Guy Monson, managing partner et CIO de Sarasin, a abandonné la gestion des fonds Global Equity Income et International Equity Income, révèle Investment Week. Ils seront gérés désormais par Mark Whitehead, qui les co-gérait déjà, avec Darryl Lucas.
Le groupe suisse Vontobel a confirmé des informations de l’agence finews selon lesquelles la plate-forme dédiée aux produits structurés Veritrade pourrait être ouverte à des nouveaux émetteurs.Société Générale et Morgan Stanley figurent parmi les premiers participants potentiels de cette plate-forme désormais multi-émetteurs. Avec cette nouvelle initiative, Vontobel espère consolider sa position d’acteur de tout premier plan dans le domaine de la distribution de produits structurés.
Analyste financière chez Lombard Odier, Ju Lee rejoint l'équipe haut rendement d’Omar Saeed et Roland Hausheer chez Swisscanto, rapporte Das Investment. Elle sera responsable des fonds Swisscanto Institutional Bond Fund Global High Yield et Swisscanto Bond Invest Global High Yield.
Les actifs sous gestion de la Banque cantonale de Zurich se sont accrus au premier semestre de 3,2 milliards de francs suisses pour s'établir à 180 milliards de francs suisses, selon un communiqué publié le 31 août. Cette évolution est liée à une collecte nette de 0,7 milliard de francs et à un effet marché positif de 2,5 milliards de francs. Le coefficient d’exploitation s’est amélioré à 63,5% contre 64,6% au premier semestre 2011.
Depuis le 30 août, SIX Swiss Exchange a admis à la négociation les deux premiers ETF répliquant des indices de lettres de gage suisses (Pfandbriefe) qui sont lancés par UBS Global Asset Management. Il s’agit de deux fonds de droit helvétique à réplication physique.Les indices sous-jacents sont constitués de titres notés AAA et génèrent des rémunérations supérieures en moyenne de 25 à 55 points de base au rendement des obligations de la Confédération. Le teneur de marché pour ces deux ETF est la Commerzbank.CaractéristiquesDénomination : UBS IS - SBI® Domestic Pfandbrief 1-5 ETF (CHF) AIndice de référence : Swiss Bond Index® Domestic Pfandbrief 1-5Code Isin : CH0184305016TFE : 0,16 %Dénomination : UBS-IS SBI Domestic Pfandbrief 5-10 ETF (CHF) AIndice de référence : Swiss Bond Index® Domestic Pfandbrief 5-10Code Isin : CH0184308952TFE : 0,16 %
BSI, la banque privée suisse de Generali, qui a engagé une révision de son portefeuille d’activités, aurait suscité des marques d’intérêt de la part de deux fonds souverains singapouriens, Temasek Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC), rapporte L’Agefi citant la presse italienne. L’assureur italien espérerait retirer environ deux milliards d’euros pour BSI, un montant jugé optimiste dans le monde bancaire. Selon plusieurs analystes, l’assureur italien aurait besoin de quelque 5,5 milliards d’euros en vue de se conformer aux exigences réglementaires de Solvabilité 2.
Le groupe Pictet a annoncé le 31 août la nomination de Michael Bächle en tant que responsable de la succursale de Pictet à Bâle à compter du 1er septembre 2012. Précédemment responsable de l’antenne de Clariden Leu à Bâle, Michael Bächle succède à Thomas Vonaesch qui a développé les activités de la banque privée à Bâle depuis 2008, et qui restera chez Pictet jusqu'à sa retraite.
L’agence d'évaluation financière Moody’s a annoncé le 31 août qu’elle avait la note à long terme (A3) de la Banque Syz sous surveillance avec implication négative.L’agence explique dans un communiqué que cette décision est notamment liée à l'érosion progressive des actifs sous gestion depuis 2010 et à des résultats médiocres au premier semestre 2012.
Le gestionnaire britannique Ignis Asset Management a fait enregistrer par la CNMV le fonds Ignis Absolute Return Credit, géré par Chris Bowie, rapporte Funds People. Il s’agit du deuxième fonds alternatif introduit en Espagne par Ignis (après l’Absolute Return Government Bond Fund). C’est un fonds d’obligations d’entreprises et de performance absolue qui se veut market neutral et vise une volatilité basse, comprise entre 2 et 6 %. Le portefeuille se compose de 10 à 30 pair trades au travers de CDS très liquides.
