P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Banque Delubac et Cie on 26 March announced the arrival of Côme Jeanroy at Banque de Gestion Privée Delubac, the wealth management unit of the bank, and that it is offering a range of wealth management and investment solutions appropriate to family entrepreneurs. Jeanroy will report to Benjamin Le Moing, and will be responsible for developing entrepreneur clients, with the support of the investment bank, the asset management firm, and wealth and tax management experts at the bank. Jeanroy, 32, who holds a wealth management master’s degree from ESLSCA, joined Delubac & Cie in 2013. He began his career as a private banker at UBS, and then joined the wealth management teams at the Banque Privée 1818 and the Banque Cantonale de Genève.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Régis Bégué, head of research and equity management, has been appointed to the position of managing partner at Lazard Frères Gestion, according to a statement released on 26 March. The joins the college of managing partners at Lazard Frères Gestion, which is chaired by François-Marc Durand and which includes Jean-Jacques de Gournay, head of relations with institutional investors and distribution, Matthieu Grouès, head of collective and institutional management, Sophie de Nadillac, head of development for private management, François de Saint-Pierre, head of private management, and Gilles Trancart, head of operations. Bégué, who joined Lazard in 2005, had previously been an equity manager for the European region.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }Assets in European long-term funds as of the end of February totalled EUR4.44trn, their highest level since 2007, according to statistics released by Morningstar. Inflows to long-term open-ended funds as of February totalled EUR35.09bn, compared with EUR47.1bn in January. Bond funds posted a net inflow of EUR11.46bn, compared with subscriptions of EUR9.24bn to equity funds. As a part of equity funds, allocation funds represented EUR9.91bn.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Association of Professional Financial Advisers (APFA) claims that the contribution of financial advisers to the budget of the new Financial Conducct Authority (FCA), which will take over some of the duties of the Financial Services Authority (FSA) from April, runs the danger of increasing by a percentage of as much as 30%, Fund Web reports.The FCA on 25 March announced a 2013-2014 budget of GBP432.1m, 23% less than the GBP559.8m of the FSA budget for 2012-2013. Of this total, the industry will pay GBP391.5m, taking into account fines collected by the FSA, and the FCA business plan suggests that 30% of this total will be paid by investment advisers, mortgage advisers and general insurance brokers.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The European family office specialist Stonehage Group has appointed David McLellan as executive director in charge of the London office, Investment Europe reports. McLellan had previously been chief executive officer at Rothschild Trust Group, and a member of the executive board at Rothschild Private Bank & Trust.
Legal & General Group Plc on Tuesday said it has agreed to acquire the 75% share capital of Cofunds Holdings Ltd which it does not already own, for a cash consideration of GBP131m. The transaction will be financed out of L&G’s existing cash resources. The acquisition values Cofunds at GBP175m and is subject to regulatory approval. The transaction is anticipated to complete in H1 2013, and to be earnings accretive by the end of 2014. Cofunds and Investor Portfolio Service («IPS») will form a new business unit within the Savings division. According to L&G’s presse release, Cofunds is the UK’s largest investment platform for financial services and has over GGP50bn of assets under administration, and a share of 22% of the UK investment platform market.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Momentum Global Investment Management has recruited two members as additions to increase its presence on the British retail market, Fundweb reports. David Thomas, who had previously worked at Midas Capital Partners, is joining the firm has head of retail sales, and will be responsible for deploying a long-term growth strategy on the British retail market. Rebecca Nkoane, who joins the firm from Invesco Perpetual, will be responsible for relationships with independent financial advisers (IFA) and networks. Momentum has also finalised strategic partnerships with the Lighthouse Group and YourWealth.co.uk, to sell risk-weighted funds launched in November last year.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Richard Oliver, head of short-term interest rate trading at Morgan Stanley in London, will be joining Brevan Howard, Financial News reports. His role at the asset management firm in Geneva has not been specified.
