The European Commission proposed on March 7 to set up a European common regulatory framework for the institutions responsible for securities settlement, called Central Securities Depositories (CSDs). The proposal will bring more safety and efficiency to securities settlement in Europe. It also seeks to shorten the time it takes for securities settlement and to minimise settlement fails. The proposal now passes to the European Parliament and the Council (Member States) for negotiation and adoption.
Among the six funds registered on 2 March by the CNMV was the Ahorro Corporación Garantizado Selección, a product guaranteed by Banco Mare Nostrum (BMN), whose complementary returns may vary from 0% at the worst to 5.09% at best at maturity (7 May 2015), depending on the evolution of the share prices of Telefónica, ENI, France Telecom, Inditex and TotalFina.CharacteristicsName: Ahorro Corporación Garantizado Selección, FIISIN code: ES0107438006Front-end fee: 5%Management fee: about 1.08%Withdrawal penalty: 5%
The US asset management firm Index IQ on 6 February submitted a form S-1 to the SEC to apply for a license to launch the first ETF investing in physical diamonds (which will be stored in Anvers), the IQ Physical Diamond Trust. The underlying assets will be industry-standard, 1-carater diamonds and diamonds parcels in various sub-categories. Index IQ is planning to use unly diamonds certified by the Geological Institute of America (GIA) after 1 January 2006.
Lazard Frères Gestion on 7 March announced that its SRI equities Sicav fund, Objectif Ethique Socialement Responsable, is changing its legal name, to become Objectif Investissement Responsable (ISIN codes: C shares: FR0000003998; D shares: FR0010990606).Objectif Investissement Responsable invests in euro zone large caps and adheres strictly to extra-financial criteria to construct a concentrated portfolio of 40 to 50 positions.“Objectif Investissement Responsable has a 10-year track record covering several phases of the economic cycle, from the Internet bubble to the recent crisis, including periods of market growth. Over this period, our management has outperformed the Eurostoxx index by 6%, with good regularity and low volatility. We select primarily profitable businesses, so as not to sacrifice economic performance,” says Axel Laroza, manager of the Sicav fund since its creation.
The US firm Oaktree Capital Management has raised a EUR3bn fund which will focus on European distressed businesses, the news agency Bloomberg reports. The vehicle, the European Principal Fund III, has raised 20% more than its initial objective of EUR2.5bn. According to Henessee Group, investment funds investing in distressed assets worldwide earned returns of 3.2% in January, compared with 2.1% one year earlier.
Mirae Asset Global Investments, the US affiliate of the Korean asset management firm, is now offering US investors its Global Dynamic Bond Fund. The product is the first bond fund from the firm to be offered in the United States. Mirae manages over USD50bn worldwide.
The alternative management firm The Gargoyle Group, specialised in equity options strategies, has launched a market neutral fund with a continuous hedging mechanism based on index options, FINalternatives reports. The fund uses a number of proprietary elements for the vehicle, which have contributed to the success of the flagship fund from Gargoyle, the Gargoyle Hedged Value Fund. The fund seeks to earn alpha from stock-picking and the addition of premiums from the sale of overvalued call options.
A few months after his employer, FrontPoint Partners, closed down its boutique, Stphan Czech is seeking to raise USD1.5bn for a new hedge fund, the Wall Street Journal reports. The new firm will be known as Czech Asset Management, and will specialise in lending to mid-sized businesses (generally with USD20m to USD100m).
Last month, ETPs worldwide attracted a net total of USD18.4bn, compared with USD34.1bn in January, and USD10.9bn in the corresponding month of last year, the BlackRock Institute reports.Assets as of 29 February, for their part, totalled USD1.720trn, compared with USD1.651trn one month previously. Since the beginning of the year, assets under management increased by USD195.8bn, or 12.8%. For ETFs alone, assets totalled USD1.5245trn, compared with USD1.4604trn as of the end of January, in 3,145 products, compared with 3,063.The general slowdown in inflows has affected nine out of the ten largest players in February. ProShares has seen net subscriptions of USD0.4bn, compared with net outflows of USD0.7bn the previous month.Vanguard takes the top spot, with net inflows of USD5.7bn, compared with USD6.9bn in January, putting it ahead of iShares (BlackRock) with USD4.8bn, compared with USD11bn, and PowerShares/Deutsche Bank, with USD1.5bn compared with USD3.8bn. Net subscriptions to db x-trackers (Deutsche Bank) fell to USD0.1bn, from USD1.1bn.For their part, State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) and Lyxor Asset Management (Société Générale) saw net outflows of USD0.2bn and USD0.4bn, respectively, in February, compared with net inflows of USD5.1bn and USD0.5bn the previous month.
