Although it is supposed to be a ?global? product, David Rolley, Kenneth Buntrock and Lynda Schweitzer, co-managers of the Global Bond Fund (USD1.5bn) from Loomis, Sayles & Co (USD106bn), now have a ?recovery exposure? to the private sector in the United States, which accounts for 47% of assets, the Wall Street Journal reports.Although the fund’s largest positions are still in European bonds, the Euro is underweighted. The fund is only 10% invested in junk bonds, but none of the 283 assets it holds in this category present serious default risks.
The executive vice-president of Legg Mason, Peter Bain, will be leaving the bank at the end of the month, eFinancialNews reports. Bain was head of the asset management division, but has chosen to ?pursue other opportunities.? His responsibilities will be redistributed to several other team members internally.
Handelsblatt reports that Deka (savings banks) and Union Investment (co-operative banks) are willing to support an initiative led by DWS (Deutsche Bank), which is calling on Deutsche Börse to provide more transparent and liquid trading of corporate bonds, a market on which trading now takes place largely on an ad-hoc basis by telephone. DWS would like the stock market enterprise to appoint a market maker, who would be respnsible for setting firm prices and executing the corresponding orders at these prices. It would also be possible to separate price formation and execution. But banks see these plans as difficult to realise at a time when they are in the midst of efforts to reduce debt, a spokesman for the Sifma banking association says.
Ignites relays reports in Financial Times Deutschland that Deutsche Bank is suing Reserve Management in the United States for a refund of USD72.2m which were invested in the Reserve Primary Fund. On the morning of 15 September, before the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy, the German bank ordered a redemption of USD500m, and received verbal consent - but they only got USD428m the next day.
Kristin Halvorsen, the Norwegian finance minister, has decided to place Siemens under observation due to systematic large-scale corruption practiced by the group over many years. This may lead to the firm being expelled from the portfolio of the Government Pension Fund - Global, formerly known as the Oil Fund. ?Even so, Siemens is now in the eye of public opinion, and has begun rolling out a series of anti-corruption measures. Putting the firm under observation will allow the Fund to maintain pressure to incite the German group to continue its efforts in the fight against corruption,? the Norwegian minister stated.As of 31 December 2008, the Government Pension Fund - Global held NOK6.3bn in Siemens shares, which represent 1.34% of voting rights in the firm.
The Swiss Fund Association (SFA) on Friday welcomed propositions by the Federal Council to provide administrative assistance on tax-related questions. Gérard Fischer, chairman of the SFA, says that in return, the Swiss government should ask for access to markets for Swiss actors, in order to connect Switzerland to European OPCVM markets in particular. Matthäus den Otter, president of the SFA, declares that discrimination against Switzerland practised by other states such as Germany and Italy should be stopped.
Alex Stanic, manager of the Newton Global Opportunities fund, has resigned, and is expected to join the British management boutique River & Mercantile as its new head of equities management, Citywire reports on 12 March. Stanic also managed the BNY Mellon Global Equity and the BNY Mellon Global Intrepid.
In February, Swedish funds posted net subscriptions of SEK2.1bn, largely thanks to net inflows of EUR1.1bn to equities funds, the Swedish investment fund association (Fondbolagens Förening) states.Hedge funds and diversified funds posted net inflows of SEK0.6bn and SEK0.2bn, respectively. Money market funds are also in positive territory (+SEK0.3bn), while bond funds have seen net outflows of SEK0.1bn.
Daniel C. Sontag, chairman of Merrill Lynch Global Wealth Management, has been appointed as a member of the board of directors at BlackRock (USD1.3trn in assets as of the end of December). He and Brian T. Moynihan, president of global banking and wealth management at Bank of America, will replace John Thain and Gregory J. Fleming, who have resigned.
DWS (Deutsche Bank), Deka (savings banks) and Allianz Global Investors are all claiming to be the number one management firm in Germany. All three of them are right, in their way. In the case of DWS, it is true in terms of asset volumes in securities funds; for Deka, it is true if funds of funds and house funds in which they are invested are included in the count; and for AGI, it is true counting assets under management for the insurance group. Union Investment (co-operative banks), meanwhile, is number one for assets in Reister retirement savings accounts, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. But the question of which firm has the most assets under management doesn’t say anything about which one is the best.
