according to the most recent report from the management firm. In addition to its 52.45% exposure to cash, nearly 37% of the fund consists of ten positions on equities. The remainder, roughly 11%, is invested in 18 other positions, totalling EUR136.2m.
Investec, the South African financial services group, is close to taking full control of Rensburg Sheppards in a deal that could value the private client wealth manager at GBP400m, says the FInancial Times. The investment bank has offered GBP9 a share to buy out the 52 per cent of Rensburg’s shares it does not own.
The Financial Services Survey by the Confederation of British Industry, undertaken by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), has found that profits in the asset management sector increased further in the quarter to the end of March, setting a new record. For the financial services sector as a whole, profits have also increased, for the third consecutive quarterly rise. For investment management firms, the rapid improvement in profitability has resulted from an increase in volumes and an increase in revenues from fees and commissions. The increase in volumes is largely due to continued growth in activities serving financial institutions and foreign clients. However, concerns about the Malthusian impact of regulations on the growth of business in the next twelve months have increased, setting a new record, as 74% of heads surveyed say they are concerned. Pars Purewal, UK asset management leader at PwC, says that confidence in the asset management sector may prove fragile, as managers are more hesitant than in the past to develop new products, which leads to questions about whether they have really defined a clear long-term growth strategy. On the plus side, the survey finds that investment management firms are planning to increase their staff in the next three months, ahead of the UCITS IV directive, in order to meet the increased workloads that the regulations will impose on back and middle offices.
Credit Suisse announced on 29 March that it has been granted permission by the Indian authorities to set up an office in Mumbai, which would allow it to extend its range of services on the Indian market. The Swiss bank has also been given permission to trade in Indian debt as well as other fixed income products.
Pimco has hired Mikael Angberg as a senior vice president and head of business development Nordics. Based in the firm’s London office, Mikael Angberg joins Pimco’s Nordic team to build on the firm’s strong franchise in the region. He will report to Michael Burns, executive vice president and head of Pimco’s Nordic business. Prior to joining Pimco, Mikael Angberg was head of Nordic institutional equity derivatives sales at BNP Paribas and previously, was executive director for Nordic institutional sales at Goldman Sachs Asset Management. He also worked at Axa Investment Managers.
The Austrian-German management firm C-Quadrat has announced that it has received a notification from F&C Asset Management that a takeover bid submitted for approval to the Austrian antitrust regulator Übernahmekommission (ÜBK) on 22 March will not be followed up. Legally, this means that F&C will not be allowed to make a bid to acquire C-Quadrat or buy shares in C-Quadrat which might result in such an operation for a period of one year.
State Street Global Advisors (SsgA) on 25 March announced the appointment of Marc Reinganum as head of the active management team for developed equities markets. Reinganum will be based in Boston, and is head of all aspects of active management of equities portfolios on international developed markets. He was previously at Oppenheimer Funds, where he was senior portfolio manager and head of quantitative research.
In 2009, the Warburg group, which includes the private bank M.M. Warburg and six affiliates in Germany, and one each in Luxembourg and Switzerland, but which does not include Degussa Bank, which publishes its accounts separately, posted a 26.3% increase in pre-tax profits to EUR65.7m. ROE rose to 31% from 23% in 2008. Assets under management at the group as of 31 December totalled EUR32.3bn, compared with EUR29.2bn twelve months previously.
Since 1 January 2010, the chairman of the board at BHF-Bank, an affiliate of Sal. Oppenheim, has been Wilhelm von Haller, who has been installed by Deutsche Bank as head of Sal. Oppenheim. On Monday, the AGM of BHF-Bank elected four Deutsche Bank executives to its supervisory board. They are Stefan Krause, a managing board member and chief financial officer (CFO) at Deutsche Bank, Philipp von Girsewald, Head of Corporate Mergers & Acquisitions, Henning Heuerding, Managing Director Group Strategy & Planning, and Christian Sewing, Chief Credit Officer. Dietman Schmid, a managing board member at BHF-Bank, has been elected as a member of the «administration board» (Verwaltungsrat) at the bank, and then elected as chairman of that board. The board of directors consists of representatives of industrial and service sector businesses as well as public sector enterprises. He advises the board on economic questions, and promotes relations with other businesses.
According to a survey by Pioneer Investment of 500 institutional investors, respondents on average expect returns of 4.4%, thus the potential for disappointment is high, the Börsen-Zeitung reports. Meanwhile, 50.1% of respondents prefer absolute returns to outperformance of a benchmark index. Wolfgang Kirschner, director of institutional business for Pioneer, says that half of the businesses surveyed have no equities in their portfolios. Those which do have an average allocation of only 7.5%. More than one quarter are planning to increase their exposure to equities, while 20% are planning to reduce their exposure to bonds.