Asset management firms are increasingly seeking opportunities in niche activities, which means that in 2012, merger and acquisition operations may increase in the alternative management sector, the research agency Cerulli Associates predicts.Despite an encouraging year, activities in the asset management sector have remained moderate in 2011, due to a volatile and uncertain environment. The total value of all transactions last year represented USD17.3bn, down about 5% compared with the previous year.M&A deals in the alternative management sector may rise again this year for several reasons. First of all, major banks are divesting, in order to trim back their balance sheets to comply with new prudential regulations. Secondly, there has been an increase in interest in acquisitions in alternative management due to an increase in allocations to this asset class, largely from institutional investors.Another reason to bet on alternative management is that possibilities for distribution have been multiplying in Europe an Asia via UCITS vehicles. Lastly, ETF providers, whose popularity is set to increase, may also become attractive targets. So far, few transactions have been completed despite the interest expressed by some parties for independent firms which don’t have the means to develop their activities themselves.
Loomis Sayles, an affiliate of Natixis Global Asset Management which actively sells six UCITS funds, on 7 March opened its office in London, under the name Loomis Sayles Investments. The new location will be led by Christine Kenny and Jeffrey Seaver as managing directors and co-heads. Loomis Sayles manages about USD20bn in assets for institutional investors in Europe and the Middle East/North Africa (MENA) region.Kenny, who had most recently been head of investment grade trading, becomes chief compliance officer and senior fixed income strategist. She will be in charge of the development and management of relations with British and European sell-side clients.Jeff Seaver, a member of the institutional sales team in the United States, for his part, will be in charge of the development and management of relationships with institutional clients in the United Kingdom, continental Europe and the MENA region.Two bond analysts, Chris Keller and Heather Kearney, have been transferred to London, where the team will have seven full-time members, including a head of relations with the main consultants, who will be recruited locally.Loomis Sayles has also opened an office in Singapore, under the direction of Paul Ong, who had been lead portfolio manager, external fund management at the Monetary Authority of Singapore. He joined the firm in October 2011. Loomis Sayles manages about USD20bn for clients based in Asia.
Georges Gagnebin has become the new chairman of the board of directors at the independent Banque Pâris Bertrand Sturdza (PBS), according to an announcement appearing in Le Temps. The former CEO of UBS Wealth Management from 2000 to 2004, appointed to the position on 6 March, is returning to service four years after leaving a position as vice chairman of the board of directors of Julius Baer, which he had held in the meanwhile.
Although German investors have a reputation for being sensitive to environmental and social issues, savings investors pay virtually no attention to these aspects when they make their investment decisions. According to a recent study by Faktenkontor, only 4% of Germans choose their financial products on the basis of ethical criteria (ecological, social, governance, etc). Security remains the dominant criterion, with 49% of respondents prefering less volatile products. Performance tops the list of concerns for 21% of German investors.
The Financial Times reports that, according to sources familiar with the matter, as part of an overhaul to the top management at Deutsche Bank announced on Wednesday, the investment banker Michele Faissola will become the head of a new unit dedicated to asset and wealth management. [This profession already exists within the group, but as part of a larger unit known as PCAM, for private client & asset management -ed].
Since 1 March, the external distribution team at Pioneer Investments Germany has taken on two newly-appointed sales directors. They are Ronny Alsleben (former portfolio manager at Top Vermögen) and Reinhold Dirschl (formerly of MEAG Munich Ergo KAG).Alsleben will focus on wealth management clients, some banks and family offices, while Dirschl will focus on savings and co-operative banks.
Assets under management at the private bank of the DZ group, DZ Privatbank, as of the end of 2011 totalled EUR12.7bn, up EUR2.2bn year on year.In addition to an increase in assets related to the merger with WGZ Bank (EUR0.7bn) and the acquisition of a significant stake in UniCredit Luxembourg (EUR2.1bn), net inflows in Germany have totalled over EUR1bn. This has largely offset the impact of negative market effects.
