Michael Reed has joined Fidelity International as head of its activities in South Korea, according to Asian Investor. Reed previously served three years as country head for South Korea at Franklin Templeton.
With State Street Wealth Connect, unveiled on Tuesday, State Street Corporation is offering its wealth management clients a tool which will allow them to “focus on management and growth rather than on bank and middle office functions,” says Steve Nazarro, senior vice president of the wealth management service activities at State Street. Currently, the group provides custody and administration for more than 500 clients in this high net worth private client segment. In practice, State Street Wealth Connect allows direct access to State Street through a customizable online platform which is completely integrated into the range of State Street investment services, including global custody, accounting and monitoring of policy at businesses, and also with the document and delivery and messaging system, which will allow wealth managers to communicate directly with their clients through this secure portal.
Franklin Resources announced net income of USD367.4m, or USD1.60 per share diluted, on revenues of USD1,238.9m for the quarter ended September 30, 2009. For the quarter ended June 30, 2009, net income was USD297.7m, or USD1.29 per share diluted, on revenues of USD1,073.6m. For the quarter ended September 30, 2008, net income was USD300.5m, or $1.28 per share diluted, on revenues of USD1,321.5m.Total assets under management by the company’s subsidiaries were USD523.4bn at September 30, 2009, as compared to USD451.2bn at June 30, 2009 and USD507.3bn at September 30, 2008. Net new flows for the quarter ended September 30, 2009 were USD12.2bn, as compared to USD6.0bn for the prior quarter and net redemptions of USD8.6bn for the same quarter a year ago.
Guy de Blonay, the manager of the Henderson New Star Global Financials fund at Henderson New Star, is to join Jupiter, eight years after having left the company, Citywire reports. He will be co-managing the Jupiter Financial Opportunities fund with Phillip Gibbs, but in a first stage will be restricted to an advisory role.Guy de Blonay’s fund at Henderson New Star is now managed by Emily Adderson, who acted up to now as deputy manager.
Private equity firm Blackstone Group LP has begun talks with lenders to cut up to USD5bn from the USD20bn debt load carried by Hilton Worldwide, according to people familiar with the matter, the Wall Street Journal reports.Blackstone is considering contributing USD800m of new equity to buy back debt at a discount. It also is seeking to extend debt maturing in 2013 to 2016, while converting some junior slices of debt into equity. The USD800 million in additional equity would come from funds managed by Blackstone that already have invested in the deal, the biggest equity investment ever made by the firm.Initially, Blackstone funds and co-investors put up USD5.6bn in equity in the deal, while assuming USD20bn in debt.
A criminal case filed earlier this month alleged that an unnamed Advanced Micro Devices Inc. executive shared confidential information about the chip maker with a defendant in the Galleon case. According to a person familiar with the matter, this executive would be Hector Ruiz, chairman and former CEO of the company, The Wall Street Journal reports.
On Tuesday, the British asset management firm Impax Asset Management Group plc announced that it had accepted an invitation to join the Investor Network on Climate Risk (INCR), a network of US institutional investors engaged in addressing risks and dangers related to climate change. The INCR has its headquarters in Boston, and represents about 80 asset management firms with over USD8trn in assets under management, much of it in public and private sector pension funds, as well as foundations.
BNY Mellon has announced the integration of the broker-dealer services of BNY Mellon Capital Markets into those of BNY Mellon Shareowners, as of 26 October. All existing services will continue for all market segments currently covered by the two entities.
The Committee of European securities regulators (CESR) on 27 October announced the launch of a public consultation on the use of a standardized reporting format for financial information. The consultation provides an occasion for the CESR to gather feedback from market actors on the use of XBRL markup language, already used by international and European regulatory bodies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in the United States, the CEBS (Committee of European banking supervisors), and the French Commission Bancaire-Banque de France. The CESR states that the consultation will concentrate on the potential introduction of an IFRS reporting format in the mid- to long term. The consultation will be open until 30 November.
Turquoise, the pan-European equity trading services company, announced that it will extend its services to include six Exchange Traded Commodities (ETCs) to trade via its MTF platform. The series of six new ETCs, tracking the performance of physical gold and silver, as well as gold bullion indices, will be available to Turquoise members from 13 November, 2009.
Citywire reports that the management firm Fidelity has closed its FAST Europe fund to new investments, due to the volume of assets in the fund (USD2.5bn). The decision was taken in order to prevent deposits from new investors from having a negative impact on the fund’s strategy. The fund, managed by Anas Chakra, uses derivative products and leverage to improve performance. In the past three years, FAST Europe has posted gains of 7.2%, compared with losses of 21.1% for the MSCI Europe index.
Six family offices (including Taresta Family Office, BNPP Fortis, and Family Office Auris 4) have joined forces to create the wealth management firm Mazabi Gestión de Patrimonios, which will start out with more than EUR300m in assets, Funds People reports. Mazabi states that it employs 13 management and advisory professionals, all of whom have at least 15 months of experience, and four main offices (Madrid, Barcelona, Bilbao, and Malaga). The president of Mazabi is Vicente Gómez de la Cruz (Taresta), and the CEO is Juan Antonio Guttiérez, (Fortis).
