In November, total assets under management registered a slight decline of USD2.55 billion, bringing the total size of the industry to USD1.64 trillion, according to Eurekahedge. Asset flows for the month were marginal to slightly negative, with net outflows of US$0.19 billion while performance-based declines accounted for losses of USD2.36 billion.Assets in Asian hedge funds crossed USD125 billion for the first time since December 2008. North American hedge funds witnessed 10 consecutive months of net positive asset flows, attracting USD56.22 billion over this period.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Le Temps reports that at the last European summit of the year, EU heads of state and government accepted the conditions of Germany and agreed to the creation of the future permanent emergency support facility for the Euro zone. “Member states of the Euro zone are authorised to create a stability mechanism which will be activated if it proves indispensable to guarantee the stability of the euro as a whole,” the text says. The declared objective is to have the fund in place by 2013.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Nils Bolmstrand has resigned from his position as chief executive officer of Skandia Investment Group (SIG), and will be temporarily replaced from the end of the year by Marc Bulstrode, the current chief operating officer, until a successor can be found. Bolmstrand will remain at the Skandia group, in the insurance division, and will become head of products for Scandinavian activities. The move will allow him to be permanently based in Sweden, rather than commuting between Southampton in the UK and Stockholm.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In the past few days, there has been a resurgence of rumours of a sale of the Chi-X platform by its shareholders, La Tribute reports, citing Bloomberg. Shareholders are said to have recently received offers from Nyse-Euronext, Nasdaq OMX, Bats and DirectEdge. An acquisition of Chi-X, which is currently the numbe rtwo or three player in European markets, would strongly alter the rankings, and would give its acquirer more commission-pricing power, the newspaper reports.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Cantonal Bank of Valais (BCVs) has reaffirmed that the development of the private banking sector will be among its top strategic priorities, Agefi Switzerland reports. The BCVs prefers the open architecture model and has no funds of its own. It prefers management mandates and high added value products. “The evolution of the international context in wealth management is transforming the fact that BCVs has no international ties into an advantage, as it means the firm is free from any foreign pressures,” says Nicolas Debons, the new head of the activity.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The US asset management firm Southeastern Asset Management on 16 December announced that it is selling half of its 5.33% stake in the German firm Hochtief to the Spanish firm ACS (in which it controls a 6.5% stake). This will allow ACS to increase its stake in Hochtief to 29.84%, very near the 30% threshold. From there it may increase its stake to 50%, the Börsen-Zeitung reports.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The US management firm Stralem & Company (USD3bn in assets), a specialist in large caps, has recruited Manfred Müller, former head of wholesale at F&C in Frankfurt, as head of wholesale for open-ended funds in Germany, Austria and Scandinavia.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Basel Committee on 16 December published the final text of Basel III, including all rules governing owners’ equity at banks, which will be required to be trebled in order to prevent potential financial shocks in the future. The final text confirms the planned ratios and deadlines. Basel III requires banks to establish a minimal Tier I ratio of over 7%, which includes a “safety cushion” of 2.5%. Some changes have been made in other areas, such as the new set of international liquidity standards, which will give countries such as Denmark and Australia more flexibility. These countries and some others have a small government and corporate debt market, which could make it more difficult for them to adhere to Basel III criteria that expect most of the new safety cushion to be constituted from high-rated government bond issues. By the new rules, Denmark and Australia will be allowed to incorporate government debt from other countries and increase the proportion of secured bonds, which are subject to larger discounts. The Basel Committee has also published the results of a Basel III impact study covering 263 establishments worldwide. One of the main points in Basel III requires that by January 2019, establishments will be required to achieve a “hard” owners’ equity ratio (including social capital and profits which are not redistributed) of 7% of liabilities. Previously, the required percentage was 2%. If this measure had been applied at the end of 2009, the 94 largest banks on the planet (with owners’ equity of over EUR3bn) would have been short by EUR577bn in owners’ equity. A second group of 169 banks would have needed EUR25bn. “The transitional period (until 2019) gives banks all the time they need to deploy the new standards in a way that is in keeping with a healthy economic recovery, while consolidating protections in the system against economic and financial shocks,” the chairman of the Basel Committee, Nout Wellink, says in a statement.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Ingenico group announced on 16 December that it has obtained ISO 14001 certification for all of its corporate activities. The international certification “illustrates Ingenico’s desire to control the impact of its activities and products on the environment, and to continue the deployment of its Management System,” the group says in a statement. Ingenico’s major engagements are to be exemplary in its observation of the applicable environmental prescriptions, the taking into account of the environmental dimension in its product design, the deployment of a responsible purchasing policy which integrates environmental criteria, and increasing the awareness of employees.