Wolfgang Schäuble, the German federal finance minister, announced on Wednesday that his services will prepare proposed legislation for April which would strengthen protection for investors and increase liquidity on capital markets. The bill would aim for passage during the summer before the Cabinet. The major points to be included in the legislation would be tougher measures to protect investors in the grey market, and tougher sanctions on financial services providers who give fallacious advice. The bill will also forbid naked shorts and introduce transparency requirements for declared short positions. The German government is also proposing to implement added disclosure for financial instruments, in order to prevent surprise take-overs of businesses. The minister is planning to introduce a minimum time period for retention of shares in open-ended real estate funds and minimal liquidity requirements which will be a function of the delay period for redemptions. In addition, the German government would create an “orderly” liquidation procedure for real estate funds which have been closed for a long period of time.
Nevsky Capital, the London hedge fund manager, is poised to wind down its flagship emerging markets fund. Sources close to the fund have told the Financial Times that the USD3.3bn Nevsky hedge fund would “highly likely” be liquidated after the departure of its two star managers, Martin Taylor and Nick Barnes, was announced on Wednesday. The pair will continue to manage the fund for another 12 months.
As we announced at the end of last year (see Newsmanagers of 15 December 2009), Baring Asset Management will finally launch its OEIC fund of Middle East and North Africa (MENA) shares by the end of first quarter. Investment Week reports that the product, managed by Ghadir Abu Leil-Cooper will be placed on the market on 29 March, which coincides with the end of first quarter 2010, the deadline the firm announced last year for the launch. For Barings, the MENA region offers attractive long-term outlooks, despite the risks in the region, including political ones. The countries of the region are rich in commodities and are profiting from a continuing rise in energy consumption. In addition, oil and gas are not the only resources in these countries, which also have a young and growing population. In the past few years, the financial and tourism sectors have seen strong growth, and these trends are likely to continue, while governments are committed to developing infrastructure in the region.
As the Inverco association announced that foreign real estate firms had gained ground in the Spanish market (see Newsmanagers of yesterday), Funds People was running reports, also relayed in Expansión, that the funds which attracted the largest subscriptions were the Robeco US Premium for equities, Schroder ISF Euro Corporate Bond for bonds, the Carmignac Patrimoine among diversified funds, and the CAAM Dynarbitrage Volatility for hedge funds.
Agefi Switzerland reports that the GIC, one of the two major Singapore sovereign funds, will on 5 March convert a loan it made to the Swiss UBS group into shares in the firm. The CHF11bn, which it lent to UBS in 2007, will give GIC a stake of at least 6% in a capitalisation estimated at CHF59.453bn. This CHF11bn stake has nonetheless lost about 70% of its value in two years, giving it a potential value of CHF5.5bn, though the Singapore fund also holds about CHF2bn in coupons. It appears unlikely that GIC will seek to sell its stake off in the short term, and will be likely to hold it at least until it can break even on its initial outlay.
Agefi Switzerland reports that HSBC Private Bank will open a new branch office in Gstaad, which will be operational by mid-2010. The move comes as part of a strategy to significantly increase the bank’s presence in the Swiss onshore market.
On Wednesday, db x-trackers (Deutsche Bank) announced the launch of its Luxembourg-registered fund db x-trackers II iBoxx EUR Liquid Corporate 100 Total Return Index ETF, which charges 0.20% fees, and which was created on 8 February. The synthetic replication fund replicates the iBoxx EUR Liquid Corporate 100 corporate bond index, which includes exclusively bonds denominated in Euros or currencies which preceded the Euro, with a remaining time to maturity of at least two years, and a minimal volume of EUR750m.
The Munich-based ETF management firm of the Deka group (German savings banks), ETFlab Investment, on Wednesday announced the launch and introduction on the XTF segment of the Deutsche Börse of its first publicly-traded corporate bond fund, the ETFlab iBoxx Euro Liquid Corporates Diversified. The German-registered product (DE000ETFL375) based on physical replication offers access to a diversified range of securities, as the index it replicates includes 75 issues from firms whose headquarters are located in the Euro zone, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Norway, or Denmark, with a preference for fixed-rate securities. The manager is allowed to retain only up to two issues from the same borrower, and no issuer is allowed to account for more than 7.5% of assets. The securities are rated investment grade, or at least BBB-, but the limit is A- for financial sector borrowers. The remaining time to maturity for bonds in the portfolio is between 1.5 and 10.5 years. As for corporate bond ETFs launched the same day by db x-trackers (Deutsche Bank), the management commission for the product is 0.20%.
