Apax Partners a annoncé aujourd’hui la signature d’un accord définitif pour l’acquisition du groupe Inseec, l’un des principaux acteurs dans le secteur de l’enseignement supérieur privé en France. Le montant de l’opération soumis à l’accord des autorités réglementaires, est de 200 millions d’euros.Le groupe Inseec était contôlé par Career Education Corporation, une société américaine spécialisée dans l’enseignement supérieur.le groupe Inseec comprend 11 collèges en France ( Paris , Bordeaux , Lyon et Chambéry) et à l'étranger (Monaco , Londres, Chicago) et est soutenu par un réseau de 200 universités partenaires, indique un communiqué.
Fidelity vient de lancer deux nouveaux fonds qui vont enrichir sa gamme «multi-asset income», rapporte Money Marketing. Les deux nouveaux fonds, Fidelity Multi Asset Balanced et Fidelity Multi Asset & Growth, seront co-gérés par Eugene Philalithis et Nick Peters.Les deux véhicules viseront un rendement compris entre 4% et 6%, le premier ayant pour objectif une performance totale de 6,5%, le second 7%.Avec une allocation obligataire de 50%, le fonds équilibré aura une allocation tactique pouvant varier dans une fourchette de 20% à 60% dans les actions et les infrastructures et une volatilité attendue de 7,5%.Avec une allocation obligataire de 25%, le Growth & Income fund aura une allocation tactique pouvant varier dans une fourchette de 25% à 80% dans les actions et les infrastructures avec une volatilité attendue de 11%.
Le service marketing d’OppenheimerFunds a été renforcé par le recrutement de Peter Mintzberg comme senior vice president, strategy & market planning, après avoir été head of marketing ainsi que head of strategy Latin America & Iberia chez BlackRock.De son côté, Stephen Tisdalle, devient senior vice president, brand marketing. Il vient d’Ogilvy & Mather où il était managing director responsable des stratégies marketing services.Quant à Rupa Athreya, qui était head of strategy chez Chase Wealth Management, elle devient head of product development chez OppenheimerFunds.Le gestionnaire new-yorkais a par ailleurs annoncé qu’il muscle son pôle multi classes d’actifs avec la création d’un global multi-asset group (GMAG) qui comprend neuf gérants de portefeuille et analystes sous la responsabilité de Mark Hamilton, CIO, market allocation, qui a rejoint la société en avril.Parmi les spécialistes du GMAG, Oppenheimer Funds a muté le gérant du Oppenheimer Currency Opportunities Funds, qui devient vice president, macro strategist.Deux nouvelles embauches complètent l'équipe. Dokyoung Lee devient senior vice president, director of research, qui vient d’AllianceBernstein. D’autre part, Laura Lawson, devient vice president, senior client portfolio manager. Elle travaillait auparavant pour Brandywine Global et sera subordonné à Kamal Bhatia, senior vice president et head of fixed income & alternative products.
Pour son fonds immobilier Fidelity Eurozone Real Estate Fund, Fidelity Real Estate Investment Management , filiale de gestion de fonds immobiliers de Fidelity Worldwide Investments, a acheté le complexe de bureaux «Le Verdi» à Issy-les-Moulineaux près de Paris. Cet ensemble sert de siège mondial à Nestlé Waters. L’acquisition a été financée entre autres par un crédit garanti de 22 millions d’euros.
