Isam, the hedge fund founded by the former head of Man Group, Stanley Fink, is planning to increase its assets under management by a factor of at least seven in the short term, by moving into the Middle Eastern sovereign fund and institutional markets, the Reuters news agency reports. The firm, with total assets under management of slightly over USD700m, is currently in talks with sovereign funds, pension funds and high net worth clients in the region, Fink tells Reuters.
Emerging markets equities funds have seen another week of redemptions, according to the most recent estimates from EPFR Global. Since the beginning of the year, net outflows from these funds have totalled USD40.5bn.However, equities markets appear to be in a slightly less pessimistic phase than in the past few weeks. “Some balance seems to be developing between optimists and pessimists. And if you look at flows to ETFs, which are most immediately sensitive to changes in investors’ moods, optimists appear to be gaining the upper hand,” says the managing director of EPFR Global, Brad Durham.Outflows from equity funds as a whole nonetheless totalled USD1.37bn in the second week of October.
A quarterly survey by Financial Times Deutschland of the major asset management firms has found that a majority of strategists are doubtful of the effectiveness of the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF). For example, Kurt Schappelwein (Raiffeisen Capital Management) claims that the EFSF does not solve any of the fundamental problems, while Stefan Rondorf (Allianz GI) says that it lacks the dissuasive capacity that would allow it to intervene on the necessary scale in the Italian or Spanish bond markets.For fourth quarter, strategists recommend a positioning on defensive shares such as equities in the health and food sectors. On the other hand, banking sector shares which appear to be directly affected by the debt crisis in peripheral European countries figure at the bottom of the list of recommendations.
A survey by the Edhec-Risk Institute of 104 European institutional investors has found that 68% of professionals are critical of equity indices which are cap-weighted, and 53% are critical of debt-weighted bond indices. However, despite their faults, these products remain a yardstick for investors and asset managers.When asked about the frequent confusion between indexing and passive management, 58% of specialists say that indices should not simply reflect passive strategies, but 75.2% are also of the opinion that indices should not be based on alpha.Sub-segment indices are relatively unimportant to investors in equities, but are highly important for those who use bond indices.Investors in equities are mostly irritated by the fact that standard cap-weighted indices give a disproportionate weight to overpriced shares, and do not offer sufficient diversification. For their part, users of bond indices pay more attention to reliable exposure to duration than to liquidity questions.Lastly, the adoption of alternative weighting models is perceived in a more positive light by investors who use equities indices (45.2%) than in the bond sphere (17.6% of respondents for indices of govies and 12.5% for corporate bond indices).
The amLeague company announced on Monday, 17 October that it has formed a partnership with the index provider Stoxx Limited. From 1 January 2012, the European equities indices Euro Stoxx 50, Stoxx Europe 50 and Stoxx Europe 600 will be used exclusively for European mandates. The agreement will also allow international mandates established in the future (see Newsmangers of 11 July 2011) to also have a bechmark index developed by Stoxx. The investment universe and performance comparisons will be based on a coherent and homogeneous family of indices in terms of their methodology and periodical revision of their perimeters, a statement says.
On 16 August, DWS Investments launched the Luxembourg fund DWS Invest China Bonds, which invests in bonds denominated in Chinese yuan on the offshore market for renminbi debt in Hong Kong, which currently has a total volume of EUR23bn, or CNY200bn.With this new product, which follows similar products from the likes of AllianceBernstein and ETFs from Van Eck and Invesco, the Deutsche Bank affiliate is offering an actively-managed product with a portfolio of up to 50 positions (bonds with a good ratings and mid-term maturity), which will be managed by Philip Meier and the emerging markets team. The fund is also a bet on the appreciation of the Chinese yuan against the US dollar, and also has shares which are hedged for euro/dollar currency risks.Meier will be assisted by specialists from the Chinese asset management firm Harvest, in which DWS holds a 30% stake.CharacteristicsName: DWS Invest China BondsISIN codes:LCH share class in euros: LU0632805262FCH share class in euros (minimal investment EUR0.4m): LU06322808951A2 share class in US dollars: LU0616856422E2 share class in US dollars (minimal investment EUR0.4m): LU0616856778Front-end feeLCH and A share classes: 3%FCH and E2 share classes: 0%Management commission:LCH and A2 share classes: 1.10%FCH and E2 share classes: 0.60%Depository bank: State Street Bank Luxembourg SA
The central asset management firm for the German co-operative banks, Union Investment, will soon be extending its range of guaranteed funds (90 products, EUR16.4bn in assets as of the end of August), with the addition of the UniGarantPlus: Erneuerbare Energien (2018), which will be launched on 14 December 2011, and for which subscriptions have been open since 17 October and will remain open until 9 December.The new fund, denominated in euros, will focus on equities in the renewable energies sector (wind, solar, geothermal, biocarbons, ethanol, etc).CharacteristicsName: UniGarantPlus: Erneuerbare Energien (2018)ISIN code: LU0661713296Maturity: 21 September 2018Guarantee: EUR104 per share at maturityFront-end fee: 4%Management commission: 1% (maximum 1.5%)Premature withdrawal fee: 2% (paid to the fund)Depository banking commission (DZ Privat Bank SA, Luxembourg): 0.05% (maximum)
