As of 31 December, Spanish pension funds had total assets of EUR84.79bn, which represents an increase of 8.1% or EUR6.38bn in one year, with the strongest increases for corporate schemes, whose assets under management rose by 9.28%, the Inverco association of asset management firms reports. Gross inflows were down 6.7% to EUR5.6bn. Average annual performance for the year comes to 7.7%, following average losses of 6.44% in 2008.
On Wednesday, HSBC Global Asset Management released three of its Irish-registered ETF funds for sale in Germany. The funds are the HSBC DJ Euro Stoxx 50 ETF (IE00B4K6B022) , which charges 0.15% fees, the SBC Cac 40 ETF (IE00B4L49M32), which charges 0.25%, and a product denominated in pounds Sterling, the HSBC FTSE 100 ETF (IE00B42TW061), for which the management commission is 0.35%. HSBC is planning to market more ETF funds on the German market in the future.
In 2009, foreign fund management firms had the upper hand over German rivals, as they offer largely equities products in Germany. And, with the exception of Pioneer, they were not affected by the massive wave of redemptions which hit money market funds, which are predominantly distributed by local (German) asset management firms. According to estimates by Handelsblatt, Germans invested a net total of EUR5bn in open-ended funds from the largest and best-known foreign asset management firms (such as Carmignac, Schroders and BlackRock), while as of the end of November, they had withdrawn a net total of EUR10bn from funds by DWS, Allianz Global Investors, Union Investment and Deka.
Regulatory uncertainties may represent a sword of Damocles for the rapidly-growign ETF markets, according to a study by State Street Global Advisors, cited by Asian Investor. The rapid growth of the ETF market cannot conceal the fact that many products (commodity, inverse, leveraged and actively-managed products) are causing some concern among regulators. US regulators are asking questions about the future of commodities products, for example, particularly about the impact of speculative trading on underlying commodity prices. Though some commodity ETF funds invest in the physical commodities themselves, most use futures to replicate such an exposure, which may cause market distortions. The Securities and Exchange Commission and the US Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) may soon propose new regulations, according to the study. The CFTC is said to favour the introduction of limits to the size and market share of ETFs.
Agefi reports, citing data compiled by the International Investment Funds Association in cooperation with Efama in Europe, that outflows from money market funds up to the end of September last year in 45 countries gathered pace. Outflows in third quarter totalled EUR198bn, compared with EUR156bn in second quarter. Funds had assets of EUR3.766trn, slightly less than one quarter of the overall total for the sector.
Citywire reports that Deutsche Asset Management (DeAM) will help two of its specialised managers to create their own management boutiques. DeAM will not invest in the new firms which will be led by two of its current heads, Aliver Kratz, head of DeAM’s global thematic strategies, and Janet Campagna, in charge of quantitative management at the firm. However, it will act as a consultant to the new firms, and will provide them assistance where necessary in areas such as legal compliance and public relations. Deutsche Bank says that the two new firms will begin operations in second quarter 2010.
The agency Steria Mummert Consulting has tested the customer services and Internet offerings of 99 fund management firms in Germany. It awarded quality ratings of five stars to four major asset management firms (those with over 15 funds on sale): Union Investment (co-operative banks), DJE Kapital, Deka (savings banks), and Hansainvest (an affiliate of Signal Iduna). Two niche players (with 8 to 15 funds on sale), Berenberg and Star Capital, also earned five stars. In 2008, Steria Mummert awarded five stars to a total of nine asset management firms.
In the space of seven months, since the launch of its activities in the United Kingdom, Vanguard has achieved GBP500m in assets under management. The US giant introduced eleven exchange-traded funds in June 2009, which were well-received by both institutional and retail investors, Investment Week reports.
The Merseyside Pension Fund (GBP4.2bn in assets under management) has launched a RFP for three mandates in the area of sustainable investment, totalling GBP500m, Responsible Investor reports. The three mandates are for emerging markets equities, Japan, and the Pacific region. All three were previously managed by Nomura Asset Management, which may submit bids in the new RFP after a seven-year term, the maximum allowed by the fund.