According to financial industry sources, Talanx is preparing to buy a 10% stake in Swiss Life, and to buy up 10% of the 24% stake in MLP held by the insurer, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. The Talanx group incudes Hannover Rück (Hanovre Ré), HDI-Gerling and Aspecta, the latter two of which already cooperate with AWD and MLP in life insurance distribution. Swiss Life owns 100% of AWD; its stake in MLP was diluted by a capital increase which Axa and Allianz subscribed to.
The Financial Times reports that hedge funds belonging to the Alternative Investment Management Association are considering a lawsuit against Porsche over its involvement in the spectacular rise in the share price of Volkswagen last year which caused the funds billions of dollars in losses.
The hedge fund Centaurus Capital, managed by former BNP Paribas traders Bernard Oppetit and Randy Freeman, will launch a new merger arbitrage fund, the Financial Times reports. The new product will charge 1.5% per year in fees and 15% of profits, which is less than the 2% and 20% usually charged in the sector. The fund will offer total transparency as to its positions and will allow monthly withdrawals with 30 days’ advance notice.
According to the most recent Investhedge Billion Dollar Club survey, assets in hedge funds contracted by about 30% in 2008, and losses averaged 16.63%. The largest funds of hedge funds, those with more than USD1bn in assets, had assets under management at the end of last year of USD744bn. There were 137 of them at the end of December, compared with 164 one year previously. The three actors with more than USD30bn in assets are UBS Global Asset Management with USD34bn, Union Bancaire Privée with USD33bn, and HSBC Alternative Investments with USD31.88bn.
At a meeting in the Netherlands from 2 to 4 March, eleven banks with strong commitments to sustainable development founded the Global Alliance of Banking on Values, which will aim to deliver a social, ecological and sustainable economic response to the global financial crisis. The establishments in the alliance have assets of over USD10bn, and more than 7 million clients in 20 countries.The alliance includes the following banks: Alternative Bank ABS (Switzerland), Banca Popolare Etica (Italy), GLS Bank (Germany), Banex (Nicaragua); BRAC Bank (Bangladesh), Mibanco (Peru), Merkur Bank (Denmark); New Resource Bank and ShoreBank Corp (United States), Triodos (Netherlands) and XacBank (Mongolia).
Fondsprofessionell relays Bloomberg reports that the alternative management firm Paulson & Co has earned gains since September of GBP311m by short-selling shares in Lloyds Banking Group and HBOS. Paulson also declared a short position amounting to 1.17% of capital in Barclays, whose shares have since fallen by two thirds.
ETFs are beginning to attract capital away from actively-managed funds, but traditional managers are not going to stand by and let it happen, MarketWatch reports. Charles Schwab and Pimco (Allianz group) are planning to move into the ETF market.
ING Investment Management has announced that the boards of trustees of the closed real estate funds ING Clarion Real Estate Income Fund and ING Clarion Global Real Estate Income Fund have approved the merger of the two funds. The funds are managed by ING Clarion Real Estate Securities (USD11bn in assets as of the end of 2008).
Selon l’Agefi, «Goldman Sachs et Morgan Stanley ont créé une joint-venture pour s’implanter sur le marché européen des fonds indiciels négociables en Bourse (?)».Baptisée «Source», cette coentreprise pourrait entrer en activité dès avril avec le lancement de 20 exchange traded notes, notamment sur les matières premières, et 50 exchange traded funds (ETF). Ces produits seraient en passe d'être homologués en Irlande, précise notamment le quotidien numérique.
