Thames River Capital has announced the appointment of Trygve Tøraasen as manager of its European equities team. He will be in charge of the Thames River European Fund, which he will co-manage with Carlos Moreno. Tøraasen was previously a manager at Fidelity Investments of the FMR Europe Fund and the European Dynamic Growth Fund.
Selon Les Echos, la banque d’investissement Calyon réclame à IKB plus de 1,675 milliard de dollars (1,17 milliard d’euros) de dommages et intérêts. La filiale du Crédit Agricole a déposé une plainte devant la Haute Cour de justice de Londres, reprochant à IKB de lui avoir fourni des informations trompeuses. L'établissement de Düsseldorf a indiqué qu’il passait actuellement en revue les charges contre lui, avant de réagir à cette plainte. Cette action en justice est liée à une procédure antérieure, celle du rehausseur de crédit FGIC contre IKB et Calyon.
The asset management unit at Natixis earned ongoing net results for the part of the group in second quarter up 20% compared with first quarter, to EUR55m, on net banking proceeds up 5% to EUR313m, largely due to rising management commissions.Natixis points out in a statement that the profitability of the activity has improved considerably, as the cost-income ratio has improved 3 points to 73%, largely due to the apparent stabilisation of charges.After three consecutive half-years of falling asset levels (as negative market effects offset inflows), assets have increased by EUR29bn (+6.5%) compared with first half 2009. In second quarter 2009, assets under management totalled EUR476bn (+6% compared with 31 March 2009). Net inflows in second quarter totalled EUR9bn. Market effects were positive to the tune of +EUR28bn, while currency effects were negative, at -EUR8bn.In Europe, assets under management totalled EUR311bn. Net inflows have progressed well, at EUR6.8bn, largely driven by money market products. Market effects are positive to the tune of +EUR9.2bn. In the United States, assets under management totalled USD230.9bn. Net inflows totalled USD2.4bn. Market effects are positive, at +USD25.9bn. The evolution of the product mix has continued, with an increase in the proportion of bonds, which now exceed 50% of assets under management.
The hedge fund firm Citadel Investment Group will drop the name Citadel Solutions for its fund administration division, which will instead become known as Omnium, the Wall Street Journal. The association with Citadel has kept some potential clients away.
Currently, BNY Mellon has about 150 employees in Hong Kong, where the headquarters of its Asia-Pacific operations are located (in the region, the business has 16 offices in 12 countries). The US group is planning to recruit a further 50 people in the Chinese special economic zone by the end of 2010, to strengthen its asset management activities and services in the areas of securities and treasury. Additional office space has been rented on the 14th floor of Three Pacific Place, which will put asset management personnel in a single location.
In first half, EFG International has posted net profits of CHF20m, a 54% decrease compared with second half 2008 and of 89% compared with the same period of last year. These results were dragged down by a one-time charge of CHF33m, of which CHF18.8m were for an accelerated amortization of intangibles at C.M. Advisors, the fund of hedge fund activity acquired in 2008. As of the end of June, assets totalled CHF80.4bn, 7% more than at the end of December (CHF75.4bn), and 17% less than as of 30 June 2008. Net inflows in January-June totalled CHF2.2bn, as institutional hedge fund clients withdrew CHF2.5bn and retail investors brought in CHF4.7bn. In second half 2008, EFG International saw net outflows of CHF0.8bn, compared with net inflows of CHF14bn in first half of that year. The number of customer relationship officers (CRO) at the firm fell at the end of June to 674, despite 75 new recruitments.
Reserve Primary Fund and its independent trustees filed a court brief on Friday, supporting the distribution of the fund’s remaining assets as soon as possible, the Wall Street Journal reports. The document states that subscribers may receive slightly more than expected: USD0.9875 per share, and perhaps as much as 99 cents.
The Global Top-Down Strategies Fund (EUR3.5bn in assets) has invested EUR150m since the end of May in 40 businesses in the renewable energies sector, including Areva, Westas Wind Systems, and ABB, Responsible Investor reports. The fund is managed by five people, including Frank Smudde, on behalf of APG Asset Management, an affiliate of the ABP pension fund for civil servants in the Netherlands (EUR180bn in assets).
