La société de gestion écossaise Martin Currie vient d’annoncer la nomination de la spécialiste du secteur de la santé, Andrea Bici, au sein de son équipe «consumer and healthcare».Andrea Bici était précédemment chez Schroders, où elle a passé huit ans. Elle suivait notamment le secteur de la santé en Amérique du Nord en tant que First Vice President et analyste actions des petites et moyennes entreprises.
Schroders a annoncé le lancement d’un fonds dédié à l’immobilier dans le monde, le Schroder Global Property Income Maximiser. Le produit propose aux investisseurs de tirer parti de la croissance de ce secteur par une exposition aux actions issues du secteur immobilier. Le fonds, qui devrait être accessible à partir du mois de février 2011 (il est en attente d’agrément de la FSA), vise un rendement brut initial de 7% au travers d’une gestion active Reits et des actions à fort rendement avec un overlay (une call option couverte) sur ces titres pour améliorer le rendement. Le Global Property Income Maximiser sera cogéré par Thomas See, Jim Rehlaender et Al Otero.
Standard Life Investments annonce ce jeudi 26 novembre que Henderson Global Investors et Aviva Investors ont investi pour le compte de leurs clients au total 60 millions d’euros dans son fonds European Property Growth Fund. Lancé en 2001, le produit est investi dans 38 actifs immobiliers situés dans dix pays en Europe continentale, précise un communiqué.
Selon le Financial Times, Henderson Global Investors a demandé à ses conseillers, JPMorgan Cazenove et UBS, d’étudier la faisabilité de l’acquisition de tout ou partie de Gartmore. Il est peu probable qu’une éventuelle offre se fasse au prix du cours actuel des actions de Gartmore (103 pence) ou au dessus, compte tenu du départ de son gérant vedette Roger Guy.
BlackRock lance un trust investi sur les marchés frontières, le BlackRock Frontiers Investment Trust, rapporte le Financial Times. L’objectif du fonds, géré par Sam Vecht, est de lever entre 80 et 100 millions de livres auprès des investisseurs institutionnels.
La Tribune rapporte que les deux années de crise risquent d’être meurtières pour certains fonds de LBO. «La mort d’un fonds d’investissement est une mort lente, explique un bon connaisseur du marché cité par le quotidien. Si une équipe perd la confiance de ses investisseurs, elle ne parvient pas à collecter de nouveaux capitaux. Son rôle se réduit alors à gérer les participations de ses précédents véhicules d’investissement puis à les céder. Une fois cette étape franchie, le fonds disparaît. » A ce jeu, le britannique Terra Firma et Candover sont aujourd’hui en très mauvaise posture. Pour ce dernier, le taux de rentabilité annuel est aujourd’hui de - 26,4 %. Et la liste des fonds en péril est encore longue, notamment Elevation Partners et J.C. Flowers.
La première banque britannique HSBC a annoncé le 26 septembre la nomination à la tête de sa division banque privée de Paul Thurston, actuellement directeur de la branche du groupe au Royaume-Uni, deux mois après le changement de présidence et de direction générale de la banque. Paul Thurston prendra ses fonctions le 1er mars 2011 à Hong Kong, selon le communiqué du groupe.
L’Agefi rapporte que, compte tenu de Solvabilité 2 qui sera mis en place à partir de 2012, Generali, qui gère 473 milliards d’euros d’actifs (au 30 septembre), dont 331 milliards d’investissements propres, constitués principalement par des obligations (78,1%), des actions (8,1%) et des investissements immobiliers (7,1%) souhaite accroître cette part du patrimoine immobilier. L’assureur souhaite porter celle-ci à 9% et faire passer progressivement son portefeuille de 24,2 milliards d’euros à 30 milliards d’euros. L’objectif est également d'étendre son patrimoine immobilier, aujourd’hui concentré en Europe, vers les Etats-Unis devenus plus rentables et la Chine, où la compagnie s’oriente de plus en plus. Du côté de la gestion d’actifs, c’est notamment en Chine que l’assureur compte se développer, précise le quotidien.
