M&G Investments has posted net subscriptions in Italy since the beginning of 2013 of over EUR2.5bn, and now has assets of over EUR7.1bn in the country, Andrea Orsi, associate director of M&G Investments Italia, tells Bluerating. “Italy now represents the second largest market for M&G, after the UK,” he says.In 2013, the British firm has formed 10 new distribution agreementswith networks of financial advisers and private banks. Five other agreements are expected to be signed by the end of the year, with three networks of financial advisers and two private banks.In Italy, M&G has 12 employees, who are supported by 10 native Italian speaking people based in London.
In the first nine months of the year, Eurizon Capital, the asset management firm of the Intesa Sanpaolo group, has posted net subscriptions of EUR9.8bn. This allowed it to increase its assets to EUR158bn as of the end of September (+8.6%). The results of operational management came to EUR173m, up by 50.4%.
Matthieu David, head of external distribution at BNP Paribas Investment Partners, has told Bluerating that the French asset management firm will soon start an “ambitious campaign” to relaunch the Parvest platform. In 2013, it says that BNP Paribas IP has seen an acceleration in its activities serving financial adviser networks.
The asset management firm SEB Asset Management, an affiliate of the Swedish banking group SEB, which has been present in France for several years via its funds, is seeking to develop its presence serving French independent financial adviser (IFA) clients. To achieve this, it has recruited Adil Benmakhlouf, previously of Morgan Stanley, as salesperson for France dedicated more partiuclarly to these clients. He is based in London, like all of the team covering France, but regularly travels to France. He works with Laurent Farcy-Briant, head of sales for France and French-speaking Switzerland. In order to win over French IFAs, SEB AM is playing the Scandinavian card, which currently has a favourable image, to the fullest. The range on offer to these clients thus naturally includes three Scandinavian equity funds from SEB which are already registered in France. These are the SEB Nordic Fund, a Scandinavian equity fund managed by Tommi Saukkoriipi, formarly of Nordea, the SEB Nordic Small Cap Fund, a fund specialised in Scandinavian small caps, and the SEB Nordic Focus Fund, a fund based on the best ideas from Scandinavia managers at the firm. This range will soon be complemented by other products, including the Asset Selection (CTA) fund and a quant-managed global equity fund, which will also be made available to institutional investors. Opening to IFAs will allow SEB AM to continue its development in France, which began a few years ago, and which has hitherto been focused on professional clients (fonds of funds, insitutionals). Laurent Farcy-Briant, who joined the firm two and a half years ago to cover the French markte, says that at the time, SEB AM had only EUR12m under management for French clients, who were primarily invested in the SEB Asset Selection fund. These assets now total nearly EUR100m, distributed over a wide variety of products, and a more diversified range of clients.
Following a restricted request for proposals for the 1st lot of contract 2011FRR07 (thematic collective fund mandate – Global Universe), the French national pension fund, the Fonds de réserve pour les retraites (FRR), has decided to select the bids from the following asset management firms: 1. BNP Paribas Asset Management SAS 2. Kleinwort Benson Investors The mandates will be awarded for a duration of four years, renewable for 1 year. The indicative total amount of funds placed for management may total EUR150m. The FRR on 21 September 2012 launched a restricted request for proposals for selection of investment service providers to manage transition operations. At the conclusion of the selection process, the FRR decided to select the bids from the following candidates: · Blackrock Advisors (UK) Limited · Goldman Sachs International· Russell Implementation Services The mandates are awareded for a period of three years, renewable for 1 year.
The CNMV has issued a sales license for Spain to three ETFs from Lyxor UCITS ETF, the SG Europe Quality Income, the CSI 300 A-Share- C-EUR and the BTP 10Y – MTS Italy Government Bond –C- Eur, Funds People reports.
After a slowdown in second half 2012, the Italian real estate sector has finished the first six months of the year with stable evolution, Assogestioni, the Italian association of asset management professionals, reports. Total activities are approaching EUR42bn, slightly up by 0.4% compared with second half 2012. Assets in the 209 funds counted in Italy totalled EUR25.6bn, and gross inflows totalled EUR701m, down compared with EUR981m in December. Redemptions totalled EUR439m. In first half, 9 funds were launched and the average duration for new products is 14 years. The range in the sector is 90% composed of funds reserved for institutional or qualified investors (188 funds for EUR2bn). The 21 retail funds have assets of EUR4.6bn.
The former secretary of the Treasury, Timothy Geithner, has been recruited as president and managing director by the private equity firm Warburg Pincus, the Wall Street Journal reports. Geithner will report directly to the co-CEOs, Charles Kays and Joseph Landy, and will serve full-time in the operational roles at the firm of strategy and management for the group, investor relations, and questions related to investments.
César Zeitouni has left the Exane Archimedes fund, Citywire reveals. The long/short equity specialist was co-manager of the EUR326m fund with Gilles Lenoir since its launch in December 2006. Zeitouni will now concentrate on new fund launches.