Le 20 novembre, Matthew Haimes deviendra le patron de ses services à la clientèle très haut de gamme (ultra high net worth ou UHNW) pour le Royaume-Uni et l’international chez Credit Suisse, selon Wealth Briefing. Il était jusqu'à présent UK head of family office solutions chez JP Morgan Private Bank.Le nouvel arrivant remplace Ian Dembinski, qui a été nommé head of UK domestic clients, et reprend le poste laissé vacant par Paul Sarosy qui est parti en mai pour devenir ensuite head of investment solutions chez Coutts.Matthew Haimes sera subordonné à Blake Shorthouse, head of UNHW, EMEA, et à Eric Pfister, head of market area UK/international.
Matrix Group, société de gestion basée à Londres, va fermer sa gamme de fonds Ucits, lancée en mai 2010 à Dublin, après avoir effectué une revue stratégique de ses activités, rapporte Citywire. Cette décision est liée au fait que la société n’est pas parvenue à réaliser des économies d’échelle nécessaires par rapport à ses concurrents. Les fonds seront fermés le 7 septembre.
Matrix Group, an asset management firm based in London, will be shutting down its range of UCITS funds, launched in Dublin in May 2010, following a strategic review of its activities, Citywire reports. The decision is related to the fact that the firm is not able to realise the necessary economies of scale compared with its rivals. The funds will be closed on 7 September.
The British Financial Services Authority (FSA) in the seventh issue of its newsletter on RDR regulations draws the attention of the finance community to the distinction between product cost and the cost of advising.RDR regulations require the largest firms, such offer both advising on products and products, to introduce “reasonably representative” advising fees for services offered. This, the FSA says, forbids these firms from hiding these advising costs with profits from other areas of their activities.The FSA is concerned that firms will apply too restrictive a vision of what should be included in the cost of advising, excluding, for example, IT costs, marketing budgets or costs related to the development of the activity.The case will remain at the centre of the FSA’s concerns until the end of the year, the FSA adds, adding that firms need to test their new pricing models.
The auditing and consulting firm Ernst & Young has issued a warning to platforms that are planning to cease to accept operations from US taxpayers based in the United Kingdom on the pretext that the reporting required by the FATCA law is too costly, Money Marketing reports. According to Ernst & Young, the FATCA legislation will require platforms to set up new procedures for opening accounts, in order to more easily serve potential US taxpayer customers. In other words, it will be difficult for platforms to restrict itself to complying only with the requirements of this many-tentacled regulation. Dan Hall, a partner at Ernst & Young specialised in advising on financial services, says “platforms have manifestly been under multiple pressures recently, largely due to changes related to RDR regulations,” which come into effect on 1 January 2013. But there is still time to comply with requirements related to to the FATCA law, which also comes into effect in 2013.
Since 30 August, SIX Swiss Exchange has added the first two ETFs replicating Swiss mortgage, or covered, bonds (Pfandbriefe) to trading. The funds are launched by UBS Global Asset Management. They are both Swiss-registered, physical replication funds.The underlying indices are constructed out of AAA-rated securities, which generate average returns 25 to 55 basis points higher than the returns for Swiss federal bonds.The market maker for the two ETFs is Commerzbank.CharacteristicsName: UBS IS - SBI® Domestic Pfandbrief 1-5 ETF (CHF) ABenchmark index: Swiss Bond Index® Domestic Pfandbrief 1-5ISIN code: CH0184305016TER: 0.16%Name: UBS-IS SBI Domestic Pfandbrief 5-10 ETF (CHF) ABenchmark index: Swiss Bond Index® Domestic Pfandbrief 5-10ISIN code: CH0184308952TER: 0.16%
In the fiscal year ending on 30 June 2012, the Texas-based asset management firm US Global Investors, a specialist in commodities and emerging markets, posted net profits of USD1.53m, compared with USD7.83m in 2010-2011, with a loss of USD0.11m in April-June, compared with a net profit of USD0.49m the previous quarter, and USD1.54m in April-June 2011.Revenue for 2011-2012 fell to USD23.85m, compared with USD41.93m.Assets at the end of the fiscal year totalled USD1.62bn, compared with USD2.60bn one year previously. Average AUM over the past fiscal year totalled USD2.06bn, compared with USD2.82bn in 2010-2011.Frank Holmes, CEO, says that US Global Investors was not the only asset management firm to suffer from outflows from its money market and equity funds, as statistics from the Investment Company Institute (ICI) show that equity funds underwent net redemptions of USD171bn in the twelve months to the end of June. However, despite the scale of the redemptions, US Global Investors has strengthened its sales and marketing strategy, added to its institutional sales team, and beefed up its IT systems. “At the same time, the firm has lowered its overhead,” the manager says.
