Julius Baer a annoncé ce mardi la prise d’une participation majoritaire dans le capital de la société de gestion de fortune brésilienne GPS Investimentos Financeiros e Participações SA («GPS») en augmentant sa présence au capital de 50 points de pourcentage. Julius Baer Group Ltd détient désormais 80 %.« Cette augmentation fait suite à une coopération très réussie à ce jour et souligne l’objectif stratégique de Julius Baer de construire une entreprise leader de la gestion de fortune au Brésil, l’un des marchés les plus attractifs nationaux de gestion de fortune à travers le monde et le plus grand marché de la gestion de patrimoine en Amérique latine», indique un communiqué.GPS, qui comprend les sociétés GPS Planejamento Financeiro Ltda. et CFO Administração de Recursos Ltda., est le plus grand gestionnaire de fortune indépendant au Brésil. Il dispose d’environ 6 milliards de francs suisses d’actifs sous gestion, un encours qui a presque doublé au cours des trois dernières années.
T. Rowe Price prépare activement son retour en Amérique latine. Le gestionnaire d’actifs américain envisagerait en effet de s’implanter au Brésil après avoir quitté l’Argentine en 2013 suite à la décision du gouvernement local de renforcer ses contrôles et ses exigences en capital, rapporte Financial News.En choisissant le Brésil, T. Rowe Price, qui gère environ 692,4 milliards de dollars d’actifs, rejoint ainsi une longue liste de groupes qui ont installé des bureaux dans le pays ces dernières années, à l’instar de Pimco, Brevan Howard ou Aberdeen Asset Management, énumère le site d’information britannique. «Nous avons conduit une étude approfondie sur l’Amérique latine et le Brésil est le candidat le plus probable, a reconnu Christopher Alderson, responsable des actions internationales chez T. Rowe Price, dans un entretien à Financial News. Dans une perspective de qualité de vie, nous préférons Rio à Sao Paulo.» Le dirigeant a également indiqué que la compagnie regarde aussi l’Uruguay et le Chili comme bases possibles pour ses activités en Amérique latine. Auparavant, les activités de T. Rowe Price en Amérique latine ont été basées en Argentine pendant 16 ans.
Parvest, the Luxembourg-registered Sicav which aims to be the shop-window for BNP Paribas IP’s active management business, is getting an overhaul. Its range has been extended and now includes new “assistance” services dedicated to professionals who recommend it or invest in it.Parvest, whose assets now total EUR35bn, has 106 sub-funds, after registering or engulfing no less than 54 new funds between last year or this year. The reason for the additions is a “need to give Parvest a coherent and legible product range which provides access to the best of our management expertise,” Philippe Marchessaux, director and CEO of BNP Paribas IP, explains.Parvest now offers seven distinct asset classes: a sectoral equity range with eight sub-funds has been released, as well as a range of three funds which invest in listed real estate. The developed country equity range has been reinforced with as many as 16 funds investing in emerging markets, 10 of them in equities and six in bonds. With management centres in Russia, Brazil, and Indonesia, sub-funds investing in the countries or regions in question are managed “locally,” adding to the international aspect of the Sicav.In order to win over professionals active in the distribution and private banking sectors, BNP Paribas IP has developed 7 websites in 5 languages, which also provide access for mobile devices through an iPad app and other forms digital communication.The objective is as follows: available in 32 countries worldwide, in Europe, Asia and South America, Parvest, according to the BNP Paribas IP CEO, is expected to see a rapid rise in its assets. With its multi-share system, Parvest reaches a wide and varied range of investors. In figures, though no precise data has been disclosed, the goal of the asset management firm is to increase assets under management by at least EUR10bn by 2016.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } BlackRock has recruited Man-Yeon Choi from Schroder Investment management as country head for South Korea, International Adviser reports. His appointment will take effect from 3 June 2014, and he will report directly to Andrew Reynolds, chief financial officer and head of corporate strategy for Asia-Pacific. Choi will be responsible for supervision and development of all activities at BlackRock in South Korea. He replaces Sung Nak Yang, who had been director of the Korean entity for the past six years. Choi had previously been head of sales in Korea for Schroder. He also worked at Korea Investment Trust for 15 years.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In the new business model at the BNP Paribas group, unveiled on 24 March at an investor day, which will continue to be based on three pillars, the investment solutions unit, which includes asset management, private banking, securities services and insurance, is expected to generate about 1/6 of the group’s activities in 2016, compared with one third for finance and investment banking, and half for retail banking. Revenues for the investment solutions unit, which totalled EUR6.32bn in 2013, are expected to rise by 5% annually until 2016, while the cost/income ratio, which was 69.3% in 2013, may improve by 2 percentage points by 2016. BNP Paribas had last autumn already unveiled the new plans for its investment partners division, with inflows expected to relaunch by 2016 (+EUR40bn) in three areas: institutional clients, the Asia-Pacific region, and emerging markets, platforms, and distribution networks.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asset management firms which have set up good governance practices generally earn the best results for investors, according to a study released by Morningstar. Morningstar studied the practices of asset management firms on the basis of their success rate, which Morningstar defines as the percentage of funds from a firm which have survived and outperformed the median fund in a given category, taking into account total returns and risk-adjsuted returns. To measure governance, analysts studied the average seniority of managers, the retention rate of funds by managers, ownership of shares in the fund by managers and commission levels. In total, higher seniority and fund shareholding rates are associated with more modest commission levels, and also correspond to better improvements in governance and higher success rates. The study finds that companies that employ managers who have over 15 years of seniority have better success rates. Mnagers who invest in funds also have better success rates. And asset management firms where commission levels are lower have better success rates over periods of three, five and ten years.