On 20 March, Pictet Asset Management (PAM) will officially launch its Luxembourg-registered Pictet-Global Flexible Allocation fund, which is the first transposition to the world of open-ended UCITS funds of its asset allocation expertise, which has been operating internally or on behalf of Swiss pension funds since 1967, and which already has assets of EUR6.2bn.The fund, which was registered in France on 17 February, reflects a completely discretionary management defined by a committee on the last Wednesday of each month, based on the opinions of 23 investment professionals in the PAM Strategy Unit, with flexibility of about one quarter for tactical overlay. The management team, led by Olivier Guinguené, CIO for asset allocation and quantitative management, and including Eric Rosset, head of the balanced management team and manager of the pension fund for Pictet employees, and Steve Donzé, macroeconomist, may invest without constraint in all asst classes allowed under the UCITS directive, largely via indices, but also via derivative instruments, and as a last resort, live shares (when there are no appropriate liquid instruments). In order to avoid being classified as a fund of funds, the Flexible Allocation fund will not invest in other funds or ETFs for more than 10% of its assets.In theory, the fund is managed with an absolute return objective of at least 10% returns if the stock markets are rising by more than 20%, with a minimum of % in normal markets, with protection for assets if markets fall by a proportion of less than 10%. The anticipated average volatility is 8%.CharacteristicsName: Pictet-Global Flexible AllocationISIN codes:LU0726358681 (I shares)LU0726358764 (P shares)LU0726358921 (Pdy shares)LU0726359069 (R shares)LU0726360075 (HI USD shares)LU0726360158 (HP USD shares)Management fees:0.45% (I and HI USD shares)0.90% (P, Pdy and HP USD shares)1.80% (R shares)Estimated TER:0.75% (I shares)0.80% (HI USD shares)1.20% (P and Pdy shares)1.25% (HP USD shares)2.10% (R shares)Performance commission: 10% with high watermarkHurdle rate: Citigroup 3 month in euros
Kathleen C. Joaquin, director of operations and distribution, has been promoted to chief industry operations officer at the Investment Company Institute (ICI), replacing Donald Boteler, who retired at the beginning of March.In her new role, Joaquin will be the director of operational personnel at the ICI, with responsibility for numerous tasks related to transfer agencies, shareholder services, clearing and settlement, custody, fund accounting, reporting, and technological questions. Joaquin will report directly to Paul Schott Stevena, chairman and CEO of the ICI.
BNP Paribas on March, 8th announced it will sell 28.7% or 54.43m shares of Klépierre to Simon Property Group for EUR28 per share.This deal is part of BNP Paribas’ adaptation plan to increase its common equity Tier 1 ratio by 100bp to reach 9% on a fully-loaded Basel 3 basis by 1 January 2013. The disposal of 28.7% of Klépierre’s share capital will generate a capital gain of approximately EUR1.5bn for the group and will contribute 32bp to this target.BNP Paribas will retain 22.2% of Klépierre’s share capital. and plans to remain a «significant shareholder» in the company. Therefore, BNP Paribas has committed to keeping this entire stake for at least one year.
Societe Generale has appointed Jean-François Mazaud as head of Societe Generale Private Banking. He replaces Daniel Truchi, «who has decided to pursue new opportunities in the financial sector outside Societe Generale group», according to a press release. Jean-François Mazaud joins the executive committee of the Private Banking, Asset Management & Securities Services division and reports to Jacques Ripoll, Head of the division. He also becomes a member of the General Management Committee of Societe Generale group. Meanwhile, Patrick Folléa has been appointed deputy head of Societe Generale Private Banking. He retains his existing functions as CEO of Societe Generale Private Banking France and supervisor of the private bank’s activities in Belgium. Yves Thieffry, currently deputy head of Societe Generale Private Banking, will be taking up another position within the private bank. In the meantime, he and Patrick Folléa will work closely together during the hand-over period. These appointments will take effect on 10 March 2012. Jean-Francois Mazaud became deputy head of Global Finance for Societe Generale Corporate & Investment Banking in 2008 and a member of Societe Generale Corporate & Investment Banking’s executive committee in 2009. Yves Thieffry has been Deputy CEO of Societe Generale Private Banking since 2007. In 2011, he became a member of the private bank’s executive committee, with responsibility for supervising Luxembourg, Switzerland, Monaco and the Middle East.
Lyxor has listed 3 more ETF funds based on AAA-rated euro zone government bonds on the Italian stock exchange, FonciOnline reports. The range thus grows to 4 ETF funds, each of them specialised in different maturities (1-3 years, 5-7 years and all maturities). Government bonds to which the ETFs are exposed are issued by Germany, France, the Netherlands, Austria and Finland.
Skandia Investment Group (SIG) has announced the appointment of a new sub-advisor for its USD363m USD Skandia Greater China Equity Fund, with the fund’s management changing from First State Investments to MIR Investment Management as of March 5 2012. James Millard, chief investment officer for Skandia Investment Group said: “First State has been an excellent investment partner, but we are in agreement that further asset growth could be a future constraint in sustaining performance (...).”
Daniel Tubba, manager of the BGF Emerging Markets fund, whose assets under management total USD1.1bn, has left the group, Investment Week reports.Tubba has been co-head of a team dedicated to emerging markets worldwide, which also includes Diren Shah and Sam Vecht.Emerging markets funds, both offshore and onshore, will now be managed by Shah and Luiz Soares, who has joined the group from Axiom International Investors.