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The San Francisco financial services firm Stone & Youngberg LLC has been sentenced by an arbitration panel of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (Finra) to reimburse USD750,000 to the Kay Family Revocable Trust of Lenore and Charles Bleadon, the Wall Street Journal reports.The regulator finds that Stone & Youngberg advised the family trust to invest in a feeder fund for Madoff Securities, but did not engage in any meaningful due diligence, in complete disregard to its fiduciary duty to its clients.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The French financial asset management association (AFG) on 16 December announced the appointment of Bernard Descreux (La Banque Postale Asset Management) as chairman of the AFG management techniques commission. He succeeds Jean-François Boulier (CEO, Aviva Investors Europe).Descreux has been a board member at La Banque Postale AM (LBPAM) since 1999. Since 2001, he is in charge of bond management, diversified equities, and engineering and intermediation services. He is also chairman of La Banque Postale Structured Asset Management and AMlab, an incubator for innovative management firms, both of which are affiliates of LBPAM.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Companies with a high likelihood of default monitored by Moody’s (“B3 Negative and Lower Corporate Ratings”) have cumulative debt of over USD100bn that will mature between 2011 and 2015, according to a study recently published by the ratings agency. The number of companies exposed to defaults fell to 182 from a peak of nearly 300 in first half 2009. The development reflects an improvement in the quality of credit for companies in the speculative category, but many of the remaining companies will be facing significant refinancing needs. About 42% of the debt concerned has a negative outlook, while only 15% of the total has a positive outlook.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Sherborne, the investment vehicle for the activist investor Edward Bramson, which has achieved a 17.5% stake in F&C, has called for an extraordinary shareholders’ meeting to be held, the Financial Times reports. The goal is to replace Nick McAndrew as chairman of F&C. Sherborne would also like to replace Brian Larcombe, non-executive director, with Ian Brindle.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The ratings agency Fitch Ratings on 16 December announced that it has raised the Asset Manager rating for Schroder Investment Management from “M2+” to “M1.” The rating covers all investment activities at the firm, except alternative management activities. The Fitch rating reflects the firm’s long history, its independence and its solidity in difficult market conditions. The profitability and liquidity of the firm ensure it a strong financial basis, as shown by the recruitmentss made in 2010, including a chief investment officer for fixed income. Fitch has also announced that it has rebuilt its institutional activities in the past two years, and assets under management have increased 64% since the end of 2008. As of the end of September 2010, assets under management totalled GBP181.5bn (59% institutional, 41% retail, excluding private banking), of which 45% is invested in equities.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Les Echos reports that more than 100,000 tons of cocoa, equivalent to 3% of global production, were delivered on Tuesday, 14 December, the deadline for December contracts on Nyse Liffe. Operators are convinced that the British hedge fund Armajaro, led by Anthony Ward, which met with much criticism this summer for buying USD1bn of cocoa (240,100 tonnes, equivalent to about 6% to 7% of the market), is unloading stock. Since the context is less good than it was in June – since then, cocoa prices have fallen 19% from peaks of GBP2,348 per tonne – the operation is not considered an unmitigated success.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The non-governmental organisation Earthrights has published a report which blows the whistle on the Norwegisn government pension fund (NOK392bn in assets under management) for its investments in oil and gas companies with operations in Burma. According to the 40-page report by the NGO, the Norwegian sovereign fund has invested a total of about USD4.7bn in 15 oil and gas companies active in Burma. Among the guilty companies is the French firm Total, in which the Norwegian fund has invested USD1.6bn, and the US firm Chevron, with an investment of slightly over USD900m. The South Korean Posco and the Chinese CNOOC are also on the list, with investments of USD244.5m and USD168m. Among the violations the NGO finds in Burma are forced labour, murder, and expropriation of real estate. The NGO therefore recommends that the ethical council place under watch or exclude firms which violate the ethical standards set by the sovereign fund itself.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Fonds professionell reports that a spokesperson for the Bochum public prosecutor’s office on 16 December confirmed reports in the Süddeutsche Zeitung that LGT and LGT Treuhand will pay EUR46.35m to settle legal actions against them by the German tax authorities over information stored on a DVD which was stolen from LGT Treuhand in 2002, and sold in 2009 for EUR4.5m to the German intelligence service BND. LGT employees implicated in the affair will pay EUR3.65m. Neither LGT nor its employees have admitted any wrongdoing in the matter.