With the Reserve Primary Fund meltdown a recent memory, the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday introduced new regulations which require money market funds to hold more liquid top-rated assets, the Wall Street Journal reports. Money market funds will also be required to publish their net asset value more frequently, while the average duration to maturity of assets in the portfolio will be reduced to 60 days from 90 days currently. This could cut into performance, reducing it by a further 0.10%, says Pete Crane, president of the research firm Crane Data. This is not good news for money market fund management firms, which have already seen redemptions due to low returns. Investors withdrew USD540bn from money market funds in 2009, bringing assets down to USD3.3trn.
Agefi Switzerland reports that assets under management at the hedge fund selection firm Gottex fell once again in the fourth quarter of 2009, from a total of USD8.23bn in September to USD8.13bn at the end of the year. The performance of investments remained positive. Gottex values the contribution of investments at USD10m in fourth quarter and USD635m in 2009. With the end of the period of turbulence in sight, Gottex is setting itself ambitious objectives. The good performance of its main products will bring it a share of the spoils as investments flow back into institutional funds this year. Its main strategy, market neutral, will pass its peak in June 20007 in the second half of this year, meaning that performance commissions may be charged again. Gottex is also planning to develop UCITS III-compliant products, with the first launch of such a fund to come in the next few months.
BBVA announced on Wednesday that net profits for its retail banking and asset management division for 2009 as a whole were up 30.5% to slightly over EUR1bn. As of 31 December, assets under management totalled EUR49.97bn, 1.9% less than at the end of September, but assets in investment funds, at EUR32.8bn, make the group the largest Spanish asset management firm, with a market share of 19.3%. According to statistics from Inverco, funds from BBVA have a total of EUR33.2bn in assets as of the end of 2008. For Spanish pension funds, assets increased in one year by 6.8%, to slightly over EUR17.17bn.
L’Echo reports, citing labour union sources, that ten employees in private banking activities of BNP Paribas in Portugal have been let go. “The reshuffle comes at the time of the firm’s merger with Fortis. BNP Paribas is using this as an occasion to push through other reorganizations,” the source says. The ten employees were laid off from a team of about 40 people who are employed under more favourable financial conditions than the applicable legal norms, due to the intervention of the European Commission in the management of the French bank BNP Paribas, the Belgian newspaper points out.
The French national pension fund, the Fonds de réserve pour les retraites (FRR), announced on 27 January that it has awarded two mandates for management of transition operations, to Goldman Sachs International and Russell Implementation Services Limited (Frank Russell Company group). The two mandates were awarded following a restricted RFP launched on 20 May 2009. The mission of the asset management firms will be to undertake centralised trading of financial instruments for the FRR in order to construct portfolios of financial assets with the best possible cost and confidentiality conditions.
Mike Durbin, president of Institutional Wealth Services (USD392.7bn), Sanjiv Michandani, president of National Financial (the clearing platform, with USD550m in assets), and Ed Orazem, president of Family Office Services, will report directly to Gerald McGraw, head of Fidelity Institutional. Mutual Fund Wire observes that the reshuffle follows the announcement of the departure of Charles Goldman, who was head of custody and settlement at Fidelity, and will be leaving the company at the end of March.
Bernhard Wenger has been appointed as head of sales to institutionals at the Austrian fund management firm C-Quadrat Investment. He will be in charge of Austria, Switzerland, and central and eastern Europe. Wenger was previously Director Institutional Sales Global Banking and Markets at HSBC Trinkhaus in Düsseldorf.
The hedge fund AHL, from the alternative management firm Man Group, lost more than USD700m last week, the Financial Times reports. The fund, which has USD21.7bn in assets, lost 3.57% of its net assets between 18 and 22 January. The losses follow a tough year in 2009 for the fund, the only negative year it has had since its inception 23 years ago. Last month, AHL was already reporting weekly losses on the same scale (-4.3% in the first week of December). These losses are an embarrassment for Man, as the asset management firm is seeking to boost its assets. Man recently launched two UCITS versions of AHL open to retail investors.
