P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } JP Morgan Asset Management is planning to reduce its annual fees for the JPM Emerging Markets trust to 0.75% from 1%, if assets in the fund reach GBP800m after 1 July, Money Marketing reports. Assets under management in the strategy managed by Richard Tetherington currently total GBP688m, The performance commission will be maintained at 10%. In second half 2013, the trust was down 5.7%, while the MSCI Emerging Markets Index was down by only 1.4%.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Invesco Real Estate has officially announced the recruitment of Etienne Dupuy as director for Europe of asset management (see Newsmanagers of 18 February 2014). He will be based in Paris, alongside Paul Joubert, director for Europe of transactions, and will be responsible for leading valuation projects for European assets, and will oversee a team of 16 asset management and real estate professionals located in 6 European countries. In this role, he joins the Investment Committee as well as the Executive Board Europe.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Investors are heading for bond ETFs in large numbers, the Wall Street Journal reports. Bond ETFs listed in the United States took in USD16bn between 1 and 21 February, according to TrimTabs Investment Research. It is expected to bring in the largest month since the launch of the first bond ETF in 2002, and double the monthly record set in May 2012 (USD84.bn). Among the ETFs which have benefited from this trend are the iShares 3-7 Year Treasury Bond ETF, which has more than doubled its size to USD6.3bn, after receiving USD3.8bn since the beginning of February. The Pimco 7-15 Year U.S. Treasury Index ETF has seen its assets multiplied by six after subscriptions of USD57.3m.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Morgan Stanley Wealth management has announced an addition to its range of consulting services for defined contribution retirement programmes, with the introduction of a new discretionary investment programme. The new programme allows retirement heads at Morgan Stanley and Graysone to assume some fiduciary responsibilities to assist the providers of retirement plans with allocation decisions and complex selections. The providers may use Morgan Stanley models based on risk, or new target date portfolios put in place by Morgan Stanley Wealth Management.
BNY Mellon on February 24 announced that it has signed an agreement to acquire the remaining 65% interest of HedgeMark International, LLC, a current affiliate and a provider of hedge fund managed account and risk analytic services. It has held a 35% ownership stake in HedgeMark since 2011. BNY Mellon will integrate HedgeMark’s capabilities with its Global Risk Solutions offeringsThe deal is expected to close in the second quarter, subject to regulatory approval. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed. Founded in 2009 and headquartered New York, HedgeMark assists in the structuring, oversight, and risk monitoring of hedge funds, specifically dedicated managed accounts.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In a long article, the Wall Street Journal discusses the departure of Mohamed El-Erian from Pimco, where he was CEO, and seeks to paint the mood which reigns at the US asset management firm, with its founder, the emblematic Bill Gross. “A high-pressure work environment that turned less collegial over the past year, a deteriorating relationship between the two senior executives and certain decisions by Mr. Gross that confused some employees” are said to be responsible for the departure of El-Erian. In June last year, Gross and El-Erian, who had long been considered a successor, confronted each other publicly over the subject of the conduct of the founder of the firm, the WSJ reports. In November, the executive board tried to make peace between them. El-Erian was offered more power. But he announced that he would be leaving. “You can’t leave,” Gross protested. “We need you.” Some thought that the two men would eventually overcome their differences. At the beginning of this year, El-Erian agreed to work with a mediator to fin a new way of making the company work, but Gross rejected the mediator. At the end of January, El-Erian therefore announced to Gross that he had taken his decision and left. The WSJ article also relates that Gross is a very demanding boss, that the working conditions are difficult, but that the firm pays some of the best salaries in the world of asset management.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } “A good year for asset management,” the chairman of the board at La Banque Postale, Rémy Weber, said at a presentation of the bank’s results. Assets under management at affiliates of the asset management unit of La Banque Postale last year rose 3.5%, to EUR150bn. Net banking proceeds are up 11.9% to EUR134m. Management costs ere stable at EUR68m, while gross operating results were up 27.2%, to EUR66m. The cost/income ratio improved by tens of basis points, to 52.7%. Net inflows at La Banque Postale Asset Management totalled over EUR900m, excluding CNP, driven by the dynamism of institutional clients and despite outflows from the retail segment. The good performance of the markets and the performance of management have also brought in a level of assets at the end of 2013 more than EUR4.5bn higher than 2012.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Syz & Co is opening its doors on the Scandinavian market. The Swiss banking group on 25 February announced that in Sweden it has registered 12 of its Oyster funds. The range is already registered in 10 European countries. The choice of Sweden is no mistake. With EUR270m invested, “the Swedish investment fund market is an important market in Europe, and 76% of Swedes save in funds,” says Syz & Co. Like other European countries, Oyster will sell its funds to institutional investor clients, including pension funds, life insurers and professional intermediaries such as banks, asset management firms, platforms and distribution networks.