The defined-benefit pension fund United Technologies Corporation Master Retirement Trust has contracted Mellon Capital Management (BNY Mellon Asset Management) to manage “a USD100m active strategy which invests in high-quality corporate bonds for the long term.” The new mandate brings total assets managed in active corporate credit strategies to more than USD800m.
The Austrian-German management firm C-Quadrat Investment in 2009 earned net profits of EUR5.7m, compared with losses of EUR12.2m in 2008. The recovery is largely due to a strong increase in revenues from performance commissions, to EUR7.6m, up from EUR0.5m. Assets in funds increased by 58% in the course of the year, to a total of EUR2.66bn as of 31 December. Total assets under management at C-Quadrat generating revenues as of the end of the year came to EUR4.51bn, up from EUR3.28bn, which represents a 37% increase. The improvement in results is also due to a 39.7% contraction in operating costs excluding personnel, to EUR4.1m, while net personnel costs have risen 3.9%, to EUR7.4m.
Dexia Asset Management on Monday announced that it has appointed Benoît Magon de La Giclais as head of sales. He succeeds Cécile de Lasteyrie, who has been appointed as head of the client development department. Magon de La Giclais joined Dexia AM in 2001, and took charge of relations with French institutionals, including businesses, pension and retirement planning institutions, insurers, and banks investing on their own behalf. After serving as head of French institutional clients in in 2008, he has been in his current position since January 2010. “With over 10 years of experience in sales of high added value financial solutions, Benoît Magon de La Giclais is now responsible for strengthening Dexia AM’s position in the French asset management industry,” a statement from the firm says.
AIG received USD277m from the private equity investor Pacific Century Group to whom it sold PineBridge Investment (USD87.3bn in assets), the Wall Street Journal reports. AIG is also planning to receive a “performance note” and will continue to receive a portion of carried interest. The deal, which is worth up to USD500m, was supposed to have been signed in late 2009, but has been subject to several delays. AIG continues to manage about USD509bn in assets.
According to Financial Times Fund Management, Richard Wohanka, the new chief executive of UBP’s asset management and alternative investments division, is keen to develop its long-only operation, which has USD10bn of assets, alongside its hedge fund and private banking arms. In particular, he is keen to build up UBP’s capabilities in emerging markets.
According to the study “China Gold Report: Gold in the Year of the Tiger” by the World Gold Council (WGC), the tonnage of gold consumed by China may double in the next ten years. Gold consumption was worth more than USD14bn last year, equivalent to 11% of global demand. The study finds that, although gold consumption per person was as high in China as in India, Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia, annual demand for gold in China may increase by 100 tonnes, to a total of 4,000 tonnes, for the jewellery sector alone. In the past decade, Chinese gold producers have increased their production by 84%, but their known reserves represent only 4% of global reserves. If these figures are correct, the WGC estimates that China may have exhausted its gold resources in six years.
Sigbjørn Johnsen, the Norwegian Finance minister, on Monday announced that assets in the Government Pension Fund global (GPFG), formerly known as the Petroleum Fund, increased last year by NOK394bn, to a total of NOK2.757trn. NOK169bn of the increase is due to transfers and positive market effects of NOK642bn, but the revaluation of the Norwegian Kroner knocked NOK418bn off the total, though it did not wipe out the international buying power of the fund. The performance of the GPFG came to 25.6%, 4.1 percentage points better than its benchmark portfolio, while the performance of the Government Pension Fund Norway totalled 33.5%, which represents an underperformance of 2.2 percentage points compared with the benchmark portfolio. The minister says that in terms of active management, an expert report recommends limiting the margin for active management to 1% tracking error, from 1.5% previously, excluding exceptional circumstances. However, he admits that slavishly replicating benchmark portfolios also carries impractically high costs. In the area of responsible investment, Johnsen says that the GPFG has now added tools such as active exercise of ownership rights and exclusion on the basis of environmental, social and governance criteria to its range of techniques for all its investments.
Deutsche Bank on Monday announced that it has signed a declaration of intent with Craigs Investment Partners to acquire a 49.9% stake in the New Zealand-based management firm (NZD5bn in assets). The acquisition price was not disclosed. Deutsche Bank and Craigs Investment Partners have also signed a strategic alliance which will include a close collaboration in market activities. The corporate finance team at the German bank will cooperate with the equities and bond platforms at Craigs to offer New Zealand clients of the latter firm a wider range of products. Craigs clients will also have access to the research and expertise of the investment bank of Deutsche Bank. Craigs Investment Partners will remain independent.