The German asset management firm Credit Suisse Asset Management Immobilien KAG has announced that its open-ended real estate fund CS Euroreal has sold three properties for an undisclosed total price higher than the most recent expert valuations.Since redemptions were suspended in May 2010, the CS Euroreal fund has sold 11 properties (all above market value) for EUR880m. That brings liquidity available for potential redemptions as of 5 October to EUR1.29bn, or 21% of assets. Gross liquidity totals EUR1.65bn, or 26.9% of assets managed.The past three sales have included a commercial/residential property in Leipzig, a commercial property located in Dresden, and an office property in London.The buyer of the two German properties is RREEF (Deutsche Bank), which will add the Leipzig property to tis open-ended fund grundbesitz europa, and the Dresden property to an institutional real estate fund.The London property, St Katherine’s Estate (18,000 square metres) has been sold to the Employees Provident Fund of Malaysia.
Most of the pension liabilities of BHF-Bank were outsourced in early October to the BHF Pension Trust e.V. pension fund. The migration involved a volume of about EUR120m. The portfolio will be managed by Frankfurt Trust, the asset management firm of the BHF group.Deutsche Bank is currently in talks with the private equity investor RHJ over a sale of BHF-Bank, which was inherited by Deutsche Bank along with the private bank Sal. Oppenheim, which it took over in late October 2009.
The US group Franklin Templeton is planning to launch a real estate fund dedicated to emerging markets or to the Asia-Pacific region, Asian Investor reports. Franklin already offers two real estate funds, one of which is international in scope, while the other is focused on the United States. Assets in the two vehicles total about USD1bn, of which 70% are in the international fund.
The Parisian office of the Australian asset management group First State Investments, which will open soon, will be composed of two people, according to information obtained by Newsmanagers.The two staff will be Eva von Sydow, sales director - Europe, who has been working with the asset management firm for nine years. She will cover the French and Swedish markets (she is Swedish). The second is Philippe Taillardat, formerly of Amundi, who has recently joined First State to co-direct the asset management team for infrastructure investments in Europe.First State, which belongs to Colonial First State Global Asset Management, the largest fund management firm in Australia (with GBP99.2bn in assets as of 30 June), is already present in London and Edinburgh, but not yet in continental Europe, an area where it has ambitions to develop. The firm manages Asian and emerging markets equity, global resources, global equities, publicly traded real estate and infrastructure funds.
No major European bank is sufficiently transparent about its employees’ pay scales, which need to be disclosed in fuller detail, the European Banking Authority (EBA) claims. “Disclosure of pay policies and practices observed could be considerably improved for the majority of banks in our sample,” the EBA stated in a report on bank transparency on 17 October. According to the report, one quarter of the banks in the sample provide “insufficient” information about their pay practices, while half of them could improve their communications in this area. The organisation also recommends giving more emphasis to the ties between practices and risks. It also considers that disclosure of credit counterparty risks and risks related to interest rates need to be improved. The report is available at the following address: http://www.eba.europa.eu/News--Communications/Year/2011/EBA-publishes-f…
Après l’examen des 61 candidatures reçues en février 2011 à propos de l’appel d’offres de prestation de services relative à la gestion d’actifs pour le compte de l’IRCANTEC, un deuxième questionnaire a été transmis mercredi 5 octobre aux 35 répondants pré-sélectionnés. Pour lire l’avis complet pour la deuxième phase: cliquez ici. Pour rappel, les prestations sont réparties en 4 lots. Le portefeuille de valeurs mobilières constitué en représentation des réserves est actuellement proche de 6 milliards d’euros d’actifs à fin septembre 2010. La nouvelle allocation stratégique cible comprend 25 à 30 % d’actions, 10 à 15 % d’obligations indexées sur l’inflation et environ 60% d’obligations nominales. Les marchés sont conclus pour une période de 4 ans à compter de la notification du contrat. La date prévisionnelle de début des prestations est le 4ème trimestre 2011. LOT 1: Mise en place et gestion de 2 FCP investis en actions et valeurs assimilées. L’allocation initiale indicative de chaque FCP est de l’ordre de 150 millions d’euros avec un volume cible de 500 millions d’euros par FCP ; La gestion sera une gestion active, principalement dans la zone euro(s). LOT 2: Mise en place et gestion de 3 FCP investis majoritairement en obligations à taux nominal, TCN et valeurs assimilées L’allocation initiale indicative de chaque FCP est de l’ordre de 200 millions d’euros avec un volume cible de 800 millions d’euros par FCP ; La gestion sera une gestion active dans la zone euro(s). LOT 3: Mise en place et gestion de 3 FCP investis en actifs financiers diversifiés. Ces fonds seront dédiés à l’Ircantec, avec une allocation indicative 50% actions et 50 % obligations. L’allocation initiale indicative de chaque FCP est de l’ordre de 200 millions d’euros avec un volume cible de 700 millions d’euros par FCP ; Ces FCP intègreront une gestion tactique en fonction des opportunités identifiées sur les marchés. Ils intégreront une part significative de titres en dehors de la zone euro(s). LOT 4: Mise en place et gestion de 2 FCP investis en obligations à taux indexés sur l’inflation. L’allocation initiale indicative de chaque FCP est de l’ordre de 200 millions d’euros avec un volume cible de 400 millions d’euros par FCP.