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Axa Investment Managers (Axa IM) has made two recruitments as additions to its Asian bond team, Citywire Global reveals. Jim Veneau has been appointed as the new head of credit for Asia, while Christy Lee has been appointed as a manager in the Asian fixed income team. Veneau, former chief investment officer at HSBC Global Asset Management, previously based in the United States, will be responsible for Asian credit and fixed income portfolios, and will also ensure development of the credit and fixed income strategy of Axa IM in Asia. Lee, for her part, joins Axa IM in Hong Kong from UBS Asset Management, where she had been a portfolio managing partner. She will now be responsible for the development and execution of credit strategy at AXA IM, focusing on the pan-Asian credit market.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Northern Trust is strengthening its positions in Asia-Pacific. The asset management firm, based in Chicago, on 25 February announced the opening of a representative office in Malaysia to assist its current institutional clients to develop its activities in the country and the region. It becomes the seventh affiliate of the firm in Asia. To direct the new location, Northern Trust has recruited Ariani Rustam from Bank Negara Malaysia, the central bank of the country. Before joining Northern Trust, she served for 12 years in the institution where she was senior executive in charge of risk management, operations, quantitative analysis, and in the past five years, director of the External Fund Management division, in which she participated in the introduction of new asset classes to diversify the investment of reserves from the Malaysian central bank. The Asia-Pacific region already represents a major area for growth at Northern Trust. Its assets under custody have risen by 26% per year between 2008 and 2013, while its assets under management have increased by 15% per year over the past five years.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Legg Mason Global Asset Management is adding to its team in Italy with the appointment of Stefano Colombo as head of client relations, Investment Europe reveals. Before joining Legg Mason, Colombo was in charge of client service at State Street Global Advisors, after working at PwC in its division dedicated to the financial services industry, and more particularly in asset management and private banking.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }Nordea has signed an agreement withBanca Popolare di Vicenza, by the terms of which the Italian bankwill distribute the 66 sub-funds of the Nordea I Sicav which arelicensed for sale in Italy, Bluerating reports.P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Robeco has merged its natural resources and infrastructure equities funds into a single fund specialised in trends in global growth, Citywire reports. The new fund entitled Robeco Global Growth Trends Equities will be managed by Henk Grrotvels and Marco van Lent.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The European acquisition financing landscape is changing considerably due to an increase in liquidity and a rapid inflow of alternative sources of capital offering new products, according to the 2014 report from DLA Paper on European acquisition financing, which surveyed more than 250 providers of debt, advising, sponsors and companies active in European financing markets. At the start of the year 2014, the outlooks for the European acquisition financing market appear much more optimistic than 12 years ago, with 70% of respondents expecting an increase in transaction activity this year, compared with 51% last year. In addition to a gradual increase in liquidity from traditional lenders, sponsors now have access to a wider range of debt providers, such as private debt fonds, bond funds and institutional investors. Private debt funds have a profound impact on the European market, participating in more than 50 deals in 2013, a significant increase over 2012. Given the volume of private funds raised and in pgrogess, with more than 30 having already raised funds, or in the process of doing so according to funds qurveyed. - this trend is expected to increase in 2014.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } St James’s Place has declared its appetite for growth. At the publication of its annual results, the British asset and wealth management firm has announced that it is “in advanced talks” to acquire Henley group, an investment advising firm which has GBP400m (USD665m) in assets under management, and 4,000 expatriate clients in Hong Kong, Singapore and Shanghai. It is the firm’s first attempt as part of a more long-term strategy of international expansion, which will target British clients living in the Middle East if the Asian experiment is as successful as hoped, says David Bellamy, CEO of St James’s Place. The British firm dares to declare its ambitions at a time when it has published impressive results. In 2013, St James’s Place earned GBP190.7m in pre-tax profits, up 42% compared with 2012. Its net inflows totalled GBP4.3bn, up 28% year on year, bringing assets under management to GBP44.3bn, up 27% compared with 2012.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Henderson Global Investors has promoted two fixed income managers in order to support John Pattullo and Jenna Barnard, FundWeb reports. Nicholas Ware has been appointed as co-manager of the Fixed Interest Monthly Income fund (GBP719.2m in assets) to work alongside John Pattullo and Jenna Barnard. Meanwhile, Rebecca Morris-Charles has been appointed as deputy manager for the Preference & Bond fund (GBP597.7m), also managed by Pattullo and Barnard.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } About 45.3 million shares in F&C Asset Management, equivalent to a stake of 7.8%, have been traded in a single block at 122 pence per share, the same value as the GBP700m bid by Bank of Montreal (BMO), the Financial Times reports. Aberforth Partners, the sixth-largest shareholder in F&C, is reported to be behind the sale, and BMO is said to be the buyer. F&C shares finished down 0.3% to 124.4 pence. The BMO bid requires the approval of 75% of shareholders. Aviva and the directors of F&C give it support representing 12.3% of capital. But other investors in F&C, including Standard Life, which owns 10.3%, are keeping their options open in case of a rival bid.
