In its annual report, published on the website of the Bundesanzeiger (official gazette), Sal. Oppenheim states that it lost EUR1.27bn in 2009, compared with EUR163m the previous year. The private bank, which has been taken over by Deutsche Bank on 15 March 2010, says that it will be necessary to create new structures to generate growth and to return to profitability, which will involve a re-examination of back-office functions, in order to create synergies with Deutsche Bank. In particular, savings will be necessary in IT. The firm will now concentrate on wealth management for private clients, institutional management, and management of retail and institutional funds. Sal. Oppenheim predicts that it will return to profitability in two to three years. The 2010 accounts will be dragged down by one-time costs related to restructuring and the sale of assets owned directly by the bank. Further write-downs may be necessary for some credits, as well as investments in real estate. Operating profits, however, are expected to increase to a satisfactory level this year.
The Moscow city government and Paris Europlace on 18 June signed a protocol agreement in Saint Petersburg in the presence of the French minister of the economy, Christine Lagarde. The protocol sets out the basis for an increased cooperation between the financial markets of Paris and Moscow in the area of financial services. The cooperation agreement will result in the establishment of concrete relations to exchange information and expertise for financial practices, development of services, and new products, especially in the area of debt management, where Paris and Moscow both play a top-tier role worldwide. It also provides for the organisation and management of an Institute for Risk Management, and for regular exchanges in the area of market infrastructure, in line with the evolution of securities rights and good international practices. A joint working group will structure the exchanges, which may also lead to the organisation of specific seminars and local and reciprocal assistance provided to French and Russian financial actors in the development of their commercial, institutional and public relations.
From 1 July 2010, Vigeo will include the “transparency and integrity of influence practices” in the criteria it uses to rate the social responsibility of businesses. With this new criterion, Vigeo will measure what businesses publicly disclose about the engagements they take on, staff and resources they mobilize, either internally or through the use of specialised organisations (think tanks, lobbying agencies, professional associations, etc.), to affect expertise and legislative and regulatory processes likely to have an impact on their interests. In an environment in which the power of the professional lobbying industry is growing, with observable consequences in the absence of consistent international regulation, the risks of accusations of improper conduct are not negligible for businesses which are inadequately transparent in this area. On the other hand, businesses which make the effort to provide information on the positions they support, and on the organisation and budget dedicated to managing their relationships with public decision-makers, may see a benefit to their reputation, as well as increased legal security, increased investor confidence, and thus better attractiveness to investors as well as more permissive attitudes on the part of shareholders, and more generally, better social acceptability for their brand. The development of the ratings criteria was undertaken by vigeo with the support of the French section of Transparency International under a partnership agreement between the two organisations signed in July 2009.
According to sources familiar with the matter, the SEC is extending its investigation of the activities of the hedge fund management firm Magnetar Capital, founded by Alec Litowitz, a former trader from Cidatel Investment Group, the Wall Street Journal reports. The regulator is seeking to determine the exact role of Magnetar in the CDO markets, in which the hedge fund manager bought some of the highest-risk categories of derivatives, and made considerable amounts of money on CDS used to hedge against defaults on these assets.
According to sources familiar with the matter, Citi Capital Advisors, the alternative management platform from Citigroup, will seek to raise about USD1.5bn for private equity and USD1.75bn for hedge fund investments, the Wall Street Journal reports, adding that according to Bloomberg, the asset management firm will give itself two years to raise this amount of capital. The plans come ahead of the future “Volcker rule” which will forbid commercial banks from making speculative investments with their own capital. This point is also particularly sensitive for JP Morgan Chase, which owns the hedge fund management firm Highbridge Capital Management, and for Morgan Stanley, whose affiliates include the hedge fund management firm FrontPoint Partners.
The private equity investor Inflexion and F&C Private Equity Trust have sold their stakes in ICS to the US management firm Blackstone, for a total of GBP110m-GBP125m. F&C says that it received GBP6.3m in cash and GBP0.5m in loan notes, which, along with subsequent payments, will bring the internal return rate to 73% after 22 months.