Lyxor Asset Management has announced the appointment of Michael Bernstein to the position of head of development for North America. His primary responsibility will be to strengthen and develop relationships with institutional investors, consultants, distribution partners and other asset managers.Bernstein joined Lyxor in 2009 as head of Pension Fund and US Consultant clients.His appointment comes as part of an expansion of the firm on the North American market, “a key area of development for Lyxor,” a statement says. The “Business Development” team working under Bernstein will also be enlarged in due course.
Charles Firmin-Didot, founder and manager of the Talents range of funds, is leaving Axa Investment Managers to “pursue other opportunities,” a spokesperson for the French asset management firm has confirmed to Newsmanagers, following reports in the British press. Firmin-Didot developed the Talents strategy, focused on entrepreneurs who hold a stake in their own firms. This strategy is now managed by Mark Beveridge, who has been supervising Firmin Didot over the past three years. He will rely on two analysts, one portfolio engineer, and the resources of Axa Framlington, a statement from the firm says. The departure of Firmin-Didot was revealed as it was announced that the UK domiciled OEIC Axa Framlington Talents Fund will be closed. But Axa IM states that the two events are unrelated. The fund is being closed due to its limited size GBP5.5m as of 24 August 20120, the asset management firm explains. Its liquidation will be effective from 29 October. AXA IM’s two other funds in the Talents strategy, the Luxembourg domiciled AXA WF Framlington Talents Global and AXA WF Framlington Emerging Markets Talents funds, will remain open.
China Investment Corp has sold most of its stake in BlackRock, as part of a strategy to reduce its exposure to financial institutions, the Financial Times reports. The Chinese sovereign fund bought the stake of nearly 3% of BlackRock, representing about USD1bn, when the firm acquired Barclays Global Investors in 2009. In the past few months, it has been gradually selling off these shares, for a profit, sources familiar with the matter say.
The pension fund for Californian teachers CalSTRS invested USD1.2bn in real estate in second quarter, with 78.5% of its engagements invested in core strategies, CalSTRS announced in its quarterly activity report.
Investors have this year generally given the benefit of the doubt to France, treating it as a “core” country of the euro zone economy, despite its high levels of debt. However, some hedge funds are questioning this way of seeing things, and are incstead tending to rank France as a peripheral European country, the news agency Reuters reports. Many macro hedge funds are now claiming that very low returns on French government bonds are not sustainable for a country on the verge of recession. Hedge funds are also sceptical of the fiscal policy of France’s new president Hollande. “The market appears to consider France a safe place, but we estimate that in reality, French returns should converge more towards Italian and Spanish returns and not towards German returns,” says Pedro de Noronha, managing partner at Noster Capital.
The Natixis Souverains Euro R fund (EUR813m) from Natixis Global Asset Management has been reigistered by the CNMV and will now be made available for sale in Spain, Funds People reports.The product with 51 holdings, managed by Olivier de Larouzière, invests in public debt from euro zone countries. It aims to outperform the JPMorgan EMU Global index over a three-year period, through active management of duration, dynamic allocation to assets over the rate curve, and a balance between different countries in the euro zone.
The British asset management firm Ignis Asset Management has registered the Ignis Absolute Return Credit fund, managed by Chris Bowie, with the CNMV, Funds People reports. It is the second hedge fund launched in Spain by Ignis (following the Absolute Return Government Bond Fund). It is a corporate bond and absolute return fund which aims to be market neutral with low volatility, totalling between 2% and 6%. The portfolio is composed of 10 to 30 pair trades via highly liquid CDS.