The Global State Street Investor Confidence Index fell 3.4 points in March to finish at 88.0, down from February’s (revised) reading of 91.4. The decrease was driven mostly by North American institutions, whose confidence decreased 4.2 points from February’s (revised) level of 99.7 to settle at 95.5. The change in European investors’ sentiment, while also negative, was less pronounced, with the European ICI declining just 0.4 points to 91.7 from February’s revised reading of 92.1. Risk appetite among Asian institutional investors increased slightly, rising 1.8 points from 85.5 to finish the month at 87.3.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The global pool in government bonds rated AAA by the three major agencies (Fitch, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s) have fallen by more han 60% since the financial crisis, from USD11trn to USD4trn, the Financial Times funds. The decline was sped by a ratings downgrade of the United States by Standard & poor’s in August 2011.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Fundweb reports that Resolution reported pre-tax operating profits in 2012 of GBP274m, compared with EUR681m the previous year, a decline which is due to EUR404m in exceptional elements in 2011.Assets in the heritage division as of the end of 2012 fell to GBP68.7bn, compared with GBP70.8bn one year previously, while assets at the UK division increased to GBP19.7bn, from GBP16.9bn.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The hedge fund which refers to itself as The Children’s Investment fund, or TCI, is putting an end to the charitable activities which distinguished it in previous years in the world of alternative management, FINalternatives reports. TCI has decided no longer to pay a part of its commissions, of about one third, to the TCI Foundation, an organisation into which it has been paying money since its debut in 2004. It is also discontinuing its donations of 0.5% of its assets under management when the fund earns returns of over 11%. According to one source, TCI has decided to discontinue the practice “largely because the foundation has achieved sufficient size.” The TCI Foundation was thought to have about GBP2bn in assets under management as of August 2011. It has paid slightly under 2% of this amount to charitable causes.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Schroders denies that the departure of one of its most experienced managers, Richard Buxton, is related to the acquisition of Cazenove Capital, the firm announced on Monday. Philip Mallinckrodt, head of Schroders Private Banking at the group, has told FTfm that “Richard was not aware of the merger when he decided to leave.”
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The major US hedge funds have taken part in launches of hedge funds last year in Europe, Prohedge reports. US funds had no difficulty recruiting European talent in an industry which is highly stable and has solid infrastructure. Pine River, Millennium, and SAC are among the firms which are said to have succeeded in attracting specialists from some new hedge funds that failed to take off, either due to insufficient performance, or simply because they failed to raise adequate capital, such as Edoma, the fund by Pierre-Henri Flamand, Benros, and Portman Square. Pine River is reported to have succeeded in recruiting two team members from Edoma, as well as Paul Godfrey from Portman Square. This is a setback for the European industry of new hedeg funds, which has been stagnating for about five years.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Efama announced yesterday at a press conference in London that it would be requesting an impact study of any decision by Europe to cap bonuses paid to fund managers, Agefi reports. The proposal by the legislator would limit variable remuneration to no more than the fixed salary poses a problem, as the principle of flexibility in order to reward performance is an important tool to balance good and bad years and remain competitive in other markets outside Europe. According to Efama heads, such a decision in Europe is all the more regrettable than it was taken as part of new legislation to limit UCITS funds, the newspaper reports.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Plans by the European Union to cap bonuses for fund managers are expected to be eased, after the MEP leading the drive to restrict pay scales, Sven Giegold, announced that he was ready to relax his stance, the Financial Times reports. Giegold told the Financial Times that he was open to allow fund managers to raise the cap on their bonuses to as much as twice their base salaries. “If giving fund managers the possibility to raise the bonus-salary ratio from 1:1 to 1:2 will help reunite the parliament, I’m happy with that as long as shareholders or investors can approve the 1:2 increase.”
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Korean pension fund, whose assets under management total about USD340bn, is still planning to open an office in Hong Kong, Asian Investor reports. However, without the project being called into question, the opening of a Hong Kong office in 2013 has been postponed, as the pension fund esitmates that it needs to stabilise its New York and London offices first. As a part of its mid-term allocation programme, the Korean pension fund has also seen an increase in its equity allocation from 9.1% in 2003 to 25.4% in 2012, while in the same period the bond portfolio was reduced from 90% to 66%, and the allocation to alternative management rose from 0.2% in 2003 to 7.8% last year.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Berlin-based quirin bank as of the end of December had assets of EUR2.4bn, compared with EUR2.3bn one year earlier, due to net subscriptions of EUR143m. Meanwhle, the firm, which operates solely on the basis of fees, in 2012 saw a loss of EUR0.9m, comapred with EUR4.9m the previous year.The number of clients has increased to 8,697, from 8,419.Currently, assets under management total EUR2.5bn, for about 9,000 clients.