«Compte tenu de l’environnement de faibles taux d’intérêt ainsi que de la baisse des valeurs liquidatives et de la fermeture des remboursements de plusieurs des fonds immobiliers du portefeuille (Axa Immoselect, Axa Immosolutions, UBS 3 Sector Real Estate, DEGI German Business et DEGI Global Business)», la banque privée allemande Berenberg «estime qu’il n’est très vraisemblablement plus possible de tenir les objectifs de son fonds de fonds immobiliers Berenberg Select Income Universal*". Ce fonds sera donc progressivement liquidé d’ici au 30 septembre 2014, indique un communiqué, précisant que, depuis le 23 octobre, les souscriptions et rachats sont suspendus.Dans un premier temps, Berenberg va vendre les 57 % de l’encours du fonds (151,67 millions d’euros au 22 octobre) détenus sous forme d’obligations. Le montant correspondant sera très rapidement distribué aux porteurs.Pour les 43 % restants, les remboursements dépendront de ceux perçus par le fonds de la part des fonds immobiliers en liquidation qui figurent dans son portefeuille, au fur et à mesure de leurs ventes d’actifs.* Codes Isin : DE0002016441 et DE000A0RB9L1
Sans pour autant dénoncer sa coopération avec Deka, le gestionnaire d’actifs central des caisses d'épargne allemandes, la Sparkasse Bremen, caisse d’épargne de Brême, a annoncé le lancement de huit fonds de droit allemand dont la société de gestion est le hambourgeois Hansainvest et la banque dépositaire Donner & Reuschel, rapporte Fonds professionell.Les fonds concernés sont les suivants :BremenKapital Kompakt Ertrag (ISIN: DE000A1J67B6)BremenKapital Kompakt Ertrag Plus (ISIN: DE000A1J67G5)BremenKapital Kompakt Wachstum (ISIN: DE000A1J67J9)BremenKapital Kompakt Dynamik (ISIN: DE000A1J67F7)BremenKapital Aktien (ISIN: DE000A1J67E0)BremenKapital Renten Standard (ISIN: DE000A1J67C4)BremenKapital Renten Offensiv (ISIN: DE000A1J67H3)BremenKapital Zertifikate (ISIN: DE000A1J67K7)
Les mesures d'économie décidées par le Credit Suisse vont entraîner des suppressions d’emplois dans la gestion de fortune, rapporte le Schweiz am Sonntag. Sur les 650 millions de francs suisses que le secteur doit économiser, près de 400 millions de francs seront liés à des licenciements. Cela correspondrait à environ 1.500 emplois ou 7% de l’effectif, selon le journal qui cite une source «interne à la banque».
Unigestion est en collecte nette depuis le début de l’année, a confié à Newsmanagers Jean-François Hirschel, le directeur marketing global de la société de gestion suisse. Ce dernier n’a toutefois pas dévoilé l’ampleur des souscriptions nettes, préférant attendre la fin de l’année. En 2012, la société était en légère décollecte et au 30 juin elle gérait 10,2 milliards d’euros.Unigestion a eu du succès principalement sur les actions et le private equity. Concernant les fonds de hedge funds, son troisième pôle, Jean-François Hirschel a observé un regain d’intérêt des clients. « Sur les 8-9 premiers mois de 2013, nous avons enregistré le double des appels d’offres que sur l’ensemble de l’année 2012. Cela vient principalement d’Angleterre, de Suisse et d’Allemagne », indique-t-il.Commercialement, Unigestion a « recruté » cinq à dix nouveaux clients, principalement institutionnels, ce qui correspond à son objectif annuel. La société a notamment décroché ses premiers clients au Canada. Un succès qui pousse Unigestion à réfléchir à une implantation locale…La société suisse continue aussi de se développer en Europe, son marché historique. Elle a récemment recruté le finlandais Jussi Louekoski en tant que responsable de la clientèle institutionnelle en Europe du Nord. Elle poursuit ses efforts en Allemagne, en France et en Angleterre. En revanche, Unigestion ne couvre pas l’Europe du Sud et n’a pour l’instant pas l’intention de le faire.Enfin, en Asie, Unigestion pose des jalons et a obtenu récemment à Singapour une licence qui lui permet de commercialiser certains fonds sur place.
La société de gestion italienne Anima sera introduite en Bourse au printemps, rapporte Bluerating. Les coordinateurs globaux sont Goldman Sachs, Banca Imi et UniCredit. La société compte entrer en Bourse avec un flottant de 35-40 %, par le biais d’une offre de vente réalisée par la société qui contrôle l’intégralité du capital, Asset management holding.
A fin septembre, les actifs gérés dans des fonds par InverCaixa Gestión avaient augmenté de 18,2 % à 20,09 milliards d’euros, dont 2,37 milliards de souscriptions nettes pour les neuf premiers mois de l’année, rapporte Funds People. Le gestionnaire d’actifs de la Caixa a ainsi presque triplé sa part du marché des fonds en Espagne, passant de 5,6 % en 2007 à 14,2 % au 30 septembre.