Toughened regulations for banks and a major reduction in bonuses at those institutions will incite City investment bankers to look for jobs in sectors which are less exposed and less closely regulated, such as hedge funds and private equity, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. Headhunters such as the agency Heidrick & Struggles say that they have been flooded with inquiries from bankers seeking to do so.
Thames River Capital will launch a UCITS III compliante real estate fund in first quarter 2010, the Thames River Real Estate Securities Fund. This fund will be managed by James Wilkinson and Marcus Phayre-Mudge, and will offer weekly liquidity and a high level of transparency for investments concentrated on publicly-traded real estate firms in Europe. According to a statement from Thames River Capital, the fund will seek to outperform the benchmark index, the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed Europe Capped Index in pounds Sterling. Stock-picking will follow a bottom-up approach enriched by expertise in the area. Gross exposure to real estate shares will range from 80% to 160% of net assets, while net exposure will be within a range of 60% to 140%. Primary characteristics Structure: UCITS III fund domiciled in Ireland Asset classes: capitalisation and distribution shares in pounds Sterling, capitalisation shares in Euros and Norwegian Kroner Performance commission: 15% on performance exceeding the benchmark (FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed Europe Capped Index in pounds Sterling) Annual management fees: 1.5% (retail), 1% (I) Minimal retail investment: EUR10,000/GBP10,000, NOK100,000 Minimal institutional investment: EUR2.5m/GBP2/5m, NOK25m
Index provider Dow Jones Indexes announced on Wednesday, 27 January that Credit Suisse AG will use the Dow Jones Industrial Average index as the basis for one of its ETF products, the XMTCH (IE) Dow Jones Industrial Average. In addition, the Dow Jones EURO STOXX 50 Index will be the basis for the XMTCH (IE) Dow Jones EURO STOXX 50. The two ETFs will be available on the Swiss stock exchange.
According to the most recent quarterly study by BNY Mellon Asset Servicing, diversified funds and pension funds in the United Kingdom finished the year 2009 with returns of 3.1% in fourth quarter. For the year as a whole, median returns come to 20.5%. The weight of UK equities in portfolios continued to increase in fourth quarter, from 0.7% to 38.2%, compared with an all-time low of 35.5% in first quarter 2009. Global equities remained stable, while allocations to money markets and bonds contracted.
La BCE a déjà fait beaucoup pour la Grèce. A l’avenir, elle pourrait faire encore beaucoup plus sans même le laisser paraître... Regardons bien les choses d’abord. Le problème de financement de l’économie grecque va au-delà de la crise souveraine. Sur les 550 milliards de dette extérieure accumulée par ce pays (158% du PIB), 300 milliards sont certes de la dette publique, mais 160 milliards sont de la dette bancaire. Car ce sont bien les banques grecques qui financent pour l’essentiel le gouvernement hellénique. Et ces banques se refinancent auprès des marchés européens, si bien que 85% de la dette extérieure grecque est détenue par les autres pays de la zone euro, près de la moitié dans les portefeuilles d’assureurs, de banques et autres institutions financières françaises et allemandes. Aider la Grèce c’est donc assurer la stabilité du système financier de la zone euro, une tâche qui incombe à la BCE.
Selon le quotidien belge L’Echo, le fonds de pension de l’Inno a intenté une action en justice devant le tribunal de commerce de Bruxelles contre Petercam, en raison d’une mauvaise gestion et des pertes d’environ 20 % pour le fonds qui regroupe une partie importante des assurances groupe des travailleurs de l’Inno. Le fonds de solidarité réclame 2,3 millions d’euros de dommages et intérêts à Petercam, qui attribue les pertes à la mauvaise tenue des marchés financiers et non à une mauvaise gestion.
