Le principal fabricant européen de surgelés, mis en vente par Permira, va selon le quotidien, et «sauf surprise de dernière minute», tomber dans l’escarcelle d’un fonds. Seuls Blackstone et BC Partners restent en lice. Les acteurs industriels auraient abandonné, notamment le thaïlandais Charoen Pokphand Foods. Permira attendrait un prix proche des 3 milliards d’euros, environ 8 à 9 fois le résultat brut d’exploitation.
L’AMF vient de les accepter comme pratique de marché. Voulus par Paris Europlace, ces contrats sont structurés comme ceux pour le marché actions. Ils ont vocation à soutenir l’activité sur les plates-formes obligataires telles que BondMatch, active depuis près d’un an.
Le déficit commercial américain a diminué en avril de 4,9%, à 50,1 milliards de dollars contre 52,62 milliards en mars, montrent les chiffres publiés par le département du Commerce, sous l’effet d’une contraction des exportations comme des importations après les niveaux records de mars. Les importations de biens et services ont reculé de 1,7% à 233 milliards de dollars, tandis que les exportations se sont contractées de 0,8% à 182,9 milliards.
Les stocks des grossistes américains ont augmenté plus qu’attendu en avril, les stocks de biens durables enregistrant leur plus forte progression depuis près d’un an, montrent les statistiques publiées vendredi par le département du Commerce. Les stocks dans leur ensemble ont augmenté de 0,6% à 483,5 milliards de dollars, après une hausse de 0,3% en mars.
L’Agence France Trésor annonce l’adjudication, le lundi 11 juin, d’un montant global compris entre 6,5 et 7,8 milliards d’euros de bons du Trésor (BTF). Cette opération portera sur 4 à 4,5 milliards d’euros de bons à 13 semaines qui arriveront à échéance le 13 septembre 2012, sur 1,4 à 1,8 milliard d’euros de bons à 24 semaines à échéance du 29 novembre 2012, et sur 1,1 à 1,5 milliard d’euros de bons à 50 semaines à échéance du 30 mai 2013.
Le produit intérieur brut (PIB) de la Grèce s’est contracté de 6,5% au premier trimestre 2012 en rythme annuel, selon les chiffres publiés vendredi par l’institut de statistiques Elstat, sur la base d’estimations non corrigées des valeurs saisonnières. La contraction d’activité est plus importante que l’estimation de -6,2% qui avait été précédemment évalué. Elle suit une contraction de 7,5% au quatrième trimestre 2011.
La Bundesbank a relevé sa prévision de croissance de l'économie allemande pour cette année, disant tabler désormais sur une progression du produit intérieur brut de 1%, contre une hausse de 0,6% précédemment, en expliquant que la demande intérieure devrait compenser le ralentissement des échanges avec les pays en difficulté de la zone euro. La banque centrale juge qu’un chômage faible, des conditions de financement favorables et la bonne tenue de l’activité économique devraient permettre de soutenir la croissance cette année.
L’Autorité des marchés financiers accepte une nouvelle pratique de marché relative aux contrats de liquidité obligataire, à l’image de ce qui existe déjà pour les marchés actions. Cette décision de l’AMF fait suite à une demande présentée par Paris Europlace dans le cadre des travaux qui visaient à identifier les moyens d’apporter davantage de liquidité au marché secondaire des obligations.
Le produit intérieur brut (PIB) du Portugal ne s’est contracté que de 0,1% au cours du premier trimestre 2012, après une baisse de 1,3% lors des trois derniers mois de 2011, selon des chiffres publiés vendredi par l’Institut national de la statistique (INE). L’institut a indiqué déclaré que sur un an, le PIB s'était contracté de 2,2% lors des trois premiers mois de 2012, contre 2,9% au cours du dernier trimestre 2011.
