Lors d’une conférence à Boston, Matt Schiffman, head of retail de Legg Mason, a reconnu que son entreprise a manqué le train des ETF mais qu’elle pourrait envisager de lancer des ETF gérés activement, rapporte Mutual Fund Wire. Cependant, la décision définitive n’a pas encore été prise.
The North of Singapore contains one of the highest-security prisons in Asia, where those convicted of violating banking secrecy of high net worth clients are imprisoned. The offence carries a penalty of up to three years in prison, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. The city-state of Singapore is following the example of Switzerland and Liechtenstein. The government promotes financial services as one of the three key sectors for the country in the future, along with education and biotechnology.Singapore already manages about SGD800bn in assets for foreign clients, most of whom come from Asia, but capital from German and Swiss clients is increasing. There is little likelihood that Singapore will back down under pressure from European countries, as it would then have to institute a tax on all foreign capital, which would provoke an exodus of Chinese and Indonesian clients, which Singapore fears like the devil itself.
The Luxembourg investment fund association (ALFI) late last week welcomed a proposal by the Luxembourg government to exempt microfinance investment funds from subscription tax. The proposal, which is a part of the 2010 budget, follows a recommendation by ALFI “which has long held that an exemption from subscription tax will encourage the development of this type of fund in Luxembourg.” The Grand duchy’s ambition is to “become a leading place of domicile for Microfinance Investment Vehicles.” 45% of assets in known microfinance investment vehicles worldwide are based in Luxembourg.
Dolores Ybarra, CEO of Santander Asset Management, has told Expansión that the firm’s goal is to offer Latin American equities and bond funds for sale in Luxembourg, which is complicated as institutional investors require that these products have high volumes of assets before investing. The affiliate of the Spanish bank has had a Luxmbourg Sicav since 1993; it now has 23 sub-funds and assets of only EUR750m. Santander has now decided to boost sales of shares via its Spanish network in order to boost volumes to a high enough level for institutional investors to be interested. Net subscriptions since the beginning of the year have totalled EUR180m. Meanwhile, Santander Asset Management has registered its funds in the United Kingdom and has begun the process of doing so in two Asian countries as well.
MEAG Munich Ergo Asset Management (EUR186bn in assets), a joint venture from Munich Ré and the primary insurer Ergo, announced on Thursday that it is placing its institutional management and its management on behalf of retail investors under the single direction of Robert Helm, who since 2003 had been head of the institutional clients division. For his part, Max Plank, who was director of retail distribution, becomes general director of the asset management firm MEAG KAG, the operational affiliate of MEAG AM.
From the beginning of the year to 25 September, according to data from Teleperformance SIX telekurs, the category of funds invested in French equities has posted average returns of 24.15%. Pluvalca France, managed by La Financière d’Arbevel, tops the rankings, with gains of 63.82%. It is true that in the fund from La Financière d’Arbevel small and midcaps represent 15% to 20% of the portfolio. On average, funds invested in this asset class have gained 34.42% since the beginning of the year, and the fund at the top of the rankings in this category is the Pluvalca France Small Caps fund, which has gained 67.01%.
Erste Sparinvest (Espa) announced on Thursday that on 2 October, rather than 9 October, it will be closing subscriptions to its new fund of government bonds from countries of central and eastern Europe, entitled Espa New Europe Basket 2014 (see Newsmanagers of 15 September). According to the product manager, Edwin Triebling, the move comes as a result of high demand and a strong rise in the price of government bonds from central and eastern European countries recently. On the basis of current data, the fund is expected to return a minimum of 5% (it had initially aimed for returns of 5.25%). In light of the scale of demand, Espa is proposing to launch a new fund which will use the same investment strategy, with subscriptions to open for the new product on 9 November 2009.
Steward International Enhanced Value Index Fund, which invests according to biblical and Christian principles, filed a legal complaint in the US alleging that Cadbury’s board breached its fiduciary duties by rejecting Kraft’s GBP10.2bn takeover approach. The US mutual fund holds 6,720 Cadbury shares.
According to Mariano Rabadán, president of the Inverco association of asset management firms, investment and pension funds will need three to four years to regain the asset volumes of EUR415bn seen at the end of 2007, when the crisis set in, Expansión reports. They are expected to finish 2009 with assets under management of EUR315-320bn.