LuxCSD, coentreprise détenue à parité par la Banque centrale du Luxembourg et Clearstream International, a été désigné comme système de règlement-livraison sur valeurs mobilières au Luxembourg. Le service y fera office de point d‘accès national à Target 2 Securities (T2S).
Charles Evans, le président de la Réserve fédérale de Chicago, a indiqué que les opinions exprimées par les membres du FOMC laissent à penser que la Fed durcira sa politique monétaire plus vite qu’elle ne le devrait. «Il y a des différences sur l’état actuel de l’économie et sur les pressions inflationnistes», rappelant que pour sa part, il estime que «les pressions inflationnistes sont plus faibles que ce que beaucoup de personnes évoquent».
Le directeur financier de Citigroup, John Gerspach, a confié hier à l’occasion d’une conférence téléphonique avec des analystes que la banque américaine avait engagé la liquidation de son unité de trading pour compte propre Equity Principal Strategies. L’opération, motivée par l’entrée en vigueur de la «règle Volcker», est déjà réalisée « presque aux deux tiers» selon le dirigeant. Une porte-parole a néanmoins tenu à souligner la part modeste de cette activité dans le trading de Citigroup.
Dow Jones lance aujourd’hui deux nouveaux indices régionaux pour l’Asie et l’Europe. Des indices, dénommés Asia Dow et Europe Dow, dont la méthodologie de calcul reprend celle du Dow Jones Industrial Average américain. Ils regroupent effectivement chacun 30 valeurs.Le secteur financier est le plus représenté.
Le quotidien avance, citant son directeur général Seth Merrin, que la dark pool indienne est en négociations avec trois marchés boursiers de la région en vue de former des alliances. Liquidnet est présente au sein de huit marchés de la région dont Singapour, Hong Kong et en Australie.
Les projets publics de construction de routes en Chine ont connu un coup d’arrêt du fait d’un manque de financement depuis les deux ou trois derniers mois dans certaines provinces, indique le journal qui rapporte des propos du ministre des transports du pays. Une situation qui devrait s’intensifier au quatrième trimestre et la réalisation des projets devrait être 20% inférieure au programme initial.
Les perspectives de l'économie allemande se sont détériorées à l’approche de l’hiver en raison d’un ralentissement du rythme des commandes de l'étranger, déclare la Bundesbank dans son rapport mensuel publié lundi. La banque centrale allemande précisé qu’après la poursuite de la reprise économique au troisième trimestre, le tableau est nettement moins rose pour les deux trimestres à venir. «Le flux de commandes, notamment en provenance de pays au-delà de l’Europe, a sensiblement diminué», note la Buba.
Les créanciers privés de l’Etat grec ne discuteront d’une éventuelle augmentation de la décote sur leurs titres que dans le cadre d’un plan plus large visant à résoudre la crise de la dette souveraine dans la zone euro, a prévenu l’Institut de la finance internationale (IFI), l’une des principales parties prenantes, a déclaré Charles Dallara, le directeur exécutif de l’IFI, qui regroupe les principales institutions financières mondiales.
Eaton Vance annonce la naissance de Navigate Fund Solutions, une filiale à 100 % du groupe. Elle sera dédiée aux ETF gérés activement. Dans la foulée, le groupe a nommé Stephen Clarke au poste de président de la nouvelle structure. L’intéressé est un ancien vice-président d’Old Mutual Asset Management.