Laffitte Capital Management is planning to launch an arbitrage fund based on indices. The fund, entitled Laffitte Index Arbitrage, will be a UCITS-compliant European product, and will aim to detect arbitrage opportunities on the global stock markets on the basis of indices. It will have complementary drivers of performance: arbitrage of index re-balancing, arbitrage on dividends, and also securities trading arbitrage.“With this fund, we return to one of our first loves. From 1990 to 2006, we used index-based arbitrage for proprietary trading at Crédit Mutuel-CIC,” explains Eric Robbe, co-founder and chairman of Laffittee CM. “But it had previously been difficult to realise this activity within a regulated and liquid fund, since many products were traded over the counter. In addition, there was disparate fiscal treatment of dividends throughout Europe. These obstacles have been removed today. As many banks are withdrawing from this profession, we also have expertise on the market,” he continues. Laffitte has recruited Gregory Meyappen for the fund; he had previously directed operations of this type for proprietary trading at Crédit Agricole. He will co-manage the fund with two colleagues from Laffitte CM. The fund has a capacity of up to EUR1bn. With daily liquidity, it will be on sale to clients of all types, and will have an institutional and a retail share class to this end. It will also be listed on life insurance platforms. With the Laffitte Index Arbitrage, the firm diversifies its range, which now consists of two merger and acquisition arbitrage funds. This may help the firm to reach its objective of EUR500bn. Five years after its launch, the firm currently has slightly under EUR300bn in assets under management, and 10 employees.
Michael Eidelman, court-appointed trustee for the Peregrine Financial Group, is planning to auction off the estate of Russell Wasendorf Senior, CEO of the firm, at auction, the Wall Street Journal reports.Peregrine, which entered bankruptcy protection on 10 July, left a hole in its finances estimated at USD215mThe trustee has already recuperated USD1m from a life insurance policy. He will now be selling off Wasendorf’s property at internet auction, including a wine cellar containing thousands of bottles at Opus One, an Italian restaurant in Cedar Falls, a Patek Philippe watch, jewelry, and several SUVs.It now remains to be determined whether the Peregrine CEO also had accounts abroad, in addition to his stake in a Romanian business.
BSI, the Swiss private bank belonging to the Generali group, is reported to have received expressions of interest from two Singapore sovereign funds, Temasek and Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC), Agefi reports, citing the Italian press.The Italian insurer had been hoping to make about USD2bn for BSI, which was considered optimistic in the banking world. According to several analysts, the Italian insurer needs about EUR5.5bn to comply with Solvency 2 regulations.
Guy Monson, managing partner and CIO of Sarasin, has withdrawn from the management of the Global Equity Income and International Equity Income funds, Investment Week reveals. The funds will now be managed by Mark Whitehead, who was already their co-manager, with Darryl Lucas.
The CEO of UBS Global Asset Management, John Fraser, has convinced Kai Sotorp, former head for Asia-Pacific, to return to work for the firm, and to return to his former position, Financial News reports. Sotorp had been head for Asia-Pacific at UBS GAM Between 2002 and 2004 He left the group in 2010.
The New York state prosecutor has named more than a dozen funds which are accused of defrauding the tax authorities by modifying the type of management commissions paid by investors, the New York Times reports, relayed by Les Echos. The practice involves exonerating investors of the management commission (generally 1% to 2% of the total invested) in exchange for a reinvestment in funds from the asset management firm on the firm’s behalf. As investments, these amounts are then taxed as financial products, at rates of about 15%, though the tax on ordinary revenues would be about 35%. In addition to Bain Capital, TPG, KKR, Sun Capiatl, Apollo and Silver Lake are said to have saved hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes. The practice is common in the sector, but experts are divided over its legality.
More than one quarter of ETFs and certificates listed in the United States which have been open for over six months have not attracted enough in assets to be economically viable, according to statistics compiled by the Financial Times. That represents an increase from 14.5% at the end of 2010, according to Invest with an Edge. The 377 products in question had no more than USD25m in assets in the past two months, or trading averaged under 100,000 shares per day. The average fund generates only USD35,000 per year in revenue.