F&C is embroiled in a legal battle with two hedge fund managers - Francois Barthelemy and Anthony Culligan -, says the Financial Times. The case centres on a limited liability partnership set up in 2004 between the asset management company and the two men. The two men, who hold 20% each in the partnership, allege that after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, F&C, which has a 60% interest, «wanted to shut down the LLP» and «recognised they could not do that under the agreement without buying the individual partners out under the options». They claim that F&C «started to run the business down without even informing the individual partners» and from mid-December 2008 «they sought to impose . . . cuts that would . . . have undermined the business altogether», according to the FT.
Six managers and directors at Gartmore, including chief executive Jeff Meyer, have bought GBP557,162 worth of shares, says Financial News. But one prominent name has not joined in the buying spree - star manager and major shareholder Roger Guy.
Fund Strategy reports that Collins Stewart Fund Management and Corazon Capital are planning to merge their funds of funds, in the wake of the acquisition of Corazon by Collins Stewart in March of this year. The time-frame has not been set in stone, say sources at Collins Stewart, adding that the operation will not involve any layoffs.
Graham Kitchen, who manages several equities funds at Henderson, says that several fund managers at the firm bought a total of 2% of the shares in Jupiter released as part of its IPO, as they considered the issue price of 165 pence per share highly attractive, Investment Week reports. Since Thursday, the shares have been trading at about 190 pence per share. The first listing will take place this Monday. Jupiter, whose share offering was more than 2.5 times oversubscribed, has not posted a single quarter of net redemptions in the past 10 years.
By a vote of 91.64% in favour, 4.27% against, and 4.09% abstaining, shareholders in F&C at a general meeting on Friday approved the firm’s planned acquisition fo the management firm Thames River for about GBP53.6m, of which GBP33.6m will be paid in cash.
In a first verdict over Madoff investments, Santander was sentenced on Thursday by a court in Madrid to reimburse an investor who subscribed in May 2006 to a structured product based on a basket of investments in the Multistrategy, Strategic US Equity and Arbutraje funds from Optimal, Cotizalia reports. The investor requested a redemption of his investment within the deadlines, before the Madoff scandal reduced the value of his investment to zero on 30 November. The judge found that the bank did not fulfil its obligations in failing to reimburse the subscriber, citing the arrest of Bernard Madoff and the suspension of his funds as the cause. However, the judge did not sentence the bank to reimburse the full initial value of the investment, but only its value just before the scandal broke.
Fidelity International would like to maintain the coexistence of bundled and non-bundled commissions, Fund Strategy reports. Following the publication of a working document by the British Financial Services Authority (FSA) on the subject of distribution platforms which raises the question of commissions, the management firm has undertaken a survey of 350 British independent financial advisers (IFAs) which finds that 80% of them favour the status quo. Two thirds of advisers estimate that the cost of investments would rise if the FSA intervened to forbid kickbacks.
Toby Hogbin, head of product development at Martin Currie, says that asset management firms which do not consider the British market their top priority will take the introduction of the UCITS IV directive on 1 July 2011 as an occasion to merge their British and continental product ranges, using a Luxembourg master fund and British feeder funds, Money Marketing reports. This will result in staff reductions in back-office and compliance in the UK.
After a disastrous month of May in which legislators the world over sought to impose stricter regulations on their activities, hedge funds and the alternative management profession are continuing to grow. In the past few days, the English language press has reported on several new funds currently in development. Pierre-Henri Flamand, a veteran of Goldman Sachs, is planning to launch an event-driven hedge fund in autumn, to be entitled Edoma Capital, with about USD1bn in assets. The hedge fund will be based in Geneva, probably in order to avoid the recently announced tax hikes in the United Kingdom. A former Merrill Lynch trader, Frédéric Marino, will launch a hedge fund in summer, to be entitled FM Capital Partners, with the support of the Libyan government, which the British Independent newspaper reports will invest hundreds of millions of dollars. Marino launched a hedge fund nearly one year ago, and is planning to hire nearly 40 staff by autumn. Among the top figures at the fund will be Mohamed Taher Siala, former Libyan undersecretary for foreign affairs, and Khaled Kagigi, head of a Libyan government fund which invests in Africa. The fund’s activities will include traditional hedge fund strategies as well as research to locate investment opportunities in Africa. The Bloomberg news agency also reports that Citigroup is planning to dedicate USD750m to hedge funds this year, and Usd1bn next year.
