Axa a annoncé le 15 septembre la finalisation de la cession à Resolution des activités suivantes basées au Royaume-Uni : vie et retraite traditionnelles, prévoyance et retraite collectives distribuées par des conseillers financiers indépendants, et annuités ; le tout pour un prix global de vente de 2,75 milliards de livres (soit environ 3,3 milliards d’euros).Le montant net reçu en numéraire pour le groupe est de 1,7 milliard d’euros, précise le groupe dans un communiqué. « Cette opération est un élément clé de notre stratégie visant à optimiser davantage l’allocation du capital au sein du groupe, tout en se concentrant sur les opérations à plus forte croissance et rentabilité du marché britannique de l’assurance vie, épargne, retraite», indique le directeur général délégué d’Axa, cité dans le communiqué.
Le 13 septembre, Rydex ETF Trust a fait enregistrer par la SEC une série de 19 nouveaux ETF sans effet de levier répliquant 16 indices Russell et 3 indices MSCI. Tous comportent le suffixe «equal weight» signifiant que les titres des sociétés composant l’indice considéré sont équipondérés. Les commissions de gestion s'échelonnent entre 0,55 % et 0,90 %.
Dans un communiqué publié le 15 septembre, la Banque Sarasin a annoncé qu’elle envisageait de tirer parti des conditions favorables qui prévalent actuellement sur le marché suisse des capitaux pour émettre un emprunt à moyen terme avec l’objectif de «diversifier sa stratégie de financement».La Banque Sarasin a chargé l’UBS de jouer le rôle de chef de file.
La Russie prévoit de lever 50 milliards de dollars - et non plus 29 milliards - par le biais de privatisations au cours des cinq années à venir, a déclaré mercredi 15 septembre le ministre des Finances, Alexeï Koudrine, cité par l’Agefi.
Selon l’Agefi, Export-Import Bank of China et le fonds souverain chinois CIC ont chacun investi 300 millions de dollars dans un fonds destiné à financer des projets dans l'énergie et les infrastructures en Asie du Sud-Est. Il doit atteindre les 10 milliards de dollars dans les huit ans.
L’Agefi rapporte que la société de gestion française Comgest, spécialiste des actions internationales, va ouvrir une quatrième filiale à Singapour d’ici la fin de l’année. Pour monter ce nouveau bureau, deux gérants vont être détachés de la filiale de Hong-Kong qui cogère avec Paris les fonds Asie hors Japon, mais ne dispose pas d’une équipe de vente locale. «Nos clients institutionnels préfèrent parler directement aux gérants pour mieux cerner notre style d’investissement très typé, axé sur les grandes valeurs de croissance offrant une faible volatilité», a justifié Jean-François Canton, cofondateur et président du directoire de Comgest cité par le quotidien.Si il ne souhaite pas s’implanter pour le moment dans ses autres régions d’expertise, le groupe qui affiche 11,7 milliards d’euros d’encours à fin juin «ouvrira sans doute un jour un bureau au Brésil», a également prédit Jean-François Canton.
Jupiter renforce son équipe commerciale basée à Munich, afin de faciliter son développement en Allemagne, en Suisse et en Autriche. Ainsi, Daniel Blum, commercial, et un assistant commercial vont bientôt rejoindre le bureau bavarois de la société de gestion britannique, dirigé par Martina Guenzl, directrice des ventes, Europe. Daniel Blum travaille chez Jupiter depuis septembre 2005. La décision de renforcer le bureau munichois vise à répondre à la demande grandissante pour les fonds Jupiter de la part des distributeurs comme les banques privées, les fonds de fonds, les family offices et les gérants de fortune. Jupiter prévoit par ailleurs le lancement de stratégies convertibles monde et multi-classe d’actifs en octobre.
Le 15 septembre, Feri Finance Group a annoncé avoir recruté Wilfried Hoffmann pour diriger les activités de Feri Family Trust (qui gère les actifs de 250 familles) dans la partie méridionale de l’Allemagne. L’intéressé était depuis plus de six ans le patron de Merck Finck Treuhand. Merck Finck & Co a été acquise en mai par le groupe indien Hinduja lorsque ce dernier a acheté KBL European Private Bankers.