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } After four years out in the cold, Greece and Portugal are returning to the foreground of the financial scene. Investors seeking returns are flooding to equities from the two countries, whose fundamentals are improving, the news agency Reuters reports. The Greek and Portuguese market indices, the ATG and Portugal PSI 220 indices, are up by about 14% since the beginning of the year, while the Stoxx Europe 600 is near its levels at the beginning of the year. According to figures from Thomson Reuters Lipper, funds investing in Portuguese equities posted net inflows of EUR30bn in January, nearly as much as in all of 2013, and after constant redemptions in the three previous years. Assets in these funds, however, total only EUR381bn, only one quarter of the levels achieved in 2007. Despite the rebound observed recently, Greek and Portuguese equities, on the basis of the value of their assets, were still trading at a marked discount compared with equities from other European markets.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } BNY Mellon Asset Management is forging an association with Tobam, according to two investment bankers cited by Financial News, in an article about consolidation in the asset management industry. The British newspaper observes that several asset management firms, including Amundi, Robeco, La Française and Henderson, are seeking acquisitions. On the other side, an older generation of managers who created their companies in the 1980s and 1990s, are seeking to sell while the markets remain healthy. Bankers estimate that sale prices are about 13 to 14 times EBITDA, their highest level since 2007.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Merrill Lynch and the French business school Edhec have decided to team up to develop research into allocation risk and investment objectives in wealth management, the two partners announced on 20 March. The objective is to continue fundamental research into allocation risk as part of a collaboration between Merrill Lynch asset management and the Edhec-Risk institute. The goal of the research project is to provide a rigorous mathematical approach to investments with the objectives of conservation of capital, generation of income for retirement, maintenance of a level of assets to confront liquidity risks, says professor Lionel Martellini scientific director of the Edhec-Risk institute, who will direct its participation in the partnership. On the Merrill Lynch side, the head of the project is Anil Suri, head of portfolio construction and investment analysis for the Investment Management and Guidance division.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Spanish asset management sector is certainly hotly coveted. After Jupiter Fund Management (see Newsmanagers of 10 March 2014), three new foreign asset management firms decided to set out on the assault in Spain, and to register themselves with the local regulator, the CNMV, Funds People reveals. The most recent is Charlemagne Capital, an independent asset management firm specialised in investment in emerging markets, and especially equity markets (long-only and long/short), though it also have funds which invest in bonds and currencies. The asset mangement firm on 14 March registered its UCITS Magna Umbrella Funds Plc Sicav with the CNMV. Silk Invest, a British asset management firm specialised in emerging markets, and especially frontier markets, has also set up shop in Spain in the past few weeks, and has registered an African equity fund, the Silk Africa Lions Fund, and a bond fund, the Silk Africa Sovereign Bond Fund, with the regulator. Lastly, on 7 February this year, Kleinwort Benson registered its Kleinwort Benson Investors Institutional Fund Sicav with the CNMV.
AXA Real Estate Investment Managers on March 24 announced that the Tokyo Office Property Fund (TOP) has completed the acquisition of Kojimachi, a high quality 2,565 sqm office building situated in central Tokyo’s Chiyoda district, and Harajuku, a prime 3,486 sqm office building located in the Shibuya district of central Tokyo for a total consideration of EUR36 million (¥5.1 billion).These acquisitions are co-investments between TOP and Tokyo Office Real Estate Investment Fund (TOREIF), a fund managed by Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Real Estate Investment Management Co. Ltd. Both funds were launched in August 2012. On completion of these transactions, the TOP is now 80% invested and its total assets under management has increased to over EUR106 million (¥15 billion).
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The wealth management firm Gottex Fund Management, a specialist in alternative management, has reduced its losses in 2013. Net profits after minority shareholders were negative to the tune of USD9.7m, after a loss of USD7.6m in 2012, according to a statement released on 24 March. Operating profits were also down sharply, with a loss of USD9.8n (-USD5.1bn in 2012), the firm, domiciled in Guernsey and listed on SIX, states. Shareholders are once again expected to forego dividends. Results for the last fiscal year, as in 2012, were heavily impacted by one-time costs related to acquisitions, a statement says. In 2014, they totalled USD6.1m. Before one-time costs, losses totalled USD2.3m. Assets under management (USD7.1bn) and advised as of the end of 2013 totalled USD8.08bn, up 16% compared with the end of 2012.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Assets under management at J. Safra Sarain totalled CHF131.4bn as of 31 December 2013, compared with CHF129.6bn as of the end of December 2012, the group says in its annual report released on 24 March. Consolidated net profits for the period were up to CHF180.5m, compared with CHF171m for 2012. Assets under management at the Safra roup, which includes J. Safra Sarasin Holding and its affiliates, Banco Safra and Safra National Bank of New York, as of the end of December 2013 totalled USD205bn.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Investments by Allianz Global Investors (AllianzGI) into infrastructure now exceed EUR2bn, according to a statement released on 24 March. The most recent investment is in the A11 motorway extension project in Belgium, for a total of EUR433m. This is the eighth transaction by AllianzGI in one year. AllianzGi constructed a team dedicated to infrastructure in autumn 2012.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Assets under management by the German financial services group DVAG last year rose 11% to a total of EUR17.7bn, according to a statement released on 21 March. Net inflows were up 3.2% to EUR1.93bn.