Hedge Week reports that estimates by Preqin show that institutional investment in hedge funds have been rising again since the end of 2009. Institutional investors are providing 72% of the capital invested in hedge funds.
Funds People reports that GLG Partners has recently registered four UCITS-compliant hedge funds in Spain. The products are sub-funds of the Irish-registered Sicav GLG Investments VI PLC, and include a long/short equity, GLG Pure Alpha, which replicates a fund registered in the Cayman islands, with Usd400m in assets, and three emerging markets products: GLG Emerging Markets Equity, GLG EM Credit Opportunity, and GLG EM Fixed Income and Currency. A fifth product, GLG Emerging Markets, missed the registration deadline due to an error, but will be subsequently made available. All of the funds offer daily liquidity and a profile with limited correlation to the markets.
Despite the financial crisis, a large majority of French students and young graduates in finance remain open to job opportunities abroad, according to a survey undertaken by eFinancialCareers.fr of 206 students and young graduates planning to work in the finance sector. Only 21% are concentrating their job searches on the French market. Of the 79% of respondents who are prepared to move abroad, more than half would like to work in a European country, with London their preferred European city to begin a career in the finance sector (cited by 62% of them).
La Tribune reports that investors seeking to put an end to their involvement in the Madoff caper may sell their fund shares. Although the products are effectively worthless now, and most of them have entered liquidation, the Hedgebay Trading cross-border platform offers a way to put sellers and buyers of shares in the funds in contact. According to the newspaper, as much as USD5m in trades on the Fairfield and Plazza hedge funds are reportedy taking place. Some institutional investors have even approached the platform to buy illiquid shares “transparently.” The new owners of the shares are hoping that Irving Picard, the US liquidator of Bernard Madoff’s assets, will recover more money than expected. The unfortunate investors selling their shares will also have the relief of recovering some limited amount. The platform reports that the rebound in trading of these shares has brought their value back up to only 8% of the value of the initial investment.
Following Lyxor, Amundi ETF, HSBC, Crédit Suisse and db x-trackers, it is now the turn of EasyETF to launch an ETF product based on the S&P 500. In the event, the EasyETF S&P 500 is a transformation of the firm’s ETF based on the S&P 100. EasyETF S&P 500 is available in Euros and US dollars on NYSE Euronext (Paris), Deutsche Börse (Frankfurt) and Borsa Italiana (Milan). It is eligible for French PEA savings plans, and complies with the European UCITS III directive. CharacteristicsEasyETF S&P 500 EURISIN code: FR 0010616300Management firm: BNP Paribas Asset ManagementCurrency: EURAnnual management fees: 0.20%Bloomberg code: SPTR 500 NEasyETF S&P 500 USDISIN code: FR 0010218843Management firm: BNP Paribas Asset ManagementCurrency: USDAnnual management fees: 0.20%Bloomberg code: SPTR 500 N
Since Thursday, the listings on the XTF segment of the Xetra electronic trading platform from Deutsche Börse include three new products. They are French-registered ETF funds: Lyxor ETF EURO STOXX 50 Dividends (with fees of 0.70%), Lyxor ETF Daily ShortDAX x2 (0.60%), and Lyxor ETF Daily Double Short Bund (0.20%). The new additions bring the total number of ETF products listed in Frankfurt to 674.
Franklin Templeton has announced that it has been granted a sales license in Germany and Austria for three new Luxembourg-registered sub-funds. They are the Gold and Precious Metals Fund* (LU0496367417), managed by Steve Land, the Templeton European Corporate Bond Fund* (LU0496369546), managed by David Zahn, and the new Franklin Real Return Fund* (LU0496367250), managed by Tony Coffey and Kent Burns. The Franklin Templeton offices in Frankfurt manage about USD16.5bn in assets (EUR12bn) for German investors.
Lorenzo Carcano, who since 2`003 has been manager of the Metzler European Smaller Companies fund at the German management firm Metzler Asset Management, has been selected to manage an allocation to small and midcaps representing 30% of the multi-management product MSMM European Small Cap Fund from Russell Investments, Das Investment reports.