Crise financière et scandales obligent, «le thème de la gouvernance dans les fonds revient au goût du jour», a déclaré Aymeric Poizot, analyste de Fitch Ratings, lors de la conférence annuelle de l’agence de notation qui se tenait mardi.Et en France, par rapport aux autres pays européens, les règles et principes de gouvernance s’appliquant aux sociétés de gestion sont «relativement souples, notamment s’agissant de la supervision du management exécutif de la société», constatait Fitch Ratings dans une étude publiée en décembre dernier. «Le conseil d’administration n’est pas obligé d’inclure des membres indépendants ni de créer des comités d’audit et de rémunérations». C’est la même chose au niveau des OPCVM. En effet, la structure juridique la plus fréquence est le FCP (90 % des OPCVM français), qui n’est pas supervisé par un conseil d’administration, contrairement à la Sicav. Fitch note aussi dans son étude que «la réglementation française n’exige pas d'évaluation indépendante puisque la société de gestion reste responsable de la valorisation des actifs, contrairement à ce qui existe dans les autres pays européens».
Weavering Macro Fixed Income, le fonds vedette de Weavering Capital, un gestionnaire de hedge fund à Londres, a bloqué les rachats après qu"une enquête interne a permis de découvrir un swap d"un montant important avec une société liée au gérant, rapporte le Financial Times.
Jan Straatman, l’ancien CEO de Pearl-Axial Investments qui est devenu directeur de l’investissement (CIO) d’ING Investment Management en août 2008, a annoncé une restructuration complète de la société de gestion. Il prévoit d’abandonner la formule du «silo» par classe d’actifs pour créer un système multi-boutiques avec équipes dont les idées pourront être mises en ?uvre dans plusieurs stratégies différentes, rapporte IPE. La gestion du risque sera maintenue au niveau des stratégies et couverte transversalement par une équipe indépendante de diagnostic du risque issue du monde des hedge funds. De son côté, Funds People souligne que les gérants qui ne réaliseront pas de performances positives ne percevront pas de prime tandis que Global Pensions précise que les bonus seront étalés sur deux ou trois ans et repris si les gérants sous-performent. Jan Straatman a précisé à Global Pensions que la restructuration devrait être achevée pour la fin de l’année.
Malgré la crise financière, beaucoup de fonds gérés en fonction de critères écologiques et sociaux ont été mis sur le marché. Rien que dans l’espace germanophone (Allemagne, Autriche, Suisse) ont a enregistré pour 2008 le lancement de 50 nouveaux produits représentant un encours total de 900 millions d’euros, selon le Sustainable Business Institut (SBI). Le Handelsblatt rapporte que certains des promoteurs de fonds de développement durable ont même enregistré des souscriptions nettes alors que les remboursements nets pour l’ensemble de la gestion d’actifs en Europe atteignaient 300 milliards d’euros, d’après Lipper FMI. Cela posé, avec l’effet de marché, les encours des fonds ISR ont diminué d’un tiers, une contraction moins forte que celle enregistrée pour la moyenne des fonds d’actions allemands (- 38 %).
Mardi, le conseil de surveillance de la Deutsche Bank approuvera une proposition visant à doubler l’effectif du directoire (Vorstand) à huit personnes, selon manager-magazin relayé par le Handelsblatt. Les quatre nouveaux membres seraient les banquiers d’investissement Anshu Jain et Michael Cohrs, le patron de la clientèle de particuliers Rainer Neske et le patron de l’Allemagne, Jürgen Fitschen. Jusqu'à présent, le Vorstand se compose du président Josef Ackermann, du directeur du risque Hugo Bänziger, du directeur financier Stefan Krause et du COO Hermann-Josef Lamberti. Cela posé, les quatre nouveaux membres font déjà partie du Group Executive Committee (GEC), une structure crée par Josef Ackermann en 2002. Le GEC comprend aussi Pierre de Weck, le patron de la gestion de fortune, et Kevin Parker, celui de la gestion d’actifs.
Selon les informations du Handelsblatt, le capital-investisseur Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR) serait prêt à mettre sur la table entre 3 milliards et 4 milliards d’euros pour acheter Phoenix, le grossiste en produits pharmaceutiques du groupe Merckle. KKR contrôle déjà le distributeur de médicaments et de produits de droguerie Alliance Boots au Royaume-Uni. Les 3-4 milliards s’entendent toutefois uniquement dans l’hypothèse où Phoenix serait totalement désendetté, mais l’entreprise a 4 milliards d’euros de dette à cause de ses acquisitions des années passées. Toutefois, en exploitation, la firme est réputée saine.