The Global Convertible Bond team at RWC, headed up by Davide Basile, has taken over the RWC Cautious Absolute Rate and Currency fund.The fund will be renamed RWC Core Plus and it will be co-managed by Basile and Lakshman Harendran. The objective of the fund will be to generate strong real returns with low volatility. The fund will have a core portfolio of convertible bonds that will be complemented by the use of other asset classes and hedging.Basile’s team currently manage $1.8bn in long only convertible bonds funds having seen net inflow of $595m this year. The approach and asset allocation framework currently used by the team will be extended to RWC Core Plus. It is expected that the new strategy will have many of the benefits of a traditional convertible bond fund but it will have additional flexibility to express the macro views of the team to reduce downside volatility and enhance returns.The fund is a UCITS IV Luxembourg SICAV. It is registered for sale in a number of European countries.
GLG Partners has unveiled the GLG Undervalued Assets fund, Fund Web reports. The new product has received GBP40m in capital, and is expected to be launched on 15 November. Henry Dixon will manage the new portfolio, which will be invested predominantly in British equities with an emphasis on undervalued securities.
Family offices in Hong Kong and Taiwan insurers are among the institutional investors who are showing increasingly marked interest in issues of socially responsible investment (SRI), the asset management firm Impax Asset Management, a specialist in socially responsible investment, claims, Asian Investor reports. Impax, which is 25% controlled by BNP Paribas Investment Partners, is working with the distribution platform of the French group to increase its Asian assets over the past five years. Currently, Asian assets under management from Impax total only GBP50m, half of which originates from australia, out of assets of GBP2.2bn. Several factors, however, militate in favour of this interest for sustainable investment, including a desire on the part of the Chinese government to take measures to combat pollution. But institutional type allocation to sustainable investment remains modest, totalling a maximum of about 5%.
BNP Paribas IP has recruited Tan Puay-Lit, formerly of BlackRock, as head of official Asia-Pacific institutions, and deputy CEO for Singapore, Asian Investor reports. The appointment became efective on 7 November. Puay-Lit previously spent five and a half years as director of institutional clients in Singapore for BlackRock.
As head of Amundi, the largest European asset management firm by assets under management, Yves Perrier admits it: the significant outflows form networks in France, especially Crédit Agricole, has now become a major trend. Despite all this, Amundi is still showing good results since the beginning of the year. It owes this to its international activity, and activities serving institutional investors. Hence the firm's partnership strategy, buying stakes or making acquisitions guided by the firm to make it one of the players who count in the industry.
Schroder GAIA Sirios US Equity, the UCITS format USA long/short equity fund launched in February 2013, whose management is outsourced to a well-known asset manager, John Brennan at Sirios Capital Management, has clearly won over many investors. Due to the modest range of quality UCITS format USA long/short equity funds in Europe, the fund has taken in very strong subscriptions since its launch barely eight months ago, and now has total assets of over USD700m. The Schroder GAIA Sicav, specialised in liquid alternative strategies, adapted to UCITS IV format, now includes 7 specialised funds for different investment strategies (including 5 outsources to external managers and 2 managed internally), with overall assets of over EUR2bn.
The Irish-registered, UCITS-compliant fund Baring European Opportunities Fund, launched in London on 29 October 2013, was licensed last week in France. The new product will be managed by Nick Williams and Colin Riddles, who will manage it in the same way as their Baring Europe Select Trust, a fund whose assets exceed EUR1bn. The portfolio will include an average of 100 positions on a universe of 7,000 businesses.For A-class shares, the minimal subscription is EUR2,500, and annual management fees are 1.5%. An institutional share will also be available.According to information obtained by Newsmanagers, the Baring European Opportunities Fund, whose benchmark index is the MSCI Europe Smallcap Index, is starting up with EUR150m contributed by two institutional investors, one British and one German. The new product will be subject to strong demand due to the fact that the four main competing products now either have suspended subscriptions, or have nearly reached their capacity limits.Since the beginning of the year, net subscriptions to Barings in Europe are estimated at about EUR1.4bn, while the manager has seen outflows of about EUR400m from Asia since May.
The private banking and wealth management unit at the Arbuthnot Banking unit has opnened an office in Dubai in order to develop its activities in the region. Meanwhile, Arbuthnot Latham has recruited four senior bankers for the new unit, Paul Donovan and Kieran McDonnell, previously of Coutts, as directors, as well as Giles Hanson and Peter Casey of HSBC and Barclays, respectively, as associate directors, Clare Doyle, Frances White and David Smith have been appointed as private banking executives.
Aberdeen AM will probably today sign off on the purchase of Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP) from Lloyds Banking Group, to create the first independent publicly-traded fund management firm in Europe, Agefi reports, citing the Sunday Times. The price of about GBP500m (nearly GBP600m), paid in shares, will allow Aberdeen to manage about GBP250bn in assets. Life insurance activities at Scottish Widows will continue to be housed at Lloyds.