State Street Global Markets has announced that its institutional investor confidence index in October fell to 108.4, from 118.4 in September, with the heaviest decline - 12.8 points, to 101.1 - for the North American regional index. In Europe, the index is down 9.3 points, to 101.8, while the Asian index has risen to 95.3 from 92.9. A level of 100 represents neutral confidence, the point at which institutional investors neither increase nor decrease their allocations to high-risk assets. October is the seventh consecutive month in which the index has remained below the 100 mark overall. Ken Froot, the Harvard professor who developed the index with State Street Associates, says that although quarterly results have been relatively robust thus far, “the number of pleasant surprises in employment figures, retail sales, manufacturing output and commerce were fewer and further between, and this may have had an impact on investors’ appetite” for risk.
The founder of Pimco, Bill gross, estimates that the market rally observed in the past six months has reached its peak, and that the Fed will need to maintain its interest rates for another 18 months. In his most recent column, published on the Pimco website (November 2009), Gross explains that in the post-crisis environment, nearly all assets appear to be overvalued for the long term, which has the consequence that monetary and economic policy chiefs will need to maintain interest rates at artificially low levels, and rely on aid measures to sustain growth. From his point of view, the Fed may wait for up to 18 months before raising interest rates. “My feeling is that the nominal GDP will need to show tangible signs of stabilisation at about 4% for the Fed to decide to take the risk of raising interest rates,” Gross writes. Meanwhile, an investor in US Treasury bonds should not expect miracles: 0.15% on Treasury bonsd, less than 1% on two-year notes, and a meagre 3.4% on 10-year paper. And the entire US bond market, including corporate bonds, is bringing in returns of only about 3.5%. Investors should not expect much more, and risks related to high yield, distressed or equities far outstrip the positive prospects at this point in the conjunctural cycle.
Pension funds in OECD countries lost USD5.4trn last year. They also posted averaage negative performance of 21.4% in nominal terms, and 24.1% in real terms, the OECD reports in its most recent bulletin on pension funds (Pension Markets in Focus, October, Issue 6). However, in the first half of 2009, pension funds, which earned average returns of 3.5%, recuperated more than USD1.5trn. As of 30 June 2009, pension funds only needed to make up 14% in order to catch up with thelr levels as of December 2007. The rebound in the performance of pension funds continued until 30 September this year, thanks to rallying markets, but they will need more time before the sector completely offsets its losses, the OECD estimates. The best-performing pension funds in the OECD countries were in Norway and Turkey, with returns of over 10%. Meanwhile, US pension funds earned average returns of 4% in nominal terms, while Australian funds gained only 1%. Funds in these two countries had the highest exposure to equities, at 46% for the US, and 59% for Australia.
BlackRock estimates that institutional investors will once again take an interest in alternative assets. Some alternative asset classes seem to be very attractively priced at present. New private equity funds will also invest at very attractive valuation levels, at the bottom of the economic cycle, and they won’t need to rely on leverage to generate returns. Distressed businesses may also present opportunities. Pension funds may also turn to alternative investments as a key component of their allocation. According to a BlackRock study, a 25% allocation for an international equities portfolio in a basket of alternative assets would have reduced volatility from18% to 16% per year in the period from January 1990 to December 2008, while also increasing annual returns by 0.6%.
Deutsche Börse announced on Tuesday that it has admitted eleven new Luxembourg-registered bond ETF funds from ComStage (see yesterday’s edition of Newsmanagers) to trading. The products bring the total number of tracker funds listed on the XTF segment of the Xetra electronic platform from Deutsche Börse to 518. Average monthly trading volume for products of this type comes to EUR12bn.
According to a report published on Tuesday by The Pensions Regulator (TPR), on the basis of responses form 97 defined contribution (DC) pension funds, 98% of respondents offer an open market option (OMO), but only 23% of members make use of it. However, 57% of funds need to improve the information they make available to members about the pensions they offer. Most importantly, 30% of funds are in infraction of their disclosure requirements and fail to respect information disclosure regulations in force. However, 6% of the remaining cases have been referred to control teams in order to ensure that “substantial modifications” which are necessary on retirement and process documentation are put into place. The TPR will now send a letter to approximately 4,500 pension funds to explain these findings to them, and to incite trustees to closely examine “pre-retirement” literature which is distributed to members.
In an interview with Asian Investor, Tony Rochte, senior managing director of State Street Global Advisers (SSgA), claims that “there is a lot of talk about actively-managed ETFs, but they have had a slow start. This evolution is due to the fact that investors looking for actively-managed ETFs want to see a track record of one, three, or five years. For investors who really want to pay added commissions, the performance has to be there. In other words, we don’t have a definite opinion yet about actively-managed ETFs, but that doesn’t mean that we’re not interested. We have also submitted applications to launched an actively-managed ETF and a horizon ETF in the United States. Rochte also states that SSgA has no immediate plans to launch inverse or leveraged ETFs.