En décembre, les hedge funds australiens ont généré un performance de 1,11 %, soit une performance annuelle de 17,41 % pour 2009, indique Hedgeweek, citant des données de Australian Fund Monitors. Les hedge funds equity based ont gagné 2,08 % en décembre (+24,66 % sur 2009), les fonds alternatifs investis sur d’autres classes d’actifs ont perdu 0,69 %, et gagné 7,94 % en 2009.
Afin de ne pas perdre leur avance sur le marché espagnol des ETF face à l’arrivée de nouveaux concurrents étrangers, le BBVA et Lyxor Asset management (Société Générale) vont lancer de nouveaux produits cette année. Maintenant que les ETF au format de sicav vont être autorisés, les iShares de BlackRock et les db x-trackers de la Deutsche Bank vont pouvoir débarquer en Espagne.Lyxor compte lancer entre 10 et 15 produits au premier trimestre, indique Adrián Juliá, directeur des produits cotés chez Société Générale en Espagne. Parmi les nouveaux ETF, Lyxor prévoit des produits sur les matières premières, des «short» et, si la BME accorde une licence, un fonds répliquant l’un des indices de la gamme Ibex.Le BBVA pour sa part prévoit d'élargir son offre principalement avec des ETF obligataires, de matières premières et «short». Il envisage aussi de faire coter ses ETF dans d’autres pays latino-américains après avoir déjà pris pied sur le marché mexicain.
Allfunds Bank sera l’organisme de commercialisation en Espagne des 14 premiers fonds que la Banque de Luxembourg (groupe Crédit Mutuel-CIC) vient de faire enregistrer par la CNMV, rapporte Funds People.Ces fonds sont les suivants : BL Bond Dollar, BL Bond Euro, BL Emerging Markets, BL Equities America, BL Equities Dividend, BL Equities Europe, BL Equities Horizon, BL Global 30, BL Global 50, BL Global Bond, BL Global Equities, BL Global Flexible, BL Optinvest et enfin BL Global 75.
Mardi, Munich Ré a annoncé dans un avis relayé par la Deutsche Börse que Warren Buffett lui a indiqué avoir franchi le 18 janvier le seuil des 3 % de son capital et détenir au total 3,045 % des droits de vote, dont 2,994 % directement. Sur la base du cours de clôture de mardi, cela représente environ 660 millions d’euros.
Seuls cinq «grands» gestionnaires d’actifs, dont trois français, sont parvenus fin décembre à classer au moins 50 % de leur gamme commercialisées en Allemagne parmi celles affichant la plus forte proportion de fonds notés A et B par Feri EuroRating Services, dans la catégorie «plus de 25 fonds».Il s’agit, dans l’ordre d’Oddo Asset Management, avec 18 fonds A ou B sur 31 commercialisés en Allemagne, soit 58,1 %, devant State Street, avec 17 fonds sur 31 (54,8 %) et Threadneedle, avec 24 fonds sur 44 (54,5 %. Les deux suivants sont Rothschild & Cie Gestion, avec 17 fonds sur 32 (53,1 %) et Groupama AM avec 25 fonds sur 50 (50 %). Natixis Global Associates se classe neuvième, avec 39 fonds A et B sur 99, soit 39,4 %.Parmi les sociétés de gestion ayant jusqu'à 25 fonds distribués en Allemagne, les dix premiers (sur 59 ) affichent tous des taux supérieurs à 50 % de A et AB, MFS arrive en tête avec 75 % (9 fonds sur 12), devant Vanguard Investments avec 70 % (7 sur 10) et M&G Investments avec 64,3 % (9 suir 14). CamGestion se classe 4ème avec 60,9 %, ProBTP Finance étant 5ème avec 58,3 % et Covea Finance 6ème avec 57,1 %. Lazard Frères Gestion et Comgest arrivent respectivement en septième et neuvième positions, avec des taux de 55,6 % et de 53,3 % de fonds notés A et B.