As of 28 June, the Eurex platform will open trading of futures based on six more commodities indices. The futures are based on sub-indices of the Dow Jones UBS commodity range, covering soft commodities, grains, precious metals, energy, oil, and livestock. Since March 2009, Eurex has offered futures based on the composite Dow Jones UBS index and the three sub-indices for soft commodities, energy and metals.
Vendredi, la Deutsche Bank et Winton Capital Management (13 milliards de dollars d’encours) ont annoncé le lancement du fonds DB Platinum IV dbX Systematic Alpha Index Fund, une version OPCVM III du hedge fund Diversified Program de Winton qui a affiché une performance annualisée de 17,07 % nette de frais depuis son lancement en octobre 1997 et jusqu'à fin mai 2010.Ce fonds réplique la performance du dbX Systematic Alpha Index dont les composantes sont sélectionnées par Winton et qui reflète l’exposition à environ une centaine de produits cotés (futures, forwards et options sur des matières premières, indices d’actions, obligations, taux d’intérêt à court terme et devises). Il s’agit d’une stratégie principalement suiveuse de tendance. La liquidité sera hebdomadaire et les investisseurs pourront souscrire des parts en euros, livres, dollars et yen.
Graham Kitchen, qui gère plusieurs fonds d’actions chez Henderson, a indiqué que plusieurs gérants de la société ont acheté au total 2 % des actions placées par Jupiter, le prix d'émission de 165 pence étant jugé très attrayant, rapporte Investment Week. Dès jeudi, les titres s'échangeaient en à-valoir sur la base de 190 pence. La première cotation doit intervenir ce lundi. Jupiter, dont l'émission a été sursouscrite plus de 2,5 fois, n’a pas enregistré un seul trimestre de remboursements nets sur les dix dernières années.
Six dirigeants de Gartmore, dont le directeur general Jeff Mayor, ont acquis des actions de la société pour un montant total de 557.162 livres, rapporte Financial News. Un nom important manque toutefois à l’appel : il s’agit du gérant vedette et principal actionnaire de la société de gestion, Roger Guy, souligne le site Internet.
Alors que Natixis a lancé depuis deux mois un appel d’offres pour céder ses fonds de capital investissement présents au Brésil, en Inde et en Chine pour un montant d’environ 250 millions d’euros, quatre offres fermes ont été remises auprès de la banque conseil Oddo, lundi dernier. Selon la Tribune qui cite plusieurs sources proches du dossier, le groupe Louis-Dreyfus et Artémis, le holding familial de François Pinault, font partie des candidats. Ces deux sociétés familiales sont en concurrence avec deux autres candidats plus «classiques». Le fonds de fonds Coller et Paul Capital associé à la société d’investissement française Pechel. Ce duo fait figure de favori car il est le seul à s’intéresser à l’ensemble des fonds émergents de Natixis.
Si la conservation de titres, la comptabilité, l’administration et la valorisation des fonds sont des activités largement sous-traitées dans l’industrie de la gestion d’actifs, c’est moins le cas pour le middle-office, rapporte Les Echos. Sa proximité avec le coeur du métier, la gestion, explique en partie la réticence des sociétés de gestion à sous-traiter une activité dont le périmètre peut varier d’un établissement à l’autre.
Après Lyxor, Amundi ETF, HSBC, Crédit Suisse et db x-trackers, c’est au tour d’EasyETF de lancer un ETF avec pour référence le S&P 500. En l’occurrence, EasyETF S&P 500 est une transformation de l’ETF de la gamme calé sur le S&P 100. EasyETF S&P 500 est disponible en euros et US dollars sur NYSE Euronext (Paris), Deutsche Boërse (Francfort) et Borsa Italiana (Milan). Il est éligible au PEA et conforme à la directive européenne UCITSIII. Caractéristiques :EasyETF S&P 500 EURCode ISIN : FR 0010616300Société de gestion : BNP Paribas Asset ManagementDevise : EURFrais de gestion annuels : 0,20%Code Bloomberg : SPTR 500 NEasyETF S&P 500 USDCode ISIN : FR 0010218843Société de gestion : BNP Paribas Asset ManagementDevise : USDFrais de gestion annuels : 0,20%Code Bloomberg : SPTR 500 N