Edmond de Rothschild will launch a merchant banking business in London this week, to make the City its largest centre after Paris, Geneva and Luxembourg, the Fiancial Times reports. The group, led by Baron Benjamin de Rothschild, has recruited 20 senior advisers to launch its private banking and corporate finance business, alongside its existing asset management activity. The group now has 100 employees in London, but is planning to increase this number. Christophe de Backer, CEO of Edmond de Rothschild, has told the Financial Times that the private banking and asset management group may put up to 150 employees at its Mayfair offices, and that it is planning to expand if necessary.
Petercam Asset Management has launched a high yield corporate bond fund, Petercam L Bond EuR Corporate High Yield, which will be managed by Thierry Larose and Bernard Lalière. The two are currently responsible for two high yield funds, Petercam L Bonds Higher Yield and Petercam L Bonds EUR High Yield Short Term.
Le groupe Edmond de Rothschild annonce lundi le lancement de son activité de private merchant banking à Londres. Cette nouvelle offre profilée pour une clientèle privée propose des services dans le conseil stratégique et financier, la structuration, le conseil en investissement et la gestion de fortune sur mesure. L'équipe sera menée par Henrick Schliemann.
Le gouvernement italien présentera cette semaine le contenu d’un plan de privatisations destiné à réduire la dette publique, a déclaré le président du Conseil, Enrico Letta. Celui-ci pourrait inclure la cession d’un bloc de titres Eni.
Le surplus de la balance courante en zone euro s’est réduit à 13,7 milliards d’euros en septembre, a annoncé la BCE, contre 17,9 milliards en août. Il s’agit du plus faible excédent mensuel cette année, rappelle BNP Paribas, malgré les chiffres records déjà publiés pour l’Allemagne (19,7 milliards), ce qui suggère que le déséquilibre entre BErlin et les autres pays de la zone euro s’est accentué le mois dernier. Sur douze mois glissants, la zone euro affiche un excédent de sa balance courante à 2,1% du PIB de la région.
Harris Georgiades, le ministre chypriote des finances, a confirmé à Reuters que le pays pourrait lever d’ici à quelques mois ses mesures de contrôle des capitaux. Instaurées début 2013, lors de la crise qui a touché le pays, les mesures ont déjà été assouplies.
La production industrielle américaine a enregistré en octobre un repli de 0,1% lié au recul de la production énergétique et minière. Cette baisse inattendue est la première depuis juillet. La Réserve fédérale explique cette évolution par la fermeture temporaire d’installations pétrolières et gazières menacées par la tempête tropicale Karen dans le golfe du Mexique.
Les députés ont approuvé vendredi la création d’un fonds de 1,5 milliard d’euros pour les collectivités aux prises avec les emprunts toxiques. Les amendements adoptés associent davantage les élus à l’intervention du fonds et ouvrent celui-ci aux établissements publics locaux. Les collectivités seront informées avant toute transaction avec une banque sur les frais de sortie des emprunts et verront l’aide au remboursement anticipé plafonnée à 45%.
Le fonds contrôlé par l’investisseur Bill Ackman est entré au capital des deux groupes de refinancement de crédits immobiliers, qu’un nombre grandissant d’investisseurs jugent sous-évalués. Selon un document transmis à la SEC vendredi, Pershing détient respectivement 9,77% de Freddie Mac et 9,98% de Fannie Mae. Cette prise de participation, qui représente près d’un demi-milliard de dollars, intervient après l’annonce par Fairholm Capital Management de son intention d’acheter, avec d’autres investisseurs, Freddie Mac et Fannie Mae avant de les recapitaliser. Fairholme Funds a acquis des actions préférentielles de Fannie Mae et Freddie Mac d’une valeur nominale de 3,5 milliards de dollars avec une importante décote, ainsi que des actions ordinaires. Les deux groupes, cotés sur le marché au comptant américain, sont sur le point de rembourser la majeure partie des 187 milliards de dollars d’aides publiques reçues pendant la crise.
La chancelière prépare son parti à l’instauration d’un salaire minimum uniforme en Allemagne afin de parvenir à un accord de coalition avec le Parti social-démocrate (SPD). Lors d’un rassemblement des jeunes de la CDU vendredi soir, elle a notamment déclaré que l’exigence posée par le SPD d’un salaire horaire minimum à 8,50 euros «jouera un rôle» à l’avenir.
La banque américaine a annoncé vendredi soir avoir accepté de débourser 4,5 milliards de dollars (3,3 milliards d’euros) pour régler à l’amiable des plaintes déposées par des investisseurs ayant perdu de l’argent dans des actifs adossés à des crédits immobiliers (RMBS), juste avant l’effondrement du marché immobilier aux Etats-Unis. Elle précise avoir conclu un accord avec 21 investisseurs institutionnels dans le cadre de 330 fonds de RMBS émis par elle et par Bear Stearns, établissement racheté par JPMorgan Chase pendant la crise financière. La transaction doit encore être avalisée par les administrateurs de ces fonds qui ont dans un premier temps jusqu’au 15 janvier pour se prononcer, sachant qu’ils peuvent ensuite disposer de 60 jours supplémentaires. Le présent accord n’inclut cependant pas les fonds émis par Washington Mutual, autre société acquise par JPMorgan durant la crise financière.