Allianz Global Investors a indiqué hier avoir franchi le cap des 2 milliards d’euros d’investissements en dette d’infrastructure à la suite du financement de l’autoroute A11 en Belgique. Au cours de l’année écoulée, la filiale de gestion de l’assureur a réalisé huit opérations d’investissement en dette d’infrastructure dans sept pays européens.
Standard & Poor’s a abaissé la note du Brésil de «BBB» à «BBB-», tout en relevant sa perspective de «négative» à «stable». S&P souligne des signaux contrastés du gouvernement qui ont des implications défavorables pour le budget et la crédibilité des politiques économiques. L’agence de notation anticipe une croissance faible pour plusieurs années encore, avec un PIB en hausse de 1,8% en 2014 et de 2% en 2015. Le relèvement de la perspective de la note laisse entendre qu’aucun nouvel abaissement de la note proprement dite n’est prévu dans l’immédiat. La décision de S&P était largement anticipée par les marchés, mais le calendrier choisi pour l’annoncer, à un peu plus de six mois de l'élection présidentielle à laquelle Dilma Roussef se représente, est de nature à compliquer la tâche du gouvernement. Cette décision pourrait également inciter Fitch et Moody’s à signaler à leur tour qu’elles pourraient abaisser la note de crédit du Brésil.
Selon German Gref, le directeur général de Sberbank, première banque de Russie, l'économie du pays tombera en récession si les sorties de capitaux dépassent 100 milliards de dollars. Le banquier a cité des chiffres faisant état de flux sortants de 35 milliards pour les deux premiers mois de 2014. Il a cependant précisé que Sberbank ne revoyait pas à ce stade son plan d’affaires.
La consolidation du secteur de la gestion d’actifs se poursuit au Royaume-Uni. L’assureur Standard Life est en pourparlers avec Phoenix Group en vue du rachat d’Ignis AM, dont le montant des actifs s’élève à 68 milliards de livres. La cible est valorisée autour de 400 millions.
Après l'émission record de 3 milliards d’euros réalisée le 17 mars par Volkswagen, Telefonica est venu hier sur le marché primaire de la dette hybride corporate en levant 1,75 milliard d’euros. Seul le risque de rachat anticipé par les émetteurs ternit cet engouement.
Si les assureurs semblent disposés à investir dans les PME et ETI, la Banque de France s’y intéresse également. En effet, selon l’Argus de l’Assurance, elle va ainsi lancer un fonds commun de titrisation de créances de PME. Pour rappel, certains Institutionnels comme Apicil avaient déjà pris les devants. « Nous avons acheté pour 8 millions d’euros de dettes titrisées ou diversifiées, ce qui nous permet de mutualiser les risques et d’obtenir un rendement de 200 points de base au-dessus d’une obligation comparable », témoigne Renaud Célié, directeur exécutif du pôle finances et performance d’Apicil. Jean-Jacques Duchamp, directeur générale adjoint du Crédit Agricole Assurances soumet néanmoins quelques exigences. « Nous achetons des prêts à des banques à deux conditions : qu’elles détiennent encore 20% de la dette et qu’il n’y ait pas de tranching », explique-t-il.
German Gref, le directeur générale de Sberbank, première banque de Russie, a estimé que l'économie du pays tombera en récession si les sorties de capitaux dépassent 100 milliards de dollars. Le banquier a cité des chiffres faisant état de flux sortants de 35 milliards pour les deux premiers mois de 2014. Il a cependant précisé que Sberbank ne revoyait pas à ce stade son plan d’affaires.
Avec un résultat ordinaire avant impôt de 6,14 milliards d’euros, et après prise en compte d’une dotation de 1,25 milliard au Fonds pour risques généraux (FRG), le résultat net de l’exercice 2013 s’établit à 2,44 milliards d’euros pour la Banque de France, selon les comptes annuels publiés lundi. L’institution a payé de 2,5 milliards au titre de l’impôt sur les sociétés. Dans un contexte de taux d’intérêt historiquement bas, le produit net des activités est en repli de 20 % sur un an. «Cette diminution s’explique par une forte contraction du bilan, dont le total est passé de 732 milliards d’euros à 550 milliards d’euros de fin 2012 à fin 2013, qui résulte pour l’essentiel de la résorption graduelle des encours au bilan liés aux mesures non conventionnelles de politique monétaire et, dans une moindre mesure, de la baisse du prix de l’or sur les marchés», indique la Banque de France.