Asset management firm Renta 4 on Monday announced the launch of the Spanish RMBS Fund, which, as its name indicates, will invest in primarily Spanish Residential Mortgage Backed Securities (RMBS). The limit for foreign issues is set at 30% of the portfolio, Funds People reports. The average maturity for bonds will be 15 years, and the average duration for the fund will range from 5 to 8 years. The fund, which will offer monthly liquidity, will charge 2% management commission and a 20% performance commission, with a minimal subscription of EUR50,000, the legal minimum for products of this type.
In reaction to the acquisition of Barclays Global Investors by BlackRock, Vanguard UK is seeking to accelerate its development in the UK defined-contribution retirement market, the Financial Times reports. Peter Robertson, retail director at Vanguard UK, says several pension institutions have expressed an interest in the management firm’s range of products and services.
Citywire reports that Jupiter has been authorised to launch two investment funds managed by the star manager Philip Gibbs in the next three months. The two funds will give Gibbs – the only manager to have received a Citywire rating since the creation of the firm eight years ago - the necessary flexibility to manage as he prefers. In detail, the Jupiter “Absolute Return” fund, which complies with the UCITS III directive, will provide the manager with the ability to hold liquidity and to invest in instruments which may include derivatives, in order to maintain the necessary flexibility to react rapidly to changing market conditions. The fund is benchmarked against the Libor 3 month, and will be managed in a manner similar to that of Gibbs’ hedge fund, Hyde Park, but with lower volatility and less leverage. The second fund, Jupiter Financials, is also compliant with UCITS III, and will invest in international financial sector equities. Unlike the Jupiter Financial Opportunities fund, it will allow the manager to adopt short positions on shares or indexes. It will be benchmarked against the Footsie Global Financials index.
Insurer AFA Försäkrings, whose assets total about NOK200bn, has announced the recruitment of Johan Held as chief investment officer. For the past 18 months (since May 2008), Held has been the CIO of the pension fund Andra AP-fonden (AP2). Previously, he was CFO for KP Pensions&Försäring, and worked for SEB Investment Management, as well as for the asset management arm of Nordea. He replaces Lars Öhrstedt, who will be retiring in the first half of 2010.
La Tribune précise que l’on saura le 10 novembre si la Cour de cassation pourra bientôt juger l’ancien trader de la Société Générale, Jérôme Kerviel, ou s’il faudra attendre quelques mois supplémentaires.
Guy de Blonay, gérant du Henderson New Star Global Financials fund chez Henderson New Star, va rejoindre Jupiter, huit ans après avoir quitté la société de gestion, indique Citiwire. Il co-gérera le Jupiter Financial Opportunities fund avec Phillip Gibbs, mais n’aura dans un premier temps qu’une fonction de conseil, precise le quotidien. La gestion du fonds de Guy de Blonay chez Henderson New Star sera désormais assurée par Emily Adderson, jusqu’alors gérante assistante du produit.
La société de gestion Entrepreneur Venture, spécialisée dans le non coté, a annoncé le 27 octobre le lancement du FIP Développement Durable; un nouveau fonds d’investissement permettant aux institutionnels comme aux particuliers d’investir dans des PME du secteur des économies vertes.« Ce FIP privilégiera la diversification des secteurs et investira dans les entreprises aussi bien productrices d’énergie photovoltaïque, qu’expertes de l’isolation thermique, professionnelles du traitement de l’eau et des déchets. Il évitera les thématiques qui nous semble trop soumises à un effet de mode, tel que la plupart des dossiers liés aux énergies éoliennes », indique Frédéric Zablocki, directeur général d’Entrepreneur Venture. Ce FIP sera investi dans les régions Provence-Alpes Cöte d’Azur, Rhône Alpes, Bourgogne et Ile-de-France. Au 15 juin dernier, les FIP ISF d’Entrepreneur Venture affichaient un montant cumulé de 90 millions d’euros collectés. Principales caractéristiques du FIP Développement Durable Code Isin : FR0010792853 Durée du fonds : 8 ansDurée fiscale : 5 ansDroits d’entrée maximum : 4,5%Frais de gestion : 3,5%Minima de souscription : 1000 euros
Depuis le début de l’année, le montant des cotisations en assurance vie (103,8 milliards d’euros) a enregistré une progression de 10 % par rapport à la période correspondante de l’année 2008, indiquent les chiffres de la Fédération française des sociétés d’assurance (FFSA). La collecte nette (cotisations-prestations) s'établit à 41,5 milliards d’euros à fin septembre, en hausse de 37 % par rapport à fin septembre 2008. Ceci étant dit, selon les placements composant les contrats, son évolution varie sensiblement. D’un coté la collecte sur les fonds en euros a progressé de 16 %. D’un autre, sur les unités de compte, elle a baissé de 21 %.
Au troisième trimestre 2009, l’Union Financière de France a annoncé une collecte de 191 millions d’euros, supérieure de 8% à celle du troisième trimestre 2008. Cela étant, le rebond provient d’une forte progression de l’activité immobilière (+83%).Simultanément, la collecte sur les produits financiers a baissé de l’ordre de 25 à 30% selon les produits. La collecte a généré 37,5 millions d’euros de commissions de placement sur les neuf premiers mois de 2009, avec une baisse des commissions de placement sur les produits financiers est en ligne avec celle de la collecte.