Selon Cotizalia, Manuel San Salvador, administrateur directeur général du Banco Urquijo banque privée, banque des entreprises, gestion d’actifs), a quitté l’entreprise après avoir été progressivement dépossédé de différents pouvoirs, le Urquijo ayant de plus perdu son statut d’indépendance statutaire au sein du groupe Sabadell (qui a acheté le Banco Urquijo en 2006).Officiellement, il s’agit d’un divorce par consentement mutuel. En pratique, il s’agit plutôt de la conséquence de la montée en puissance de Ramón de la Riva, qui a été nommé le 25 novembre directeur général adjoint du Sabadell et vice-président exécutif du Urquijo, et qui aurait eu l’intention de nommer prochainement un nouveau directeur général du Urquijo, au même niveau que Manuel San Salvador.
Le 26 novembre, Arcano a annoncé le lancement du Arcano Emerging Markets Funds, qui se veut le premier fonds de fonds de private equity au monde à se focaliser sur les pays émergents. L’objectif de performance annuelle brute est de 20 %., précise Funds People. Arcano compte lever 150 millions à 200 millions de dollars pour ce nouveau produit.Le fonds sera investi dans des fonds de capital-investissement latino-américains, africains et moyen-orientaux, avec une spécialisation sur le Brésil, le Mexique, la Colombie, le Pérou, l’Afrique du Sud, l’Egypte, la Turquie et le Nigeria.Ce fonds géré par Lorenzo Nogales et Sven Soderblom est principalement destiné aux fonds de pension, aux family offices et aux fondations.Le premier «closing» est prévu pour 2011.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Irving Picard, the trustee appointed to liquidate the assets of Bernard Madoff, says he has filed 40 lawsuits in a Mahattan Federal bankruptcy court to recover USD69m for investors, the Wall Street Journal reports. Of this total, 22 lawsuits concern relatives of Bernard and Ruth Alpern Madoff, while the other 18 name former employees of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities and associated companies.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Frankfurt-based independent asset management firm Lupus alpha on 26 November announced the launch of the German-registered, UCITS-compliant fund Lupus alpha Structure Emerging Markets, which allows subscribers to profit from the evolution of equities markets in emerging countries, without having to bear the full risks. Potential losses are limited to 10% per calendar year. The system will allow institutional investors with limited risk budgets to position themselves on emerging equities markets. Lupus alpha already manages over EUR800m in its protected Structure Invest range.The new fund will invest in a nearly index-based manner, based on the MSCI Emerging Markets index (24 countries). In addition, the management team may actively take advantage of the evolution of some more strongly-weighten country indices. The selection of countries is undertaken quantitatively with a trend-following model. The manager, Stephan Steiger, invests actively, using ETFs or futures on certain emerging markets. In addition, as the fund invests in local currencies, there may be positive currency effects if the currencies rise.The capital protection mechanism uses active management of exposure to equities using risk models which have been integrated into the Structure Invest fund from Lupus Alpha since 2003. The level of allocation to equities is determined as a function of the calculation of the expected shortfall on a daily basis, and dynamically adapted. If the value of the portfolio minus the expected shortfall is higher than a predefined limit, the manager has a risk margin which will allow him to increase exposure to equities.CharacteristicsName: Lupus alpha Structure Emerging MarketsISIN code: DE000A0YFF46Front-end fee: 5% maximumManagement commission: 1%Performance commission: 20% of performance against a composite benchmark index of 50% Eonia and 50% MSCI Emerging Markets TRInitial price of shares: EUR100