Le déficit commercial de la France s’est légèrement creusé en avril à 5,801 milliards d’euros, un chiffre conforme aux prévisions, après -5,572 (révisé) en mars, selon les données CVS/CJO publiées vendredi par les Douanes. Les exportations en données CVS/CJO sont ressorties à 37,043 milliards d’euros en avril contre 36,391 milliards en mars. Les importations se sont inscrites à 42,844 milliards d’euros après 41,963 milliards un mois plus tôt.
Les importations allemandes ont subi en avril leur plus forte chute depuis deux ans.Ajustées des variations saisonnières, elles ont diminué de 4,8% en avril, montrent les chiffres publiés vendredi par l’Office fédéral de la statistique. Quant aux exportations, elles ont elles aussi reculé, et ce pour la première fois de l’année, enregistrant une baisse de 1,7% contre un repli de 1% attendu, signe que l’Allemagne commence à ressentir à son tour les effets de la crise de la dette en zone euro.
The debate over regulation of ETFs, which has been raging for several months, appears to be calming somewhat. “This debate over regulations has had a lot of pedagogical utility,” Valérie Baudson, CEO of Amundi ETF, claimed on 7 June in a round table held at a Morningstar seminar. “The debate has been useful for investors. The voluntary, concerted effort on the part of the profession has been exceptional, and has resulted in astonishing transparency,” says Alain Dubois, chairman of Lyxor Asset Management, who adds that ETFS are now “the most transparent UCITS products.” Eric Wohlber, CEO of BlackRock France, sounds similar: “things are going the right way.” However, “The debate is not completely settled,” he adds, citing talks with the Treasury. Participants also stated that a high level of innovation in terms of products will be maintained despite the financial crisis. However, flows in Europe will go primarily to traditional products. “Innovation in Europe is primarily related to pure beta. In the United States, however, there are major developments of products based on intelligent indices, which, for example, correct biases in capitalisation indices,” says Isabelle Bourcier, director of development at Ossiam. It is also true that the structure of the US market is a little different, with about 50% of it in retail and 50% from institutional investors. In Europe, the market is almost exclusively occupied by institutional investors, who use ETFs as a beta allocation tool.
Samantha Ho, the star manager of the Invesco Perpetual Hong Kong & China Fund (GBP175m) and the Invesco PRC Equity fund (GBP896m), has left Invesco Hong Kong, Investment Week reports.She is replaced by Mike Shiao, manager of the Invesco Greater China Equity Fund (GBP450m), an offshore fund whose co-manager is Lorraine Kuo. The latter will assist him also in the management of Hong Kong & China fund.Joseph Tang, co-manager of the PRC Equity Fund, will become lead manager of the Irish-registered product.
Since the beginning of the year, ETPs worldwide have seen inflows of USD85.3bn, of which USD19.2bn were in May, compared with USD0.6bn in April, equivalent to an increase of 18% compared with USD724bn in the first five months of 2011, the BlackRock Institute reports.Assets as of the end of May totalled USD1.6186trn, USD94.1bn more than at the end of December, as market appreciation and forex effects have contributed USD8.8bn to this increase.In Europe, where there were 1,936 ETPs, net subscriptions in January-May represented USD5.3bn, and assets as of the end of May totalled UISD297bn. By comparison, the number of ETPs in the United States was “only” 1,465, but with assets of USD1.137trn, and net inflows of USD63bn in the first five months of this year.
Fortelus, the London-based hedge fund which made millions for clients by anticipating the fall in the British banking sector in 2008, is liquidating a part of its flagship fund due to pressure from investors, the Financial Times reports. In a letter sent on Thursday, a copy of which has been seen by the newspaper, Fortelus states that it will be splitting its main fund, with USD1bn in assets, into two types of share classes, in order to meet redemption demands.