Veritas Asset Management has appointed Farouk Abillama as senior sales manager; he will aim to develop the group’s client base and strengthen ties with traditional investors such as funds of hedge funds, endowments, and family offices. Abbilama was previously at Dresdner Kleinwort, where he was vice president and raised capital in the Middle East and Europe for hedge funds based in the United States or Europe.
Les Echos reports that the financial information group born of the merger of Thomson and Reuters yesterday received the necessary legal permission to withdraw its shares from trading on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) and the NASDAQ. From 10 September, shares in Thomson Reuters will be traded only on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), in the United States, and on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSE) in Canada.
Skandia International has announced the launch of a range of portfolio and fund planning instruments, provided by Morningstar, on onshore platforms. The tools will be available through the extranets of Royal Skandia and Skandia Ireland, and will aim to assist advisors in making judicious investment decisions in the shortest time possible.
The Madoff scandal has halted the growth of funds of funds, provoking questions about the due diligence, transparency, and liquidity of these products, Financial Times Fund Management observes. In this environment, some asset management professionals think that investors and asset managers will take more interest in managers of managers. One of them is Joanna Munro, CEO of multi-management at HSBC Global Asset Management, who estimates that these vehicles are easier to control. For the moment, at any rate, data from Lipper FMI do not show any transfer of assets form funds of funds to managers of managers.
Citywire reveals that Aviva Investors has launched a UK-focused absolute return Ucits III fund. The Aviva Investors UK Absolute Return fund is managed by Julius Lipner, who joined the firm from alternatives investment boutique Magnetar.
Les Echos reports that the largest bank in Russia, Sberbank, has been the victim of a USD180m fraud, exceeding its quarterly results in size (USD160m in second quarter). The announcement of the fraud, which has been known of by the management of the public establishment since March, comes at a time when Dmitri Medvedev, the Russian president, has initiated a program to combat corruption in public institutions.
For first half, VP Bank has reported net profits of CHF26.9m, compared with CHF41m, due to a difficult and volatile market environment.Assets under management as of the end of June rose to CHF28.9bn, from CHF28.5bn; though positive market effects brought an increase of CHF1.4bn, net redemptions totalled CHF1bn. However, assets under custody increased in January-June by CHF4.4bn to a total of CHF11bn.
At a presentation of results for first half, VP Bank has announced that due to divergences over the group’s strategic orientation, Adolf E. Real has agreed with the board of directors to leave his job as CEO as of 30 September. He has served in the position for eleven years. Fredy Vogt, CFO, will serve as interim CEO.
Assets in funds of hedge funds fell to USD530bn as of the end of June 2009, from a peak of USD825bn. Between September 2008 and June 2009, the decline in assets totalled about USD200bn, which represents a decrease of about 30%, according to the Telegraph, citing a study by the Hedge Fund Journal and Newedge Prime Brokerage of the 50 largest funds of funds. This is a major crisis for the sector, whose assets increased by an average of more than 20% per year between 2000 and 2008. Most funds have lost an average of 25% to 30% of their assets, but some have seen even more major decreases. Among the latter, the Alternative Investments division of HSBC has seen a decline of 51.9% in its assets, to USD22.3bn. Only two providers of funds of funds have posted gains: Blackstone, whose funds have gained 25%, to USD25bn, and Grosvenor Capital Management, which has gained 1% to USD21bn.