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The hedge fund management firm FrontPoint Partners has announced that it has received redemption demands totalling about USD3bn, on assets of USD7.5bn as of the beginning of the month, but it hopes that some clients will reconsider their decisions, leaving it able to start 2011 with USD5bn in assets, the Wall Street Journal reports.FrontPoint is implicated in the insider trading scandal related to information from the French doctor Ives M. Benhamou. Of the total redemption demands, USD1.5bn are for the healthcare fund which was liquidated on Wednesday, for which subscribers received 97% of NAV in cash .Morgan Stanley will sell its stake in FrontPoint to the heads of the firm. The two CEOs, Daniel Waters and Michael Kelley, will control the majority of shares ones the transaction is completed.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }AXA IM on 26 Novemberannounced the launch of a short-term bond fund, AXA IM Euro FixedIncome Moderato.“This type of fundresponds to real demand from investors, which the introduction of newregulations for money market funds on 1 July 2011 will only increase.By limiting the maturity of investments to two years, and limitingthe credit ratings permitted, the regulations will lead to moreattractive remuneration for securities that are not eligible underthese criteria, and will thus offer short-term bond funds newinvestment opportunities,” explains Mikael Pacot, head of the moneymarkets team at AXA IM.AXA IM Euro FixedIncome Moderato is classed as a fund of “bonds and other securitiesdenominated in euros,” which will allow its manager to invest inthe short-term bond market and apply an active and flexiblemanagement with several sources of performance.The new product hasflexible, active management of two sources of added value, interestrates and credit, with:opportunity-drivenmanagement of exposure to interest rates on the major OECD markets,which range within a total sensitivity limit of -1 to +1;active managementof credit exposure through securities rated investment grade at thetime of purchase (minimum 90%), with a maximum maturity of 3 years.The fund aims forannualised net returns higher than the Eonia (+25 basis points for“I” category shares, reserved for institutional investors).Characteristics of thefundLegal format:French-registered FCPCurrency: euroISIN codes (I, E):FR0010950063 & FR0010950055Type of share:capitalisationDate of creation:24/11/2010Valuation: daily Recommended minimalinvestment duration: over 9 monthsSensitivity range: -1to 1Risk profile: B(moderate risk)Minimal initialsubscription: EUR500,000 (I shares); none (E shares)Minimal subsequentsubscription: noneMaximal directmanagement fees: 0.20% (I shares); 0.45% (E shares)Maximal front-end fee:1%
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asian Investor reports that Nikhil Srinivasan, currently chief investment officer at Allianz Investment Management (CIO) for the Asia-Pacific region, has been appointed CIO for the group. He will be based at the group’s Munich headquarters. The promotion, unusual for a European firm, may be viewed as a fair reward for Allianz’s results in the region. Asian life insurance activities have grown by 45% in the first nine months of the year. Srinivasan, CIO for Asia-Pacific since 2006, reduced exposure to equities to less than 1% in August 2007, just one month before the collapse of Lehman Brothers.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In absolute terms, French funds have sustained net redemptinos fo EUR52bn in the first nine months of the year, which is the largest outflow in all countries covered by Efama, Expansión reports. However, these outflows represent only 4.15% of assets in French funds. Spanish funds may have seen outflows of only EUR16.34bn in January-September, but this total represents 10.4% of total assets under management, and thus the heaviest outflows in relative terms. The third country on the list is Italy, with net redemptions of EUR14.2bn, or 7.3% of the total. At the other extreme, Luxembourg funds have attracted a net EUR88.89bn, or 5.6% of their initial assets. But British funds have done better: their inflows of EUR38.5bn represent 7.3% of the amount observed at the end of 2009.