According to statistics from Bloomberg, losses (actual or potential) for the sovereign funds of Abu Dhabi, Norway, Singapore and other countries could be as much as USD20bn, on investments of USD69bn in American and European financial institutions in 2007 and 2008, La Tribune reports. The Singapore sovereign fund Government Singapore Investment Corp (GIC) will need ten years to make back its initial investment in the Swiss bank UBS, according to analysts.
In response to uncertain growth outlooks, looming problems for sovereign debt, and “continued” inflation risks, BlackRock has increased its allocation to US Treasury bonds, the Wall Street Journal reports. The management firm has meanwhile “noticeably” reduced its overweight position in other categories of bonds, such as corporate bonds and MBS, which saw major rallying last year. BlackRock is now neutral on Treasuries, where it was previously underweight on securities in this category.
Les Echos reports that the most recent edition of the StarMine rankings of French equities investment firms puts Nomura at the top of the annual rankings for the quality of its recommendations for CAC 40 companies. It is followed yb Oppenheim Research, Deutsche Bank Securities, and Exane BNP Paribas in the study, which takes into account stock market performance in 2009. Nomura’s analysts stood out in particular with a recommendation to buy Schneider Electric, which gained about 50% between January and December 2009. The firm, born of the acquisition of the European teams from Lehman Brothers by Nomura, was not included in the rankings in previous years. StarMine also evaluates the comparative accuracy of estimates by the brokerage firms of results for French large caps: in this area, Kepler Capital Markets takes first place, followed by Exane BNP Paribas and Credit Suisse.
Senior executives from the investment management industry feel confident enough about the future that they are expanding into new geographical locations, according to a survey taken at Investit’s bi-annual industry conference. The conference, held on 28 January 2010, was attended by 60 delegates from 19 investment management firms with GBP3.5 trillion of assets under management, and six third party administrators with GBP25 trillion of assets under custody and management.95% of respondents to the survey expressed confidence about the year ahead. Furthermore 64% expected the outlook to improve significantly by the end of the year. This is in sharp contrast to early 2009, when 41% of participants had put their projects on hold and only 27% expected the picture to improve. As confidence is returning, 88% of delegates stated that expanding into new regions is their top priority for the year ahead. In terms of where the industry is looking to expand, 56% of the participants ranked Asia Pacific as their number one destination, while the Middle East and North Africa region came second with 27% of the vote. North and South America followed with 9% and 7% respectively. As for other major areas of focus identified by respondents, UCITS (88%), data management (79%) and client reporting (77%) continue to feature prominently.
Under this attention-grabbing headline in Cinco Días, Baldwin Berges, CEO of Silk Invest, launches a plea for investment in Africa to promote the development of emerging markets. In Nigeria and South Africa, he sees similarities with Brazil: populations of over 200 million consumers, an abundance of natural resources, and the advantage of leading positions in regions with populations of over 500 million. Egypt and Morocco are comparable with India: few natural resources of their own, but a growing demographic pyramid and competitive advantages over Europe in terms of the manufacturing prices and services.
Aquitaine Investment Advisors is launching a fund whose strategy is to buy stakes in Asian hedge fund management firms, Asian Investor reports. The Crescent Fund, based in the Cayman Islands, will aim for USD200m in assets. It is available to US charaities and Asian family offices.
Sovereign funds, which like other investors have been affected by a crisis that they did not anticipate, are now returning to the market. According to a study by International Financial Services London (IFSL), investments by sovereign funds increased from USD10bn in first half (their lowest level since 2005) to USD500bn in second half, mostly in Europe and the United States. The Chinese sovereign fund was particularly active, with investments of about USD15bn over the year as a whole. Two thirds of assets at sovereign funds, which totalled about USD2.5trn as of the end of 2009, are in the hands of funds which are supplied by exports of commodities, especially oil and gas, by countries. The percentage of assets in other funds, which are supplied largely from currency reserves, will increase to 38% by 2012, from 34% currently. However, assets under management by sovereign funds fell 3% for the year as a whole to USD3.8trn. According to estimates by IFSL, assets at sovereign funds may total about USD5.5trn by 2012.
