JP Morgan AM is planning to double its market share in mutual funds worldwide, particularly in Asia, Asian Investor reports. This is a challenge, the website says, insofar as Asian households in emerging markets invest only 23% of their assets in bonds or equities, compared with 45% in developed Asian countries, and 67% in the United States. Assets in Asian funds of JP Morgan currently total slightly over USD55bn.
More than 80% of private equity investors who make merger/acquisition operations have reduced the price of a target or called off the deal due to poor appreciation of ESG criteria, according to a survey by the international United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (UN PRI) network. Three quarters of private equity firms surveyed say that poor performance in the area of ESG had prevented a deal from going through.
Julien Moutier is joining Groupama Asset Management as a manager/analyst. He joins the directional multi-management teams of the investment solutions department, and will report to Henri Chabadel. Since 2007, Moutier had been a senior multi-manager at FundQuest (an affiliate of BNP IP), with a particular focus on fixed income and absolute return strategies. The firm recently reorganized, abandoning fund management to become a consulting structure. Moutier is a graduate of IESEG. He has also been a professor at SFAF(Société Française des Analystes Financiers) since 2005.
Northern Trust has announced that it has been selected by Bridgewater Associates to provide middle- and back-office services for USD140bn in assets in its hedge funds (USD75bn for pure alpha strategies,a nd USD65bn for all-weather funds). The services include various administrative processes, transaction processing, real-time reporting, cah management, accounting and collateral management.The contract will allow Northern Trust (USD4.8trn in assets under custody and USD749.7bn in assets under management as of 30 September) to create 100 jobs in Chicago and Stamford, Connecticut.
ERAFP, the additional retirement establishment for French public sector employees, with EUR14bn in assets, is joining the Initiative for Transparency in the Mining Industries and the Institutional Investor Group on Climate Change Paris, the investment firm announced on 10 January 2013. The Initiative for Transparency in Mining Industries (ITIE), founded in 2002, seeks to develop an efficient system of information on payments to governments of countries rich in natural resources by mining, oil and gas sector businesses. The International Investor Group on Climate Change (IIGCC) brings together institutional investors over the issue of climate change. The joint initiative intends to promote a low-carbon economy, through sharing of experiences on investment practices, and supporting international public policies to this end. ERAFP is already a signatory to the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI).
Ron Redell, chairman of DoubleLine Funds Trust and executive Vice president of DoubleLine Capital, has told Mutual Fund Wire that the firm founded by Jeff Gundlach is planning to make a number of recruitments to confront strong growth of its activities. DoubleLine is for instance seeking five analysts to assist the two equity portfolio managers Brendt Stallings and Husam Nazer, who have recently been recruited (see Newsmanagers of 3 January).The asset management firm is also planning recruitments for client service, including wholesale, and for administrative positions (legal, compliance, accounting and operations).
Cinco Días reports that Banco Popular is selling EUR264m in debt from the Alteco and Mag Import companies from Joaquín Rivero and Bautista Soler to Blackstone private equity funds. The debt is guaranteed by shares of the French RE firm Gecina.
Since the closure of its Spanish office, Domingo Torres-Fernández, head of institutional commercial relationships with European clients, has become head of distribution for Spain for products from the French asset management firm Lazard Frères Gestion (EUR10.8bn), and is based in Paris, Funds People reports.
The Chicago-based asset management firm Citadel has announced annual returns of about 25% for its two hedge funds, Wellington and Kensington, in a letter to investors, the Financial Times reports. Assets under management at the firm increased to USD14bn, from USD11bn in 2011.
Simon Frank, who had been a portfolio manager in the multi-asset class team at DWS (Deutsche Bank) has joined the Frankfurt-based multi-family office Focam as a specialist in allocation, fund selection and stock-picking, Das Investment reports.At his previous employer, where he managed among others the Luxembourg fund DWS BestSelectBranchen (LU0107864448), Frank focused on equities, convertible bonds and alternative investments in the area of fund selection and of funds of funds management.
According to the German BVI association of asset management firms, net subscriptions in January-November of EUR17.713bn for all reporting open-ended security funds, with the Allianz group alone posting net inflows in this area fo EUR24.3409bn, of which EUR19.5209bn went to Pimco.The other major firm to show inflows is Union Investment (co-operative banks), which attracted a net EUR2.7562bn in the period under review.However, Deka (savings banks) has seen outflows of EUR4.2967bn, and Deutsche Bank as a whole has seen net outflows of EUR3.383bn.Only ETFlab (Deka group) has done well in the ETF segment, with net subscriptions of EUR530m in January-November. However, BlackRock has seen net outflows from iShares of EUR1.4652bn, just slightly more than EUR1.3889trn in outflows from db x-trackers (Deutsche Bank). ComStage (Commerzbank) has posted net redemptions of EUR1.0203bn in the first eleven months of the year.