According to Financial News Online, Henderson Group is in talks with investors and banks in a bid to refinance an infrastructure fund, Henderson PFI Secondary Fund II, whose value fell by 66% between 2006 and the end of June. The drop is linked to an investment made 3 years ago in John Laing, adds Financial News, which obtained a report sent to investors.
EFG Private Bank, the London-based affiliate of EFG International, has launched a bond fund in partnership with Stratton Street Capital. New Capital Wealthy Nations Bond Fund is a UCITS III fund domiciled in Ireland, which aims for returns of about 8%, and which maintains an average credit quality of single A for bonds in the portfolio.
Alternative Asset Advisors (3A), the alternative investment division of the Syz & CO Group, announced on Thursday the launch of a new fund of hedge funds, 3A Dynamic UCITS III. This product, a sub-fund of the umbrella Luxembourg Sicav Oceano, invests in UCITS III hedge funds, a universe which is increasing rapidly, according to 3A. At present there are approximately 200 such hedge funds. The fund, which is itself also compliant with the requirements of the UCITS III directive, comprises between 18 and 25 positions. 3A Dynamic UCITS III, aimed at professional clients only, seeks to achieve a low volatility of 2-4% with a return objective of 6-8% p.a. The fund will be available in three different reference currencies (USD, EUR and CHF) and will include several share classes. It offers bi-monthly liquidity.
Threadneedle announced on 1 October that it has launched a new Sicav platform, the Threadneedle (Lux)Sicav, of the World Express range from Standard Chartered. Since its acquisition in May 2009, the platform, domiciled in Luxembourg, has been under profound study with the objective of improving its integration within the Threadneedle product range. A total of 16 funds will now be managed directly by Threadneedle. Seven other funds of the range will be managed by sub-advisors. Some portfolios have changed names (European Small Cap Equities becomes Pan European Smaller Companies, Focused US Growth Equities becomes American Select), while the investment objectives for some products have been modified to better reflect the fund’s approach and the strategy of the manager.
Old Mutual Asset Managers is to launch a bond fund domiciled in Dublin for the head of fixed income Stewart Cowley. The fund will be launched in December, and will be based on the same investment strategy as the Global Strategic Bond fund, domiciled in the United Kingdom, and also managed by Cowley. The fund will be attentive to its benchmark, without being dependent on the benchmark. In other words, it will not adopt positions for the simple reason that they are found in the index.
The UniNachhaltig Aktien Global fund, being launched by Union Investment (co-operative banks), is a global equities sustainable development product, which uses a stock-picking approach after environmental, social and governance (ESG) filters have been applied by the agency imug (Institut für Markt-Umwelt-Gesellschaft). Selection will be made from a universe of 2,800 businesses worldwide, from which imug will select 260 names. Then, the companies selected are passed through another filter which this time applies sustainable research from Union Investment. The shares are then selected based on a best-in-class approach, and are subjected to a parallel tradititional type financial fundamental analysis. The manager of the fund is Ingo Speich. Union Investment manages about EUR2.5bn in sustainable development. Characteristics Name : UniNachhaltig Aktien Global: ISIN : DE000A0M80G4 Front-end fee : 5% Management commission : 1.2% (maximum: 1.75%) Depository banking commission : 0.05%
After noting that ecological sectoral funds in Germany currently represent assets of EUR826m, or about one third of the amount in biotech and pharmaceuticals funds, Börsen-Zeitung points out that regardless of the method used to compose funds (exclusion or best-in-class) SRI generates outperformance. According to a study by the Swiss asset management firm SAM (Robeco group) covering 2,500 businesses in all sectors, 20% of the most sustainable development-friendly businesses in 2008 posted performance 300 basis points higher than the 20% least sustainable development-friendly. Lucrative investments can also provide a good conscience, it seems, as long as the right fund is selected. According to the Sustainable Business Institute (SBI), the best sustainable development equities funds in the German-speaking countries (Germany, Austria, and Switzerland) in first half 2009 posted returns of about 53%, while the worst of them lost 7%. Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Sustainability World index gained about 28%.