Cowen Group has created Ramius Trading Strategies, an affiliate of Ramius Alternative Solutions, Hedge Week reports. The group has also launched the RTS Global Fund, which offers exposure to hedge funds specialised in trading activities strategies, such as managed futures and global macro, via the managed accounts platform recently created by Ramius Trading Strategies. Ramius Trading Strategies is led by William Marr, preciously international head of hedge fund research and portfolio construction at Merrill Lynch. For the 2009 fiscal year, Cowen made a net loss of USD55.3m, or USD1.35 per share, compared with USD141.8m or USD3.78 per share the previous year. As of 1 January 2010, assets under management totalled USD7.85bn, a 26% decline year on year due to net outflows of USD3.05bn offset by performance gains of USD329m.
Evercore Pan Asset Capital Management has launched its first funds dedicated to the retail market, Fund Strategy reports. Pan Dynamic Balanced and Pan Dynamic Growth will invest mainly in ETFs.
Jason Mackay, co-head of British equities at GLG Partners, will be leaving the group at the end of the year, Investment Week reports. Mackay has decided to retire, but he will remain invested in British equities strategies, and will continue to serve GLG in an advisory role.
John Tevenan will join the British management firm Jupiter as director of sales to international financial institutions, Money Marketing reports. Tevenan, who has more than 28 years of experience in asset management, had been sales director at Investec Asset Management since September 2005. In his new role, Tevenan will be in charge of developing relations with wealth management specialists.
The Sal. Oppenheim bank is adding to its product range with the launch of five Barrier Reverse Convertibles to mature on 8 March 2011. The underlying shares are Actelion, Geberit, Nestlé, Swisscom and Syngenta. Due to their protection mechanism, these products make it possible to earn gains even when markets are stagnating or decreasing slightly. So long as no share falls by 25% or more at any time, investors will receive maximal gains.
Amundi a annoncé le 2 mars que la gamme d’OPCVM de droit français «CAAM» et la sicav de droit luxembourgeois «CAAM Funds» étaient renommées respectivement «Amundi» et «Amundi Funds».Concernant les OPCVM de droit français dont la dénomination commence par CAAM, seuls ceux destinés à l’ensemble de la clientèle d’Amundi adoptent le préfixe Amundi à la place de «CAAM». Les autres OPCVM CAAM de droit français spécialement conçus pour le réseau Crédit Agricole changent également le préfixe de leur dénomination et adoptent, quant à eux, les initiales CA. Ces changements de dénomination ont pris effet le 2 mars 2010 et ont d’ores et déjà été pris en compte sur les sites Internet amundi.com et amundi-funds.com ainsi que dans la documentation juridique et commerciale (prospectus, reporting, fiche produit…) en intégrant également la nouvelle identité visuelle du groupe. Le processus de gestion de ces fonds restera inchangé, ainsi que le code ISIN, souligne Amundi.
La Banque canadienne impériale de commerce (CIBC) et Carlyle Group ont acquis avec le gestionnaire alternatif Julian Robertson et la «charity» britannique Wellcome Trust une participation de 82,5 % dans la plus grande banque indépendante des Bermudes, Bank of N.T. Butterfield, pour 550 millions de dollars. The Wall Street Journal rapporte que la CIBC et Carlyle ont chacun investi 150 millions de dollars dans la recapitalisation de Butterfield et que chacun d’eux détient 22,5 % de la banque.
A compter du 1er mars, les fonds immobiliers de la société de gestion Caam Real Estate Italia SGR, soit CAAM RE Italia et CAAM RE Europa, changent de nom et deviennent Amundi RE Italia et Amundi RE Europa.
Revenu en octobre 2009 de chez Barclays Wealth où il était director and team lead, investment & product office, Asia, après avoir passé quinze ans au Credit Suisse, Werner Schlossmacher a été promu private banking head of investment solutions for Southeast Asia and Australasia du groupe helvétique. Basé à Singapour, il est subordonné à François Monnet, managing director and head of private banking Southeast Asia and Australasia.Werner Schlossmacher demeure parallèlement head of structured derivatives for Asia-Pacific de la division banque privée du Credit Suisse.