Kai Volkmann (formerly of BlackRock Germany), head of development for Germany and Austria since the beginning of 2012, will become director of the Frankfurt office of Carmignac Gestion (see Newsmanagers of 24 January and 27 October). The offices are located at Junghofstraße 24 in Frankfurt.The German sales team for the French asset management firm has three client relationship representatives. They will report to Davide Fregonese, global director of sales and marketing, who will aim to develop the German and Austrian markets. Staff will be increased over the course of the year. “This local presence will allow us to develop Carmignac Gestion’s relationships with financial distributors and institutional investors, through a regular custom approach,” according to a press release. Eric Helderlé, CEO, says that Germany is one of the three largest markets for Carmignac Gestion, and that the opening of a Frankfurt office represents a new step in the development of long-term strategy. All funds of the range are available to German clients.Carmignac Gestion is present in eleven European countries, and now has two affiliates in Luxembourg and Frankfurt, and two offices in Milan and Madrid.
Société Générale Private Banking has recruited for its management in Switzerland, the firm announced in Geneva on 30 January. An executive board has been created to “support the dynamic of growth and accelerate development in Switzerland and abroad.” The board of four members will be led by Guillaume Lejoindre, CEO of Société Générale Private Banking (Switzerland) since January 2009. The board also includes Alberto Valenzuela, deputy CEO, in charge of banking activities in the Bahamas, Latin America, and serving independent financial advisers; Mathieu Vedrenne, who is appointed as deputy CEO and secretary of the board of directors, and Olivier Aubenas, who is appointed as director of sales. “The objective for this new organisation is to improve the reactiveness of the bank, to strengthen the quality of its services, and to foster synergies with the Société Générale Group,” a statement says. “Société Générale Private Banking (Switzerland) also provides clear illustration of its ability to adapt to the needs of its high net worth clients worldwide in an economic, financial and regulatory environment in a state of rapid mutation,” the firm adds.
Caceis and EFG International on 30 January announced that on 17 January they reached an agreement by which the activities of SIF Swiss Investment Funds S.A. (SIF), the fund administration affiliate of EFG International in Switzerland, will be taken over by CACEIS (Switzerland) S.A., the Swiss affiliate of CACEIS. The terms of the deal, which has yet to receive approval from Finma and clients of SIF, have not been disclosed.SIF is among the largest administrators of funds for third parties in French-speaking Switzerland, and manages Swiss investment funds for its clients. The agreement covers 20 funds, which represent more than CHF800m in assets. EFG International states that it has decided to withdraw from the activities of SIF after a detailed study, in order to refocus on its core profession of private banking.
The SEC has recruited a former lawyer at ProFunds Advisors as adviser for ETF funds. Barry Perschkow joined the board at the US regulatory authority in January, following a stint at the law firm Morgan, Lewis and Bockius, Mutual Fund Wire reports.
Scott O’Malia, a member of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), is planning to call this Tuesday for the creation of a sub-committee within the Technology Advisory Committee, the Wall Street Journal reports. The sub-committee would be focused on high-frequency trading, and would be chaired by the CFTC chief economist Andrei Kirilenko. The objective for the regulator is to determine how electronic trading affects commodity markets and participants on those markets.
The Department of Labor had been planning to release new regulations for 401(k) plans on this 31 January, but the regulations will be released “in a few weeks” the Wall Street Journal reports. The rules change will allow millions of employees to make significant savings.The Department of Labor will require plan administrators and asset management firms to disclose the costs of 401(k) plans, which will lead firms to reduce commissions and offer other investing choices. The new transparency regulations will allow businesses to negotiate better conditions, and will allow employees to seek the most cost-effective plans.
The consultancy firm Mercer has acquired Pensjon & Finans, a Norwegian consultant specialised in investment advising to pension funds. Following the acquisition, Espen Kløw, CEO of Pensjon & Finans, will become head of Mercer’s activities in Norway.
Since the US Federal Reserve has announced that it will be maintaining interest rates at their current low levels for another three years, inflows to emerging market equity and bond funds have reached levels not seen since second quarter 2011. According to statistics released by EPFR Global, equity funds have attracted a net total of USD8.62bn in the week to 25 January, nearly half of which went to emerging market equity funds. Since the beginning of the year, inflows to emerging market equity funds are approaching USd6bn. Bonds, for their part, have posted inflows of slightly over USD6bn, an amount not seen since the beginning of third quarter 2010, Since the beginning of the year, bond funds have seen net inflows of USD20.3bn, compared with USD17.4bn in the corresponding period of 2010. The regain in appetite for risk has also resulted in net inflows of over USD2.5bn for high yield bond funds. Net redemptions from equity funds have fallen to their lowest levels in more than six months. Money market funds finished the week on 25 January with outflows of USD7bn.