In August, securities funds on sale in Spain posted their first net subscriptions since April 2007 (see Newsmanagers of 2 September), totalling EUR402m. But in September, these funds saw further net outflows of EUR1.2bn, a phenomenon which the Inverco association of asset management firms blames primarily on issues on primary markets. In the first nine months of the year, net redemptions totalled EUR10.31bn, compared with EUR42.99bn in the corresponding period of 2008. Assets fell by 0.05%, or EUR77m, in September, to a total of EUR162.777bn as of 30 September, compared with EUR162.840bn one month earlier. Only two firms out of the top ten showed net subscriptions: Invercaixa Gestión and Ibercaja Gestión posted inflows of EUR80.9m and EUR126.5m, respectively, while BBVA Asset Management, Santander Asset Management and Ahorro Corporación saw net outflows of EUR673.5m, EUR172.3m and EUR268.2m. In terms of assets, BBVA Asset Management posted EUR32.36bn as of the end of September, putting it ahead of Santander Asset Management (EUR28.47bn) and Invercaixa Gestión (EUR12.66bn).
On Thursday, Deutsche Bank announced that it will be launching calls and puts, WAVEs, XXL WAVEs and discount certificates based on seven emerging markets ETF funds from db x-trackers on sale on its X-markets platform, for a total of 70 new derivatives. The products will allow investors to participate in an “extra-proportional” manner in the evolution of equities markets in emerging countries, including both negative and positive developments. Thorsten Michalik head of db x-trackers, points out that WAVEs and XXL WAVEs make it possible for the first time to make long and short investments with constant leverage on the selected indexes (FTSE Vietnam, MSCI Brazil TRN, MSCI EM TRN, MSCI Korea, MSCI Latam TRN, MSCI Taiwan TRN and FTSE/X. China 25 TRN). WAVEs and XXL WAVEs mature in November 2009, while options mature in December 2009 and June 2010. The new X-markets products will be traded from 8 AM to 8 PM on the Frankfurt and Stuttgart markets. They may also be traded until 10 PM off-market with Deutsche Bank, via several online brokers.
Hester Borrie has been appointed as a member of the board at the Robeco group. Borrie, formerly of Morgan Stanley Investment Management (MSIM), where she spent more than ten years, and where she most recently occupied the position of managing director for sales, will be in charge of the Global Distribution and Marketing units. Meanwhile, Roderick Munsters, CEO, will serve in the interim over the next few months as head of the Mainstream Investments unit.
José María Marcos, director general for issuers at the CNMV, says 40 Spanish asset management firms, one out of every three, saw losses in January-June this year, Cinco Días reports. The deterioration of margins is the evident consequence of falling asset levels. In 2008, the number of asset management firms in the red was 34. Since their peak in May 2007, assets under management have fallen 38%.
The British Financial Services Authority (FSA) on 1 October published a feedback statement for its public consultation on short-selling, launched in February, which confirms its desire to maintain a policy of transparency in short-selling, and to continue to publish all short positions on all shares. However, the FSA will continue to establish an international agreement on the subject, rather than engaging in efforts to introduce a specifically British regime.
KKR Private Equity Investors (KPE) and KKR & Co on Thursday announced that they have completed their merger, and that KPE will now become known as KKR Guernsey. Shares in the merged firm will be listed from this Friday on Euronext Amsterdam. Citi was the sole financial advisor to KPE in the deal, while Lazard was the financial advisor to the independent directors of KPE.
Kenneth Lewis, CEO of Bank of America (BofA), will be leaving his job at the end of 2009, La Tribune reports, after announcing in a letter to his colleagues that the mergers with Merrill Lynch and Countrywide [the insurer the bank acquired in 2008 -ed] were near completion and already profitable. The decision comes as judge Rakoff has rejected an agreement between the bank, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, and the US market regulator (SEC) over USD5.8bn in bonuses paid by Merrill Lynch after it was acquired, with the approval of BofA, the newspaper reports.
StartFragment--> Invesco has emerged as the front-runner to buy Morgan Stanley’s Van Kampen fund business, according to people familiar with the matter quoted by the Wall Street Journal. The deal, estimated to be worth USD1 billion to USD2 billion, would likely increase Invesco’s assets under management to about USD550 billion and leave Morgan Stanley with a minority stake in Invesco.