Thomas Wiesemann will be replaced by Arun Ratra on April, 15th as head of global solutions at Allianz Global Investors. He will report to CEO Elizabeth Corley and become a member of the global executive committee.The global solutions group employs 80 specialists and advises some EUR55bn in assets (see Newsmanagers of December 26th, 2012). The group covers four areas of expertise: Investment & Risk Advisory, Pension Solutions, Manager Research & Selection as well as hybrid Life/Asset Solutions.Arun Ratra was most recently head of global market group at Gulf Investment Corporation in Kuweit, after having served as CIO multi asset class solution at Credit Suisse Asset Management in Zurich.Thomas Wiesemann, Newsmanagers understands, will take over as head of «special distribution» at life insurer Allianz Leben.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The US firm BNY Mellon has announced an addition to its global team in the area of derivatives clearing. It has recruited Gregory Chemin, who worked at HPC in France and Newedge in Germany, as head of this operation in Frankfurt.Mark B. Gonzalez (New York) is also appointed at COO for derivatives clearing in the United States, while Paul Dex in London and John Guthrie and Thomas Twomey, in New York, will be responsible regionally for identifying and developing activities in the area of listed and OTC derivatives.The men will report to Sanjay Kannambadi, global head derivatives clearing services.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Rathbone Unit Trust Management is offering an absolute return fund, the Rathbone Heritage fund, a global value strategy based on stock-picking, Fundweb reports. The fund will be managed by Carl Slick, with Alan Dobble, quantitative analyst Elizabeth David, and analyst Kate Pettum. The fund, whose minimal subscription has been set at GBP1m, is primarily aimed at family offices, the high net worth client segment, and pension funds.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Union Bancaire Privée (UBP), the Geneva-based private bank led by Guy de Picciotto, is reported to be in the running to acquire Lloyds TSB Switzerland, according to knowledgeable sources relayed by Bilan. The Swiss arm of the British group has about CHF12bn in assets under management in Geneva.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }DC Bank, a Swiss regional bank, has announced profits of EUR5.18m for 2012, down 7.2% compared with 2011. Acording to Finews, although clients of the bank are less prudent, assets in investment products, largely composed of fixed income products, have posted gains of 10% in one year. In 2013, the Berlin-based bank is predicting lower profits, aware that it is acting in a difficult environment.
Vanguard Asset Management announced on March 26 that its full retail GBP range of Ireland-domiciled, low-cost index funds is now available on the Hargreaves Lansdown Vantage platform. This complements the 12 funds that were previously available through Vantage, completing Vanguard’s fund suite on the platform.The newly-listed funds comprise a selection of passive products that seek to track key global indices at low cost and provide advisers and clients with easy access to the key building blocks of diversified portfolios.The ongoing charges on all of the Vanguard funds available through Vantage range from 0.15% to 0.55%.The funds are the following :Vanguard Emerging Markets Stock Index FundVanguard Global Small-Cap Index FundVanguard Japan Stock Index FundVanguard Pacific ex-Japan Stock Index FundVanguard SRI European Stock FundVanguard SRI Global Stock FundVanguard Global Bond Index FundVanguard U.K. Government Bond Index FundVanguard U.K. Investment Grade Bond Index Fund
Le gouvernement français va demander une aide européenne de 1,3 milliard d’euros sur la période 2014-2020 pour la construction du canal Seine-Nord Europe, déclare le ministre délégué aux Transports, Frédéric Cuvillier, dans un entretien publié mardi par Le Monde. Cela représente 30% de financement européen sur la part publique.
La confiance des consommateurs américains s’est nettement dégradée en mars, tout comme leur jugement sur l'évolution de la situation économique, montre l’enquête mensuelle de l’organisation patronale Conference Board. L’indice de confiance du consommateur est revenu à 59,7 contre 68 (révisé de 69,6) en février.
Le projet phare de création d’une banque commune de développement qui devait ponctuer le sommet qui rassemble les BRICS en Afrique du Sud, devra finalement attendre, les cinq nations devant s’entendre sur les détails de financement et de gouvernance, a indiqué cette nuit le ministre russe des Finances. «Il y a eu une proposition de déclarer un capital de 50 milliards de dollars, mais en payant 10 milliards» a confirmé Anton Siluanov.
Biosev, la filiale brésilienne de Louis Dreyfus Commodities (LDC) a indiqué hier qu’elle espérait lever jusqu’à 945 millions de réaux (366 millions d’euros) grâce à l’émission de 63 millions d’actions à un prix unitaire de 15 réaux. Des actions que LDC se propose de racheter dans les 15 prochains mois à leur prix d’introduction, plus intérêt, par le biais d’options de vente à échéance juillet 2014 concédées aux actionnaires.
Chypre déterminera aujourd’hui les mesures d’encadrement des flux de capitaux destinées à empêcher un mouvement de panique des épargnants à la veille de la réouverture des banques (lire pages 1 et 2). «Nous allons étudier la meilleure façon de limiter la possibilité que de grosses sommes d’argent quittent le pays, et de ne pas imposer des conditions punitives pour l'économie, les entreprises et les particuliers» a indiqué le ministre des Finances, Michael Sarris.
Les banques, qui négocient une restructuration de la dette de la Saur, maintiennent leur offre de conversion de créances en capital de la société et critiquent l’attitude du Fonds stratégique d’investissement dans les discussions, indique un courrier des banques dont Reuters a obtenu une copie. Outre le FSI, la Saur est également détenue à 33% par Séché Environnement, à 17% par Axa Private Equity et à 12% par Cube.