For the fiscal year ending on 31 December, the US asset management firm T. Rowe Price has announced net profits of USD773.2m, USD101m or 15% more than in 2010. Operating profits have risen to USD1.2269bn, up from USD190.4m, an increase of 18.4%.The firm finished the year with liquidity of about USD1.7bn. In 2011, it dedicated a total of USD479.7m to the acquisition of 8.7 million ordinary shares, and invested USD82.3m in technologies and facilities. In 2012, T. Rowe Price is planning to place USD100m in self-financing into real estate and equipment.Assets as of the end of December totalled USD489.6bn, compared with USD453.5bn as of the end of September, and USD482bn one year previously. Of total assets under management, USD289.4bn correspond to mutual funds distributed in the United States.Net subscriptions of USD14.1bn for last year as a whole (of which USd8bn were for target-date funds) were partially offset by negative market effects of USD6.6bn.
The South Korean asset management firm Mirae Asset has launched seven ETF funds in Hong Kong, making it the third-largest provider of products of this type on the market, after db x-trackers and iShares, Asian Investor reports. The new ETF funds replicate Standard & Poor’s indices, offering exposure to seven sectors/themes (international consumer spending and six sectors ex Japan: consumer goods, financial, tech, industrials, energies, and materials).
Legislation and fear of more restrictive standards to come are obstructing the creation of European pension funds, according to a study undertaken by Aon Hewitt in December 2011, covering 60 major businesses operating in Europe, with over 2 million employees. In response to a question about the pertinence of cross-border pension funds, 76% of businesses participating in the study say that they support entities of this type. However, the three major factors which are preventing employers from putting in place cross-border pension funds are perceived cmolpexity of legislation (66%), a lack of clarity about the way in which European legislation is enacted and regulated nationally (48%) and the perceived weight of national regulatory requirements (40%). Another one third of respondents were hesitant to use the Single Brand framework to create additional costs which future regulatory changes may give rise to. The consulting firm, which has recently responded to the second consultation by EIOPA (the European authority for professional insurance and complementary retirement) on revisions to the European IORP directive, opposed the legislative changes, which may increase costs for employers rather than increasing adoption of complementary professional retirement schemes. Kevin Wesbroom, director of the Retirement Risk Mangement department at Aon Hewitt, says that “given the material implications of potential changes described in the EIOPA consultation document, we are concerned at this stage about the lack of a profound cost/benefit analysis of the impact of the changes. The blindfolded transposition of the Solvency II regime planned for the insurance industry will damage availability of professional complementary retirement, and will complicate their management.” René van Leggelo, an expert in international mobility and European pension funds at Aon Hewitt France, concludes that “for the past 18 months, I have seen a growing interest in the French market for optimisation of complementary retirement plans. Some CAC 40 businesses are currently in a feasibility study phase considering potential combinations of their European plans in a single vehicle such as a IORP.”
The European Securities Markets Authority (ESMA) on 30 January launched a highly-awaited consultation on regulations for UCITS-compliant ETF funds. The ESMA proposals cover both synthetic and physical ETFs, and lay out the requirements under consideration for these UCITS ETFs, index-based UCITS funds, efficient portfolio management techniques, total return swaps, and strategy indices for UCITS funds. In other words, ESMA’s recommendations are not limited to ETF funds, and also cover total return swaps, for which ESMA is planning additional requirements in relation to collateral, and UCITS funds investing in strategy indices, for which the eligibility requirements have been made stricter. According to the ESMA president, Steven Maijoor, “the objective with these recommendations is to improve investor protection and limit risks related to some practices by strengthening the applicable standards for collateral received, for example, in the context of securities lending activities. The recommendations also aim to improve the quality of information provided to investors, in order to allow them to take informed investment decisions. For UCITS-compliant ETF funds, ESMA is proposing the required use of an identifier for all funds, which would be included in the definition of UCITS-compliant products. Investors would be required to obtain additional information when a UCITS-compliant ETF fund is actively managed and does not replicate an index. The consultation also extends to the contents of the regime to be put in place for investors in the secondary market, including ways to sell these shares. In the chapter on securities lending, ESMA proposes that the collateral used to reduce counterparty risks should comply with the criteria put in place by the CESR, and recommends that haircut and diversification criteria also be strengthened. ESMA also insists on the need to improve regulation of complex products on sale to retail clients. “The recommendations make it possible to treat problems related to an increase in the number of complex products on sale to retail investors, and will contribute to regulatory convergence for these products,” says Maijoor. The consultation is open until 30 March. The final text of the recommendations will be completed by mid-2012.
The administration of Jersey has added to its range of funds, with the introduction of a private investment fund, Hedge Week reports. Private investment funds are closed funds, available to a limited number of qualified, professional or institutional investors. The funds may be subject to a fast-track approval process, generally a maximum of three working days.