Statistics from the BVI association of asset management firms reveal that in first half, nearly all the major players suffered net redemptions, some of which were significant in size. The only two exceptions were producers of ETFs, such as db x-trackers (Deutsche Bank group), which attracted EUR2.97bn in assets in six months, and had assets of EUR21.37bn as of the end of June, and ETFlab (Deka group), which attracted EUR1.85bn. The DWS/DB ensemble as a whole (EUR127.25bn in AUM as of the end of June) has been the only group to post net subscriptions in the first six months of the year, with EUR2.8bn. However, Barclays Global Investors (BGI), historically a specialist in ETFs (it took over Indexchange) has posted net redemptions of EUR455.9m in January-June, bringing assets to EUR16.6bn at the end of first half.The heaviest net outflows were from Allianz Global Investors (EUR72.2bn), with EUR2.43bn (despite net subscriptions of EUR2.27bn for Pimco Europe) and Deka (EUR102.23bn in assets as of the end of June), with EUR2.89bn (ETFlab is not counted as a part of the asset management provider for the German savings banks).Pioneer (UniCredit), which as of the end of June had EUR10.3bn in assets under management, posted net redemptions of EUR876.6m in January-June. Lastly, Union Investment (co-operative banks) has posted net outflows of EUR820.7m, and assets as of the end of June totalled EUR77.26bn.
In January-June, only two fund management firms have posted net subscriptions in Germany of over EUR2bn: db x-trackers, with nearly EUR2.97bn, and Pimco Europe, with nearly EUR2.27bn, Kommalpha reports, adding that the two firms are both domiciled in Luxembourg. The next three promoters in the rankings are all German: ETFlab (Deka group) has more than EUR1.85bn, ahead of its parent company, which comes in with EUR1.6bn, and Union Investment Privatfonds (EUR1.41bn).The worst results were for five Luxembourg firms, four of which have undergone net outflows of over EUR2bn. They are Deka SA (EUR2.33bn), Union Investment Luxembourg (EUR2.24bn), IFM (EUR2.12bn), and Allianz GI Luxembourg (EUR2.11bn). For its part, cominvest SA has seen net redemptions of EUR1.12bn.
With the increasing number of complex products available, the average commission charged by ETFs in the United States, according to Citi, stands at 0.56%, compared with 0.40% as of the end of 2005. Currently, ETFs from State Street have average initial assets of USD5-10m, compared with USD20m a few years ago, the Wall Street Journal reports. As of the end of July, total assets in ETF funds totalled USD640bn, but 13 products had assets under management of over USD10bn each, and their spreads are under 0.09%. However, there are more than 200 ETFs whose spreads are over 0.5%, which is not acceptable, says Matt Hougan, director of ETF analysis at IndexUniverse.com. This would mean that an investor who buys and sells shares in the fund will lose 1% of his or her investment due to differences between the buy and sell price of the shares, which adds up to more than the commissions charged by most ETFs.
Les Echos reports that Nicolas Sarkozy firmly called French bankers to order yesterday, calling for “more transparency, more control, more responsibility” in the matter of bonuses, so that “irresponsible behaviour may be sanctioned.” At least one third of variable pay will be required to be paid in equities, and two thirds in other forms. Bonuses for performance over periods of more than one year will be banned, and a system of maluses will be put in place. The banking commission will oversee the application of these rules in detail, and the former director of the IMF, Michel Camdessus, will be in charge of verifying the salaries of the 100 top-paid traders at each firm. “The government will not work with banks that do not respect these new rules,” said Sarkozy. The head of state claimed that these rules should be part of an international framework, and that he would therefore defend them up until the Pittsburgh summit. “I will not rest in my efforts to bring about a European approach,” he warned. Sarkozy is planning to ask all member states of the G20 to apply the same principle as the Paris financial centre.
The investor confidence index published by the research division of State Street Global Markets gained 3.5 points in the month of August, to a total of 122.9 points. This is its eighth consecutive monthly rise. Institutional investors continue to be the most confident class of economic actors, State Street says. However, the pace at which the index is rising has slowed, with the 3.5 point gains the smallest observed since March. Regional indexes even show a decline in confidence for investors in North America for the first time in five months. However, European institutional investors’ appetite for risk has increased, by 4.3 points for the regional index, to 109.2, compared with 104.9 the previous month.
Lancé le 13 juillet par la maison de gestion zurichoise WM Partners, le WMP Electricity Value Chain Equity Fund est un fonds permettant d’investir sur le secteur de l’électricité, des énergies primaires (uranium, gaz, charbon) destinés à la consommation domestique. Actuellement en phase de lancement, son encours s’élève à 22 millions de francs suisses. Pour le moment, la principale position est Alpiq (2,9 %), issue de la fusion entre EOS et Atel, indique Le Temps.