Selon les milieux financiers, les actionnaires de Hauck & Aufhäuser (H&A) pourraient nommer ce jeudi Michael Schramm unique porte-parole du comité de direction de la banque privée et ne pas renouveler le mandat de son homologue Volker van Rüth, qui devrait cependant demeurer en place parce que la BaFin exige que la direction d’une banque soit assumée au moins par deux personnes physiques, rapporte la Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Ce serait la chance de Jochen Lucht (ex BHF), entré au collège des associés en février et qui doit réglementairement justifier d’au moins d’un an d’ancienneté pour pouvoir prétendre à un poste de dirigeant.
Le gestionnaire tchèque Terra Partners a externalisé l’administration des parts A et CEF de son hedge fund sur les marchés frontières Worldwide Opportunity Fund à SS&C Fund Services, rapporte ICFA Online. Le fonds, enregistré aux îles Caïman était jusqu’ici administré en interne. Il a été lancé en 2003, mais n’a pas dépassé les 10 millions de dollars d’encours. Sous-traiter l’administration à une équipe polyglotte devrait permettre de faire décoller les actifs sous gestion, a estimé Howard Golden, co-fondateur et gérant de Terra Partners.
Le 15 septembre, l’autrichien Raiffeisen Capital Management (RCM) a lancé sa nouvelle Sicav luxembourgeoise avec des compartiments qui sont les clones de fonds autrichiens, Raiffeisen Emerging European Equities, Raiffeisen Russian Equities, Raiffeisen Emerging Markets Equities et Raiffeisen Emerging Markets Local Bonds. Ces produits seront enregistrés dans un premier temps au Royaume-Uni, aux Pays-Bas, au Luxembourg et à Singapour, les principaux pays où sont distribués les fonds de RCM. L’enregistrement dans d’autres pays est envisagé. En dehors du Russian Equities, dont la monnaie de référence est le dollar, tous les compartiments sont libellés en euros. Des parts en livres, en dollars et en euros sont envisagées pour une date ultérieure.Le choix de l’enveloppe sicav s’explique par le fait qu’actuellement environ les trois quarts de la distribution transfrontière s’effectuent avec des produits utilisant cette forme juridique. La sicav luxembourgeoise devrait permettre d’améliorer l’accès à d’importants débouchés en Europe et en Asie tout en développant la distribution à l’international.RCM précise que son encours a augmenté de 1,6 milliard d’euros ou de 6 % durant les huit premiers mois de l’année pour atteindre 28,5 milliards d’euros fin août. En comptant les mandats de conseil le total ressortait à 30,7 milliards d’euros. Quant à la situation bénéficiaire, elle est légèrement supérieure aux attentes. Pour les particuliers, la souscription minimale est fixée à 2.500 euros. La commission de gestion se situe à 1,75 % pour les fonds d’actions et 1 % pour les produits obligataires.
D’après les statistiques de l’association autrichienne VÖIG des sociétés de gestion, l’encours des fonds à fin août se situait à 143,9 milliards d’euros contre 142,1 milliards fin juillet. Par rapport au 31 décembre 2009 (136,7 milliards), cela représente une augmentation de 5,27 %.