In the UCITS fund market, hedge fund strategies are growing at a faster pace than expected. In the first nine months of the year, inflows to UCITS-compliant hedge funds, or Newcits, totalled EUR25bn, according to a study by Strategic Insight on behalf of ALFI (the Luxembourg investment fund association), with the assistance of the Luxembourg for Finance (LFF) association.Inflows for the year as a whole may total about EUR33bn, compared with EUR19.2bn in 2009. Assets under management in over 1,000 Newcits as of the end of September totalled EUR114bn.The study finds that products domiciled in Luxembourg this year represented more than half of all inflows and Newcits account for 45% of all funds. Excluding funds domiciled in the UK, Luxembourg funds account for two thirds of all flows.Most funds use hedge fund strategies adapted for the increasing need for absolute return solutions, with lower volatility and lower correlations, in order to diversify portfolios.Gains remain concentrated in a few products: only 50 funds account for 90% of net inflows for the year. Some funds have shown spectacular inflows. The Global Absolute Return Strategies fund from Standard Life Investments has posted net inflows of EUR3.5bn, and the Julius Baer BF Absolute Return has attracted a net EUR2.1bn. Three other funds have collected over EUR1bn this year.The fundamentals which have supported the development of Newcits remain solid, say the authors of the study. Liquidity, a rigorous regulatory framework, transparency and the UCITS brand are all factors which support the development of UCITS hedge funds. And the study points out that these are all factors which on balance outweigh access to investors, the AIFM directive and its impact, or the need for absolute returns and diversification.The estimate of net inflows of EUR33bn for the year cited above represents 15% of all net inflows to long-term UCITS funds. If this percentage increases to 25% by the end of the next decade, and inflows increase by only 5% per year – two relatively conservative estimates, the study says – then Newcits will accumulate net assets of EUR600bn in the next decade.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Hedgeweek reports that Frontier Capital Management has launched a second managed futures fund, the FrontEdge Managed Futures Fund. The defensive qualities of managed futures, one of the most liquid absolute return strategies, were once again demonstrated when the markets fell in 2008, and the segment saw positive returns of about 17%. The fund has initial capital of USD40m in investments, which will increase to USD60m by the end of the year. The lead portfolio manager on the fund, Alex Gaitan, while Marc-Philippe Davies, head of investments, is its co-manager.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Les Echos reports that the Green party MEP Pascal Canfin on Monday, 29 November published a report on proposals made by the Commission in mid-September to better regulate short-selling and transactions on credit default swaps (CDS). He would like to require investors in sovereign debt CDS to hold the underlying government debt as well. The economic and monetary affairs commission of the European parliament will finalise its position in a vote scheduled for 7 February. The planned regulations will then be subject to an agreement with the Council before being definitively passed.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 26 November, Arcano announced the launch of the Arcano Emerging Markets Funds, which claims to be the first private equity fund of funds in the world to focus on emerging markets. The gross annual performance objective is 20%, says Funds People. Arcano is planning to raise USD150m to USD200m for the new product.The fund will invest in Latin American, African and Middle Eastern private equity funds, with a specialisation in Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Peru, South Africa, Egypt, Turkey, and Nigeria.The fund, managed by Lorenzo Nogales and Sven Soderblom, is largely aimed at pension funds, family offices, and endowments.The first closing is slated for 2011.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 26 November, Deutsche Börse announced that it has added its 753rd ETF to trading on the XTF segment of its Xetra electronic platform. It is the German-registered bond fund iShares Markit iBoxx Euro High Yield (DE000A1C8QT0), which replicates the Markit iBoxx Euro Liquid High Yield Index, an index of high yield bonds issued by businesses and denominated in euros, although the issuers are domiciled outside the Euro zone. Ratings are below investment grade. Each issue must have a volume of at least EUR250m, and the weight of each issuer is limited to 5% of the index. Management commission is 0.50%.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Deutsche Börse has announced with a slight delay that it has admitted the Goldman Sachs Absolute Return Tracker Index ETF Portfolio fund to trading on the XTF segment of its Xetra electronic platform. The Luxembourg-registered product (LU0529341090) charges 1.215%, and replicates the Goldman Sachs Absolute Return Tracker Index. The index reflects the evolution of a basket of long and short investible market factors. An algorithm determines the composition of the basket, in order to replicate potential evolution of a wide range of hedge funds as faithfully as possible. This is the first ETF which Goldman Sachs Structured Investments Sicav II has listed in Germany.