As of the end of November, asset management firms in Germany had an all-time record total of EUR2.00999trn in assets under management, compared with 1.98969trn one month earlier, and EUR1.75574trn one year previously, statistics from the professional association BVI reveal.In the first eleven months of the year, the sector posted net inflows of EUR77.82bn, compared with EUR24.81bn in January-November 2011. In the month of November alone, net inflows totalled EUR10.8bn, with EUR5.75bn for open-ended funds, nd EUR5.67bn for institutional funds (Spezialfonds), but a net outflow of EUR622.6m from mandates outside funds.The BVI stresses that open-ended funds have posted their strongest net subscriptions since January 2009.
Sönke J. Siemßen, who joined Sal. Oppenheim on 1 April 2012 as head of management for fixed income portfolios (see Newsmanagers of 7 May 2012), on 2 January 2013 became «head of investment» at Nomura Asset Management Deutschland KAG in Frankfurt. Newsmanagers understands Siemßen replaces Hanno Kühn, who was MD and «CIO».
The British asset management firm Schroders has announced the launch of three funds in Germany and Austria specialised in emerging market debt. The funds were launched in France in October last year (see Newsmanagers of 3 October 2012). They are the Schroder Emerging Market Sovereign Bond, which invests in government bonds, Schroder Emerging Market Corporate Bond, which is focused on corporate bonds, and the Schroder Emerging Market Bond. The latter fund has a combination of JPM indices as its benchmark, reflecting the hybrid character of the fund.
Investment fund assets worldwide increased by 2.5 percent to EUR 21.95 trillion in the third quarter of 2012, according to statistics from the European fund and asset management association (EFAMA). In U.S. dollar terms, worldwide investment fund assets increased 5.3 percent during the quarter to USD 28.38 trillion. This difference reflects the depreciation of the US dollar vis-à-vis the euro during the quarter. Total worldwide net inflows into investment funds amounted to EUR 167 billion during the third quarter, up from EUR 99 billion in the previous quarter. This increase was achieved thanks to stronger net inflows into balanced and bond funds. Long-term funds (all funds excluding money market funds) registered increased net inflows during the quarter of EUR 175 billion, up from EUR 141 billion in the second quarter. Bond funds continued to enjoy strong net inflows (EUR 146 billion), up from EUR 121 billion in the second quarter. Balanced/mixed funds registered a large increase in net sales to EUR 38 billion, compared to EUR 2 billion in the previous quarter. Equity funds however recorded the fifth consecutive quarter of net outflows (EUR 43 billion, up from EUR 14 billion in the previous quarter). Money market funds registered net outflows of EUR 9 billion, down compared to the second quarter (EUR 42 billion). The United States registered net inflows of EUR 29 billion during the quarter, marking a turnaround compared to the second quarter when net outflows amounted to EUR 53 billion. On the other hand, Europe registered net outflows of EUR 31 billion, up from EUR 1 billion in the previous quarter. At the end of the third quarter, assets of equity funds represented 37 percent and bond funds represented 24 percent of all investment fund assets worldwide. The asset share of money market funds was 16 percent and the asset share of balanced/mixed funds was 11 percent.
A group of copper users may appeal a decision by the Securities and Exchange Commission to approve the first investment product in the United States to invest in copper, the Financial Times reports. The move would delay the launch of the ETF by JPMorgan. Copper users claim that the SEC had insufficient evidence to conclude that the launch of the product would not affect supplies of the metal.
The Herbalife company, which has been accused by William Ackman of Pershing Square of being a giant pyramid scheme, has received the powerful support of another activist funds with USD10bn in assets, Third Point by Dan Loeb, Les Echos reports. In a letter to investors dated 9 January, which Les Echos has obtained, Loeb gives a 3-page justificatino for his investment in 8.2% of capital in the business, purchased when the stock price fell 40% in four days in late December. Loeb finds the presentation by his colleague “long” but “lacking anything new,” and claims that it provided “no proof that the group has crossed a line which would lead regulators to close down the firm.” Herbalife should thus be able to respond to its detractor and to convince Wall Street. Third Point claims that shares in the firm are worth USD55 to USD68 each, compared with slightly over USD40 at the start of trading yesterday.