Frankie Lee has decided to leave Henderson to join another asset manager based in Hong Kong. He has been managing the USD355 million Henderson HF Asia-Pacific Property Equities Fund since 2008. Henderson is currently in the market to hire an equal replacement for Frankie Lee but until it has done so, Patrick Sumner, head of property equities, will be responsible for the management for the USD800 million Asian property equities assets the asset manager manages on behalf of its clients on a segregated and pooled basis, including the Henderson HF Asia-Pacific Property Equities Fund. In addition, to ensure the smooth management and running of the Fund and to assist in finding a replacement Patrick Sumner will move to Singapore in October until such a time as Henderson feel is appropriate following the recruitment of a replacement, says Henderson. Frankie Lee will continue his involvement in the fund until his day of departure on the 1st of December 2010 or until his replacement arrives.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Agefi reports that Export-Import Bank of China and the Chinese sovereign fund CIC have invested USD300m each in a fund which will finance projects in energy and infrastructure in South-East Asia. The fund will have USD10bn in assets in eight years’ time.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The European Commission on 15 September unveiled proposed regulations to improve the security and transparency of over-the-counter (OTC) derivative markets. Under the proposed regulations, the EU would require information on over-the-counter derivative contracts to be disclosed to central reference points, and that they be made available to surveillance authorities. Other information would also be made available to all market participants. The Commission is also proposing that normalised over-the-counter derivative contracts should be handled by centralised clearing-houses, which would have the effect of reducing counterparty credit risks, or the danger that the other party might default on a contract. The proposals by the Commission, which are in line with engagements by the EU and the G20 and the approach adopted by the United States, will now be examined by the European Parliament and member states. Once passed, the regulations would come into force in the second half of 2012. While welcoming the Commission’s proposals, the professional associations have expressed some reservations. The European asset management association (EFAMA) says that all participants should benefit from the new regulations, which will also protect users of the markets, including buy-side investors. The European banking federation (EBF), for its part, says that the Commission has perhaps gone a step too far in its enthusiasm for regulation, for example, with the clearing-house requirements. The Commission has also passed proposed regulations for short-selling and some aspects of credit default swaps (CDS). The bill will impose more transparency, reduce risks, and create a harmonised framework which will allow coordinated action throughout Europe. The new regulations grant national and European regulators clear authority to act when necessary in a coordinated manner to improve the functioning of the internal market. The proposal has been handed over to the European Parliament to be passed, and would come into force on 1 July 2012.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 15 September, the Austrian management firm Raiffeisen Capital Management (RCM) launched its new Luxembourg Sicav container for several sub-funds which are clones of Austrian-registered funds: Raiffeisen Emerging European Equities, Raiffeisen Russian Equities, Raiffeisen Emerging Markets Equities and Raiffeisen Emerging Markets Local Bonds. The products will initially be registered in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Singapore, the main countries where RCM products are sold. Registration in other countries is planned. Aside from the Russian Equities fund, which is denominated in US dollars, all other funds are denominated in Euros. Shares in pounds Sterling, US dollars and Euros are planned for a later date. For retail investors, minimal subscription is set at EUR2,500. Management commission is 1.75% for equities funds, and 1% for bond products. The choice of a Sicav wrapper for the fund is due to the fact that about three quarters of cross-border sales are of products in this legal format. The Luxembourg Sicav vehicle will allow the firm to improve its access to major opportunities in Europe and Asia and to develop international distribution. RCM states that its assets increased by EUR1.6bn, or 6% in the first eight months of the year, to EUR28.5bn as of the end of August. Including advisory mandates, the total comes to EUR30.7bn. Profits are slightly superior to expectations.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to statistics from the Austrian VÖIG association of management firms, assets in funds as of the end of August totalled EUR143.9bn, compared with EUR142.1bn as of the end of July. Compared with 31 December 2009 (EUR136.7bn), this represents an increase of 5.27%.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Californian pension fund CalPERS, with about USD208bn in assets under management, on 15 September announced two “significant reforms,” which will aim to restore investor confidence. Firstly, a position has been created for a senior chief risk officer, who will concentrate on risk management; and secondly, an ethics helpline has been created, which will identify fraud, conflicts of interest, and all other types of abuse. These new efforts come in addition to those already engaged in by the pension fund in the past 12 months to “restore confidence, integrity, and accountability in everything we do,” CalPERS says in a statement.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 13 September, Rydex ETF Trust registered a series of 19 new ETF funds which do not rely on leverage, replicating 16 Russell indices and 3 MSCI indices, with the SEC. All the products carry the suffix “equal weight,” indicating that the securities in the index are considered equally weighted. Management commissions range from 0.55% to 0.90%.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Axa announced on 15 September that it has finalised its sale of the following activities based in the United Kingdom: traditional life insurance and retirement; collective retirement planning and pensions distributed by independent financial advisers; and annuities, all for an overall sale price of GBP2.75bn (about EUR3.3bn). The amount received in cash by the group is EUR1.7bn, the group says in a statement. “The operation is a key element in our strategy to better optimise the allocation of capital within the group, while concentrating on higher growth and profit operations on the British life insurance, savings, and retirement market,” Denis Duverne, the deputy CEO of Axa says in a statement.