UK-based Sarasin & Partners on 7 June announced the launch of the Sarasin Global Equity and Sarasin Global Diversified funds of funds. The products have a sales license for the United Kingdom under the OEIC non-UCITS retail scheme (NURS). They are managed by Sam Jeffries, with the assistance of Oliver Tucker as co-manager, and of Lucy Empson and David Vickers. The funds will include 15 to 25 holdings each.Characteristics Name: Sarasin Global Equity Fund of Funds A AccISIN code: GB00B7CLW252Benchmark index: 50% MSCI All Countries World, 50% MSCI All Countries (GBP Hedged)Management commission: 1.50%Name: Sarasin Global Diversified Fund of Funds A AccISIN code: GB00B6114G73Benchmark index: 40% ML Sterling Broad Market Index, 25% MSCI All Countries World LC GBP, 25% MSCI All Countries World Daily (NTR), 10% UK cash LIBOR 3 months TRManagement commission: 1.50%
Richard Wohanka is no longer heading asset management at Union Bancaire Privée (UBP), Newsmanagers understands. The Geneva-based bank had no comment on the reports. But according to its website, Wohanka is no longer a member of the executive board at the firm. He has, however, retained a role as adviser for Asia, according to information obtained by Newsmanagers.Guy de Picotto, CEO of the bank, and Eftyschia La Fischer, head of Trading & Treasury, are reported to have taken over the asset management unit at UBP, according to its website.Wohanka joined the Geneva-based bank in late 2009, after serving as CEO of Fortis Investments.The news comes at a time when the bank has recently laid off 30 employees, according to an article in the local newspaper La Tribune de Genève, published earlier this week.Separately, UBP is studying several options to take on some of the clients of the Swiss activities of the Spanish Banco Santander. The reports, which appeared on Monday in the Spanish online newspaper El Confidential, were confirmed to Newsmanagers on Thursday by the Geneva-based firm.The acquisition is a part of a strategy to “strengthen the bank’s position in private management, through the acquisition of the Swiss activities of ABN Amro Bank last year,” a spokesperson for the bank says.
At a presentation in Paris on Thursday, Ian Henderson and Neil Gregson, the former and the new maanger of the JPMorgan Funds – Global Resources Fund sub-fund (LU0208853274), announced that assets of EUR2.01bn have remained stable since the beginning of the year, with slight redemptions, while a similar fund in the United States has seen net subscriptions.The portfolio of the long-only equity fund related to natural resources has 240 holdings, slightly under half of which are small caps, and the turnover rate remains low, under 30%.Overall, JPMorgan Asset Management has about USD8bn in assets under management in natural resources, funds and mandates.The two managers remain confident in their asset class, insofar as emerging markets, which are experiencing enviable growth, remain the major driver of demand for commodities, due to urbanisation, investment in infrastructure, and household consumer spending. At the same time, increase in supply of several commodities will remain moderate in the next few years. Finally, with “capitulation sales” in the past few months, the sector is no longer in favour with investors, and valuations are very low, which provides a good point of entry for long-term investments.
Interest on the part of institutional investors in highly liquid CTA strategies has increased sharply since the crisis of 2008, according to a study published recently by Citi Prime Finance, Asian Investor reports. The inconvenient aspect of this otherwise pleasant popularity is that several of the largest CTA funds have had to alter their approach, reducing their volatility in significant proportions, and also lowering their performance objectives. This development, however, makes CTA funds more accessible, the study claims, and in the future, the study predicts, retail clients will also participate more widely in vehicles of this type via UCITS and ETF structures.
Jeffrey Burch, former co-head of credit at Investec Asset Management, and a former trader at Millennium Management, has joined the private banking division of Goldman Sachs, Financial News has learned.
The British firm Standard Life Investments (SLI) has announced three recruitments for its distribution team in Boston, including Jack Boyce as managing director and head of US distribution. Boyce will work directly with Colin Clark, director of the global client group, and Bill Perry, CEO of Standard Life Investments USA. He was previously in New York, as managing director and co-head of global distribution at Pinebridge. The other two new recruitments are John Grubauskas (ex BlackRock), who joins the firm as senior vice president, client services, and Deborah Drachman (ex Citadel Asset Management), who becomes vice president, consultant relations.