Pour le premier semestre, EFG International affiche un bénéfice net de 20 millions de francs suisses, ce qui représente des baisses de 54 % sur le second semestre 2008 et de 89 % par rapport à la période correspondante de l’an dernier. Le résultat a été plombé par une charge exceptionnelle de 33 millions de francs, dont 18,8 millions correspondant à un amortissement accéléré d’intangibles sur C.M. Advisors, l’activité de fonds de hedge funds acquise en 2008.A fin juin, l’encours ressortait à 80,4 milliards de francs, soit 7 % de plus que fin décembre (75,4 milliards) et 17 % de moins qu’au 30 juin 2008. Les souscriptions nettes de janvier-juin sont ressorties à 2,2 milliards de francs, les clients hedge funds institutionnels retirant 2,5 milliards pendant que les particuliers apportaient 4,7 milliards. Pour le second semestre 2008, EFG International avait accusé des sorties nettes de 0,8 milliard de francs, contre des rentrées nettes de 14 milliards au premier.Le nombre de conseillers clientèle (customer relationship officers ou CRO) avait diminué fin juin à 674, malgré 75 nouvelles embauches.
Inspired by the agreement between UBS and the United States, the Canadian government is giving a look to the bank accounts that its taxpayers hold in Switzerland, Le Temps reports.“We would like to obtain information. UBS tried to slow things down, but in early September, we will meet with our lawyers (and UBS) to obtain this information,” the Canadian minister of internal revenue, Jean-Pierre Blackburn, told the Toronto Globe and Mail newspaper.
The international association of the hedge fund industry, AIMA (Alternative Investment Management Authority), has welcomes a decision this past weekend by the FSA (Financial Services Authority) to commission a study of the impact the planned hedge fund directive would have on the United Kingdom. The British financial market authority has asked the research firm CRA International to study the costs and benefits of the legislation, focusing on the impact of the project on investment portfolios, costs to companies and investors, on the functioning of the market and on systemic risk, and finally, to study the effects of the legislation on financing for small businesses and European competitiveness. The findings of the study will be presented by the end of the year. The Association favours a revision of the draft directive in its current form. Though it approves of some planned measures such as systematic reporting of appropriate data to national supervisory authorities, the Association argues that some areas of the planned legislation, such as those concerning leverage, depositories, and marketing, need to be revised and corrected to avoid counter-productive effects. The AIMA, which has already called on the European Commission to order a pan-European impact study, hopes that the FSA’s initiative will inspire the Commission to take that step. “We hope that the European Commission will follow suit on the pan-European level. It would be extraordinary if there were not an appropriate evaluation on the European level of the impact of a directive which could have very serious consequences.” Like the AIMA, the FSA, whose annual conference for asset management, to be held on 17 September in London, will be dedicated to the subject of the planned European directive, is said to be favourable to a revision of the Commission’s draft directive, which it considers too constraining for the hedge fund industry. The British government is concerned about the impact of the draft directive on the competitiveness of an industry which in European terms is largely centred in London. The United Kingdom’s efforts to produce a revised version of the text will be likely to provoke some debate in Europe. France, among others, is widely known to favour increased surveillance of the activities of hedge funds.
Suite à la décision de la Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) de durcir la réglementation, Barclays Global Investors a cessé la vente de nouveaux titres dans son fonds iShares indexés sur l’indice S&P GSCI Commodity, indique L’Agefi.
Selon une étude de S&P citée par le WSJ, environ 60 % des gérants de fonds actions affichaient une performance inférieure à celle de leur indice sur les cinq ans au 30 juin. A l’exception des fonds de dette émergente, au moins 75 % des gérants obligataires étaient à la traine. Cela vient apporter de l’eau au moulin des partisans de la gestion indicielle.Mais pour Jane Li, de FundQuest (BNP Paribas), «moins le marché est efficient, plus le potentiel d’un gérant d’ajouter de la valeur est important».