The British asset management firm Jupiter Asset Management has reported net inflows of about GBP750m for the 2011 fiscal year, after GBP2.3bn in 2010. The major contributors were mututal funds, which attracted a net total of GBP500m (compared with GBP1.9bn the previous year).Assets under management as of the end of the year totalled GBP22.8bn, compared with GBP24.1bn as of the end of 2010, while mutual funds had assets of GBP`17.2bn, compared with GBP18.4bn as of the end of 2010.Pre-tax profits were up to GBP70.3m, compared with GBP42.4m in 2010. The head of Jupiter, Edward Bonham Carter, says that the company is hoping to increase its distribution capacities, particularly in both French and German-speaking Switzerland. With this in mind, Jupiter has opened a representative office in Zurich. Evelyn Lederle, previously of Clariden Leu, will be in charge of development for activities in German-speaking Switzerland as senior sales manager.
The Swedish investment fund association is opposed to proposals by the chairman of the taxation committee of Parliament which would require asset management firms to charge fund fees separately, rather than taking them out of assets, in order to promote transparency. In a statement released on Tuesday, Thomas Eriksson and Pia Nilsson, charman and CEO, respectively, of the Fondbolagens Förening association, explain why they find the proposals of Henrik von Sydow inappropriate. “In our opinion, that would have a negative impact on the capacity of investors to compare funds, without taking into account the bureaucracy which it would imply. Management fees are charged every day at 1/365. How often would invoices need to be sent?” they ask. They also point out that the Swedish market includes 5,000 funds, but there are only 800 Swedish-registered funds which would be affected by the proposed legislation. “Can we have different rules for Swedish and foreign funds?” they ask.
The index provider FTSE Group on 7 March announced that from the opening of the trading day on 19 March, the asset management firm Aberdeen Asset Management, which will have left the FTSE 250, will be one of the new components in the FTSE 100 index.
La Mutuelle Générale de l’Economie, des Finances et de l’Industrie (MGEFI) gère 160 millions d’euros, dont 50 millions sont investis en immobilier (pierre). Sur la gestion des actifs, la couverture des engagements réglementés est assurée au travers d’un mandat de gestion obligataire de qualité Investment Grade. MGEFI a sélectionné un gestionnaire actif appliquant une approche buy and hold, essentiellement sur des titres de dettes d’entreprises. L’objectif est de dégager des coupons fixes tous les ans, tout en bénéficiant d’une bonne diversification, au niveau sectoriel (poids limité des financières), aussi bien qu’au niveau des émetteurs. Une grosse partie des obligations d’Etat est arrivée à échéance dernièrement, commente Frédéric Tinseau, le Responsable comptable de la gestion financière, et ne sera pas renouvelée, car la MGEFI privilégie le rendement sur les obligations corporate, même si cela coûte davantage en capital avec Solvabilité II. MGEFI utilise aussi des OPCVM dans une poche de diversification et performance (20% des actifs). Dans ce cadre, la gestion est plus souple, MGEFI s’autorisant à investir sur du HY (first), des obligations convertibles, mais aussi les marchés émergents (actions et dettes), les matières premières. Au total, MGEFI travaille avec 6-7 sociétés de gestion. Aujourd’hui, la Mutuelle reçoit beaucoup de propositions sur le crédit. Sa préférence se porte sur des fonds à échéance plutôt que certains fonds High Yield dont l’espérance de rendement peut apparaître plus élevée en contrepartie d’une probabilité de défaut plus forte. Frédéric Tinseau rappelle que les fonds fermés exonère l’asset manager de la contrainte de gestion des flux quotidiens de souscriptions et sorties. En termes de performances, MGEFI confesse que cette classe d’actifs a été la plus contributive aux résultats. A titre d’exemple, un fonds fermé sur 3 ans qui arrive prochainement à échéance aura généré 20% de performances (avec les coupons réinvestis). Enfin, un projet de rapprochement avec Istya est actuellement à l'étude, et devrait sans doute aboutir au cours de l’année 2012.
La balance des comptes courants japonais a enregistré un déficit record au mois de janvier de 437,3 milliards de yens. Un déficit qui pourrait n’être que temporaire selon les économistes. «Couplés avec les récentes cessions de yens, ces chiffres ont conduit à se demander si la flambée des rendements d’Etat que beaucoup prévoient va réellement se produire» s’interroge Barclays Capital. Par ailleurs, la contraction du PIB au quatrième trimestre 2011 a finalement été de 0,7%, contre 2,3% initialement estimé.
Le Monde rapporte que la société de gestion CFCI lancera mi-avril au plus tard une sicav basée sur les principes de la finance islamique. Dirigée par Anouar Hassoune, ancien vice-président de Moody’s, elle sera la première de ce type à être commercialisée en France auprès des particuliers.
Les nouvelles règles présentées hier par la Commission prévoient une séparation plus stricte entre activités bancaires et de règlement. Bruxelles veut aussi faciliter l’intervention des dépositaires nationaux sur des marchés tiers. Le délai de livraison sera enfin raccourci à deux jours.