The Libor interest rate manipulation scandal has led to more lawsuits, including actions against the banks Barclays and UBS by eight Californian cities, and other public institutions have also filed suit, according to reports by the news agency Bloomberg published on 9 January. There is also a class action lawsuit by owners of real estate properties in New York against 12 banks, including UBS. The agency has counted 30 other lawsuits in the United States filed by homeowners and others, who say they have been disadvantaged by the manipulation. UBS in late December pleaded guilty and must pay a fine of CHF1.4bn to various financial regulatory authorities. Barclays got off with a fine of USD450m.
The US asset management firm ProShares (USD21bn in 139 ETF funds, mostly inverse or leveraged ETFs) has filed a license application to the SEC for an infrastructure ETF, the ProShares Global Direct Infrastructure ETF, which would replicate the NMX 30 Infrastructure Global Index from the Zurich-basedd firm LPX GmbH, which covers the 30 largest publicly-traded companies in the sector worldwide, Index Universe reports.So far, ProShares has not announced the acronym or TER for the product.
OFI InfraVia on 10 January announced that InfraVia, its first infrastructure fund, has finalised its acquisition of a 55% stake in the capital of the ADTiM company, which had been owned by ETDE, Axione and Eiffage. The remaining 45% are controlled by the Caisse des dépôts (30%) and eTde/axione (15%). The Crédit Agricole group also financed the acquisition via a line of senior debt. ADTiM is the concessionary firm which has held a contract since 2008 to complete, operate and develop a high/very high broadband telecommunications network for the Drôme and Ardèche provinces under a contract from the public utilities. Axione, an affiliate of Bouygues Construction, retains responsibility for the operation of network developments.
The Luxembourg-based firm LRI Invest (EUR8bn in assets under management or administration in 230 funds) has announced that Dirk von Dreumel, who since 2012 had been head of the German market in Frankfurt (see Newsmanagers of 24 January 2012), has been appointed regional CEO for distribution in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. His mission will be do develop the launch and management of funds for third parties on these three German-speaking markets, to serve banks, wealth managers and retirement planning institutions.
Alors que la Commission doit publier des propositions législatives sur les indices avant l’été, les autorités européennes des marchés (ESMA) et des banques (EBA) veulent tirer rapidement les leçons du scandale de manipulation des taux interbancaires. Les deux autorités ont publié des recommandations de changement pour l’organisation qui gère l’Euribor: l’Euribor-EBF. Elles lui demandent de renforcer son indépendance et les contrôles vis-à-vis des banques contributrices à l’Euribor. De son côté, l’EBA demande à ces banques d’appliquer des contrôles et des règles de prévention des conflits d’intérêt. Enfin, l’EBA et l’ESMA publient une consultation plus générale sur l’élaboration des indices de marché.
Le Trésor italien a adjugé vendredi pour 3,5 milliards d’euros d’obligations à trois ans à un rendement de 1,85%, le plus bas pour cette maturité depuis mars 2010. Il y a un mois, le Trésor avait dû consentir un rendement de 2,5% pour du papier à trois ans. Même si le rendement italien baisse, il reste attractif pour des acheteurs en comparaison au rendement à peine supérieur à zéro qu’offrent les obligations allemandes à trois ans. Rome a également placé 1,5 milliard d’euros de deux lignes d’obligations à taux variables à cinq ans (CCTeu).
Le déficit des paiements courants de la France est resté stable à 2,9 milliards d’euros en novembre, selon la Banque de France. En novembre, le déficit des échanges de biens a baissé légèrement à 5 milliards après 5,1 milliards le mois précédent. L’excédent des échanges de services a lui aussi reculé légèrement à 2,8 milliards après 2,9 milliards en octobre. Le compte financier montre des entrées nettes d’investissements directs de 1,1 milliard d’euros après des sorties de 5,1 milliards en octobre.
En reprenant les activités d’ETF de Credit Suisse, la filiale de la société d’investissement BlackRock achète l'équivalent de 5% de parts de marché supplémentaire en Europe, où elle contrôle déjà 38% des actifs du secteur des fonds indiciels cotés. Elle renforce notamment sa présence en Suisse.
Certains stratégistes n’attendent plus d’assouplissement monétaire dès ce trimestre après le statu quo décidé à l’unanimité hier par le conseil des gouverneurs.