F&C Investments is rebranding its UK retail range to Thames River following the merger of the two companies, writes Money Marketing. The fund manager is going to retain the F&C brand for the UK institutional side and switch to F&C Thames River in the rest of Europe.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Sam Catalano, who was head of the equities research team specialised in metals and mining in Europe for Macquarie in London, has joined the global equities team at Schroders, led by Virgini Maisonneuve, head of global and international equities, as a portfolio manager specialised in the global materials sector. Giles Money, a recent university graduate, has also been recruited as a portfolio manager and analyst specialised in climate change. He will report to Simon Webber, co-manager of the Schroder Global Climate Change Fund.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Chris McGolpin, associate director of KPMG in the United Kingdom, has joined Schroders as head of client service & business management for institutional activities. The position is newly-created. McGolpin will report directly to Miles O’Connor, head of UK institutional.
On 15 September, Feri Finance Group announced that it has recruited Wilfried Hoffmann as director of the activities fo Feri Family Trust (which manages the assets of 250 families) for southern Germany. Hoffmann has spent more than six years as head of Merck Finck Treuhand. Merck Finck & Co was acquired in May by the Indien Hinduja group when the latter bought KBL European Private Bankers.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } IC Immobilien Holoding (EUR5bn in assets under management) has acquired PropertyOne (EUR2.8bn), financing the acquisition through a capital increase via an injection of capital. The merged entity will become a new firm, IC PropertyOne Asset und Real Estate Management GmbH, with assets of EUR7.8bn, according to a statement to the market dated 15 September. The business will have total staff of about 7,000, and the total area of properties will add up to about 3.7 million square metres, including about 700 properties. Shareholders in PropertyOne will control about 7% of the new entity, including a 4.8% stake for the US private equity investor Cerberus. The objective of IC Immobilien is to reach EUR10bn in assets under management by the end of 2011.
Jupiter is expanding its continental Europe sales team in Munich, Germany, to facilitate the company’s continued sales drive in the German, Swiss and Austrian markets. The office, managed by Martina Guenzl, sales director, Europe, will soon be joined by Daniel Blum, sales manager, Europe, who has worked for Jupiter since September 2005, and a dedicated sales support assistant.The local office has been expanded to address the growing demand for Jupiter’s funds from professional buyers including private banks, fund of funds, family offices and wealth managers, says a press release.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In a statement published on 15 September, Banque Sarasin announced that it is planning to exploit the current favourable prevailing conditions on the Swiss capital market with a mid-term bond issue, in order to “diversify financing strategy.” Banque Sarasin has mandated UBS to manage the issue.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Banque Sarasin announced on 15 September that it has added to its range of offerings for high net worth private clients, with the launch of the Private Solutions brand, which provides global wealth management advising and sophisticated solutions for the needs of non-bankable assets such as real estate properties, participations in private companies, intellectual property and lifestyle assets. The range is aimed to respond first and foremost to fundamental neets in relation to non-bankable assets, such as generating liquidity, improving returns, and reducing risk. Bankable assets, i.e. cash, securities, and precious metals, generally represent only a fraction of the total wealth of European high net worth clients. Most of the assets are located outside the world of banking, and are in principle declared in the country of domicile of the owner of the assets at book value. Real estate properties, stakes in private companies, intellectual property and lifestyle assets are a part of this largely unexploited and attractive realm of assets, the bank says in a statement.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asian Investor reports that Citi Private Bank has recruited Roger Bacon, previously at Union Bancaire Privée, as head of managed investments (MI) and advising for the Asia-Pacific region. In this newly-created position, Bacon will be in charge of sales of MI products, sales, and development of custom portfolios as well as administration of MI products. Bacon will report to Debashish Dutta Gupta, head of investments in the Asia-Pacific region.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Nevin Shapiro, the former owner and CEO of Capital Investments USA, has pleaded guilty to securities fraud and money-laundering, over charges that he orchestrated a USD880m Ponzi scheme related to his grocery wholesale business, the Wall Street Journal reports. Shapiro admits that the fraud damaged 50 investors, who lost a total of USD50m to USD100m. A verdict in the case will be delivered on 4 January.