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Agefi Switzerland reports that the German private bank Hauck & Aufhaüser Privatbankiers KGaA has merged its two affiliates, based in Zurich, into a single entity, under its own name: Hauck & Aufhaüser (Suisse) SA. The firm is the result of a merger of Dr. Höller Vermögensverwaltung und Anlageberatung AG and the private bank’s original affiliate, Bastei Privatfinanz AG, which has been present in Zurich since 1994. The new entity has no banking license. It is dedicated exclusively to institutional asset management, family offices, financial consulting and management of investment funds, including ethical and sustainable funds.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In the past, hedge funds have had the decisive advantage over ETFs of being more maneuverable and being better able to anticipate rebalancing or adjustments of indices, which often lead to market movements that negatively impact ETFs. At the beginning of next year, the Wall Street Journal reports, the Center for Research in Security Prices (CSRP) at the University of Chicago will launch investible indices which will prevent funds which replicate them from having to make mandatory transactions when changes are made to traditional indices. The distinctions between small, mid and large caps will be expressed as a percentage of the value of the total market, rather than as fixed amounts in dollars or an unchanging number of companies. Equities will be “partially weighted” via various cap size indices. If a company grows or shrinks, its shares will no longer be required to be added or removed all at once. Additions and removals will be made gradually, adn the date on which the changes are finalised will be randomized.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asian Investor reports that HFT Investment Management, a joint venture of BNP Paribas and Haitong Securities, has opened a branch office in Hong Kong, becoming the most recent Chinese asset management actor to use Hong Kong as a base to launch international activities.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Singapore hedge fund Whitefield Capital Management has decided to cease charging performance commissions until it has doubled its assets under management. Whitefield last year faced redemptions that reduced its assets under management to USD100m. The Asian Opportunities Fund, with about USD30m in assets under management, will not charge fees until it has assets of USD50m to USD100m. The fund has also earned returns of 33% this year, after results of about 80% last year.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Brazilian asset management firm Arx is planning to release its new Latin American infrastructure strategy, managed by Bruno Garcia and Rogério Poppe, in France, Alex Gorra, director of the international BNY Mellon Arx platform, announced in Paris. The product is already available in a Brazilian-registered form, and invests 75% in Brazilian and 20-25% in Mexican securities, while the remainder is invested in Colombian, Peruvian and Chilean equities. It is a strategy “which privileges domestic stories,” and which, in the case of Mexican companies like America Móvil, Cemex and Homex are absolutely not dependent on the economic activity in the United States.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Agefi Switzerland reports that Lamda Privatbank has launched its banking activities, becoming the 16th such institution in Liechtenstein. It has received authorisation from the competent authority (FMA) and will concentrate on traditional private management activities for high net worth clients.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asian Investor reports that Indonesian asset managers will soon be allowed to invest in foreign funds. Although the Indonesian government opposes capital flowing abroad, its position appears to have softened recently in relation to foreign investments by onshore management firms. The managers concerned will be allowed to invest up to 15% of each of their funds in offshore assets. They will not be allowed to buy shares in offshore funds, and will therefore be limited to buying offshore securities. The capital market regulator, Bapepam, is revising the new regulations in order to allow asset management firms to buy foreign funds by the end of 2010, says Abiprayadi Riyanyo, chairman of the Indonesian fund association. The change in regulations will allow businesses to increase their exposure to offshore products. However, many Indonesian asset management firms estimate that with a limit of 15%, this possibility will not be met with large demand, due to the level of research expertise needed, to say nothing of the costs related to custody for the fund, the administrative portion as a whole, and exposure to currency risks.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Treasury Select Committee, the Parliamentary financial surveillance committee, has called for written comments on the Retail Distribution Review (RDR), especially in relation to two questions: Will the RDR achieve the desired results? And may these results be achieved by other, potentially better means? Before the commission announced the initiative, the director of the FSA, Hector Sants, said in a hearing that the RDR has three major objectives: to install a more transparent and equitable remuneration system, better training of advisors, and lastly, a clarification of the various categories of advising offered to clients. The consultation will remain open until 17 January.