The British Treasury is putting pressure on the US administration to make changes to the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) for limited liability companies, Investment Week reports. Under FATCA legislation, non-American financial establishments from 2012 will be required to sign agreements with the US tax authorities, to disclose all pertinent information about financial accounts of clients identified as US clients. Any institution which refused to sign such an agreement with the US tax authorities would face a 30% withholding of their US revenues. As a subsequent draft of the legislation is awaited from the US administration, British sources say that the passage of the law would cause considerable problems. US authorities are reportedly not opposed to a “country-by-country” solution.
Investment Europe relays reports in the Economic Times that Fidelity Investments is in talks with potential buyers of its mutual fund activities in India, which represent INR10bn of a total of INR90bn in assets for the US asset management firm in the country. Goldman Sachs Asset Management is said to be one of the candidates for the acquisition.
Lucy O’Carroll, senior economist at Lloyds Banking Groujp, has been recruited as chief economist at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP), replacing Richard Dingwall-Smith, who has been in the position since 1998, and will remain at SWIP as senior economic adviser, Investment Europe reports.O’Carroll will be based in Edinburgh, and will report to Ken Adams, head of global strategy.
The British Man group on 30 January announced that it has signed the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI). There are now 988 signatories to the PRI, of which 126 are in the United Kingdom. “The decision is an illustration of Man’s ongoing engagement with responsible investment. As one of the largest alternative management firms, we how that the signing of the PRI encourages other members of the sector to follow our example,” Man’s CEO, Peter Clarke, says in a statement.
Odette Cesari, directeur des investissements d’Axa France dans un article paru dans l’Agefi Hebdo numéro 308: Les investissements en obligations restent principalement effectués en OAT, le poids du Portugal, de la Grèce et de l’Irlande représentant moins de 1 % des actifs. Cependant, il ne faut pas assimiler tous les pays PIIGS (Portugal, Irlande, Italie, Grèce et Espagne, NDLR) qui connaissent chacun des situations bien différentes. Cette année et les suivantes, la gestion actif/passif est plus que jamais au c??ur de nos préoccupations : la duration du portefeuille est gérée en adéquation avec celle du passif, actuellement de 7 ans.
According to the CSSF, assets in Luxembourg-registered collective investment organisms and specialised investment funds totalled EUR2.0965trn as of 31 December last year, an increase of 1.80% compared with the previous month. Positive variation totalled EUR37.093bn, due to market effects of EUR40.577bn (+1.97%), and net subscriptions totalling -EUR3.484bn (-0.17%). For the year, the total volume of assets in Luxembourg-registered funds fell by 4.66%.
The three sub-funds of the Luxembourg Sicav LO Funds, EMEA (USD31.1m as of 6 December), Pacific Rim (USD44.3m) and Greater China (USD29.9m), will be merged into the single product LO Funds – Global Emerging Markets, which will be renamed at LO Funds – Emerging Equity Risk Parity (EUR38.76m as of the end of November).The deal was decided on by the board of directors at Lombard Odier Funds, as assets in the three funds taken over by the Emerging Equity Risk Parity funds have fallen below the legal minimum of USD50m in assets, and their management objectives, investment policies and investment universes are ultimately similar. The merger will bring economies of scale and a rationalisation of the product range from Lombard Odier.The Emerging Equity Risk Parity fund will invest at least two thirds of its portfolio in equities from companies headquartered in an emerging country or which realise the majority of their activities there, according to the criteria of the MSCI Emerging Market Index. The remaining one third of assets may be invested in shares in companies which do not satisfy these criteria, and allocation to convertible bonds may not exceed 10%.
Confiante au regard de sa gestion financière de l’année 2011, la Caisse Régionale du Crédit Agricole du Nord-Est souhaite garder la même ligne de conduite. Sa trésorière, Corinne Chilain, confirme : « Nous attendons toujours d'élargir notre horizon de placement pour adapter notre stratégie ». Au c??ur de ses préoccupations, la gestion de la liquidité et des risques des 700 millions d’encours de la caisse. Avec un portefeuille obligataire pour 80 % des actifs, la performance est peu importante et la direction financière préfère jouer la carte de la prudence avant de lancer de nouveaux investissements. « Nous réfléchissions à investir sur des OATs et des covered bonds, c’est toujours à l'étude » précise Corinne Chilain qui garde un ??il sur certaines classes d’actifs en attendant le bon moment pour remanier le portefeuille. Travaillant principalement avec Amundi, la trésorière n’exclue pas de faire appel à d’autres partenaires externes : « peut-être qu’au deuxième semestre, nous seront plus à même de lancer de nouveaux investissements », et confiera alors à nouveau une partie de la gestion à la Société Générale, BNP et Natixis, gérants avec lesquels la caisse travaille habituellement.