La société de gestion spécialiste des marchés émergents Ashmore a accusé des rachats nets de 2,9 milliards de dollars sur les six derniers mois de 2013, pâtissant des sorties sur la classe d’actifs. Les encours ont décliné de 2,7 %. Le bénéfice avant impôts a baissé à 79,5 millions de livres, contre 114,1 millions au premier semestre de l’année.
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } F&C Asset Management has warned investors that income is expected to fall in second half 2013, after a decline in assets under management, Money Marketing reports. The warning comes in a letter to shareholders, laying out the timetable for the acquisition of the firm by BMO Global Asset Management. “Due to the decline in average assets under management in second half 2013, revenues are expected to be lower than in the first half of the year.”
P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Ashmore Group has suffered the full effects of the storm which is rocking emerging markets. The British asset management firm specialised in these markets has published disappointing results for the six first months. After the first half of its year, ending in December 2013, Ashmore Group has seen outflows of USD2.9bn. Although gross inflows have totalled USD7.3bn in the period, redemptions have totalled USD10.2bn. The result is that its assets under management are down 2.7%, to a total of USD75.3bn, compared with USD77.4bn as of the end of June 2013. In such a context, Ashmore Group has seen its earnings fall 18%, from GBP163.7m as of the end fo December 2012, to GBP134.6m as of the end of December 2013. Its pre-tax profits have meanwhile fallen 34%, to a total of EUR79.5m, compared with GBP120.2m one year previously.
La hryvnia poursuit sa chute mercredi et a enfoncé le seuil des 10 contre un dollar. La devise ukrainienne traitait mercredi midi autour de 10,25 contre le billet vert, soit une chute de plus de 5% par rapport au cours de clôture de la veille. Vendredi, avant la chute de Viktor Ianoukovitch, la hryvnia s'échangeait à 8,95 contre un dollar. Les obligations ukrainiennes libellées en dollar, qui avaient connu un rally lundi, connaissent également leur deuxième jour de baisse.
Le bas niveau de l’inflation en Suède rend possibles de nouvelles baisses de taux dans les prochains mois, selon le compte rendu, publié mercredi, de la dernière réunion monétaire de la Riksbank. Le vice-gouverneur Per Jansson a précisé qu’il ne voterait pas en faveur d’un relèvement des taux tant que le taux d’inflation annuel, mesuré par l’indice CPIF, ne serait pas revenu à plus de 1,5%. Il est tombé à 0,4% en décembre, bien plus bas qu’attendu.
L'économie espagnole est en bonne voie d’atteindre une croissance de 1,0% en 2014, un rythme meilleur que celui que Madrid anticipait jusqu'à présent et qui devrait permettre au pays de renouer avec les créations d’emplois pour la première fois en six ans, selon le président du gouvernement Mariano Rajoy. Dans son discours annuel sur l'état de la nation devant le Parlement, il a également déclaré que la croissance devrait s’accélérer en 2015. Les prévisions 2014 du chef du gouvernement espagnol sont conformes à celles que la Commission européenne a publiées hier également.
LBP AM accuse 2,4 milliards d’euros de sorties nettes en 2013, du fait des retraits nets sur les contrats d’assurance vie CNP, dont elle assure la gestion, et de la décollecte nette sur ses fonds destinés au grand public. Elle a collecté auprès des institutionnels et des entreprises.