Effective from 10th December 2010, the JPM Global Natural Resources Fund (SICAV) managed by Ian Henderson at J.P. Morgan Asset Management is soft closed to new investors."This fund has performed well and has attracted a large amount of assets under management. Although the fund is still not at a point where it can no longer pursue its stated investment strategy, the portfolio management team have noted that, if the fund continues to grow, that may be the case. Therefore to allow the fund to continue to meet its objectives and to protect the interests of existing investors, we have taken the decision to soft close the fund», says J.P. Morgan Asset Management. The fund’s assets were EUR3.2bn on December 15.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Norwegian finance minister on 16 December announced that the main outlines of the mandate for the Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG), formerly known as the Oil Fund, have been defined. According to the minister, Sigbjørn Johnsen, the new mandate brings no modifications of any kind for the investment strategy of the GPFG, but provides increased risk management requirements. The minister also announced that the new standards applicable from 1 January 2011 will now bring the GPFG into line with the rules applicable to the rest of the Norwegian financial sector in terms of pay scales, bonuses, and other forms of remuneration.
Le FRR lance un appel d’offres pour sélectionner de nouveaux gestionnaires de mandats investis en obligations des pays développés de catégorie investissement. Cet appel d’offres a pour objectif d’assurer la cohérence du portefeuille du FRR avec les modalités de financement de la réforme des retraites (14 versements annuels de 2,1 Mds€ du FRR à la CADES de 2011 à 2024). Lot 1 : mandats d’adossement investis en obligations du Trésor français (OAT) Lot 2 : mandats de gestion passive multi-compartiments Appel d’Offres Restreint Télécharger les documents sur : Achat Public
Outre les limites fixées aux positions spéculatives sur les matières premières (lire page 20), le régulateur américain des marchés à terme a dévoilé hier des propositions visant à permettre aux «Swap Execution Facilities» (SEF) de disposer de systèmes électroniques de trading similaires aux livres d’ordres des marchés actions.
L’institution, dont les achats de dettes souveraines culminent désormais à 72 milliards d’euros, augmentera de 5 milliards d’euros son capital souscrit à 10,76 milliards le 29 décembre. Une décision qui peut être vue comme une mise en garde adressée aux politiques européens.
Les tableaux ci-contre présentent les meilleures et plus mauvaises performances sur le marché des fonds actions américaines et le marché des fonds actions françaises au cours du mois de novembre 2010. Ces performances sont mises en perspective par le calcul de la volatilité et du ratio de Sharpe sur trois ans d’historique ainsi que du rendement depuis un an.
Les chefs d’Etat et de gouvernement des Vingt-Sept ont entériné hier le principe d’une solidarité entre membres de la zone euro en tant qu’argument ultime face aux marchés en cas de déstabilisation de la monnaie unique. La ratification de l’amendement devra être achevée au 1er janvier 2013.
Le graphique ci-contre montre l’évolution de l’Expected Shortfall ou Value at Risk conditionnelle quotidienne à 95% des rendements du MSCI Europe. Cette mesure de perte extrême décrit la moyenne des pertes une fois la VaR franchie. Rappelons que la VaR mesure la perte potentielle maximale pour un horizon et un niveau de confiance donnés. La VaR conditionnelle permet de capturer les queues de distribution épaisses et donc les risques les plus extrêmes.