Sous le titre «comment investir avec la famille March et gagner de l’argent, que l’Ibex monte ou baisse», Cinco Días rapporte que la sicav de la famille majorquaine March, Torrenova de Inversiones, est devenue la plus grosse sicav espagnole, avec plus de 600 millions d’encours, montant auquel il faut ajouter Torrenova Lux, un compartiment de 400 millions d’euros de la sicav luxembourgeoise March International.Ces deux produits sont gérés par Juan Berberana avec l’objectif de battre l’inflation de la zone euro sur le moyen et le long termes. La grande particularité de Torrenova est d’accepter des souscripteurs externes, avec une mise minimum de seulement 10 euros.Depuis 2002, Torrenova n’a été en perte (de 5,4 %) qu’en 2008. Sur dix ans, la performance moyenne a été supérieure à 4 %, avec une très faible volatilité.
Le britannique BlueBay Asset Management LLP a publié le 25 octobre un communiqué annonçant le lancement du BlueBay Total Return Credit Fund dont l’objectif de performance se situe entre 500 et 1.000 points de base «au-dessus du cycle de crédit» et qui investit dans l’univers «sub-investment grade». Il s’agit d’un fonds coordonné de droit luxembourgeois, dont l’allocation se répartit entre le haut rendement, les «loans», les marché émergents et les obligations convertibles. BlueBay,AM, filiale à 100% de Royal Bank of Canada, n’a initialement pas voulu communiquer aux journalistes le code Isin et le montant des commissions liées à ce fonds. A posteriori, toutefois, la société de communication de BlueBay a précisé que le code Isin du fonds est LU0969341816 pour la part I.
Pour le troisième trimestre, le Government Pension Fund -Global (l’ancien fonds pétrolier norvégien) a enregistré une performance de 5 %, soit 228 milliards de couronnes. Les placements en actions ont généré un gain de 7,6 % pendant que ceux en obligations rapportaient 0,3 %, soit 0,1 point de plus que l’indice de référence, précise Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM) à laquelle la Banque de Norvège a délégué la gestion du fonds. La performance du portefeuille immobilier est ressortie pour sa part à 4,1 %.Par ailleurs, comme la couronne norvégienne s’est affaiblie contre plusieurs monnaies principales durant le trimestre sous revue, l’effet de change a été positif de 31 milliards de couronnes, tandis que le gouvernement norvégien dotait le fonds de 58 milliards de couronnes.Au 30 septembre, l’encours du fonds ressortait à 4.714 milliards de couronnes, dont 63,6 % investis en actions, 35,5 % en obligations et 0,9 % en immobilier (l’objectif de long terme est de monter la poche immobilier à 5 %).
The British firm BlueBay Asset Management LLP on 25 October released a statement announcing the launch of the BlueBay Total Return Credit Fund, whose performance objective is 500 to 1,000 basis points “over the credit cycle,” and which invests in the “sub-investment grade” universe. It is a Luxembourg-registered UCITS fund, whose allocation is distributed between high yield, loans, emerging markets and convertible bonds.BlueBay AM, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Royal Bank of Canada, initially did not want to disclose the ISIN coe and commission levels for the fund to journalists. Later, however, the communications company for BlueBay did state that the ISIN code for the fund is LU0969341816 for the I share class.
The Caisse d’Epargne announced before the weekend that it is instituting a new communications relations framework for its clients and prospective private management clients. The programme aims to make the brand more visible and reaffirm its expertise in the private management market serving a wide range of clients. In order to strengthen its positioning on this market, the Caisse d’Epargne has announced the ambitious objective of becoming “a bank of reference for the regions serving private management clients.” The new framework will help to make clients more loyal and strengthen their relationships, making the expertise of the Caisse d’Epargne more visible.
Douglas Beck, managing director and head of product development at DWS (Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management) since 2006, has been recruited as head of investment capability management at Fidelity, Mutual Fund Wire reports.
French advisers are particularly interested in finding out about a new approach to portfolio constuction, according to a survey by Natixis Global Asset Management in August and September, covering 300 financial advisers, 150 of them in France.Advisers are very open to the idea of using new methods to bring investors appropriate diversification of their portfolios. Nearly two thirds of French advisers (64.7%) admit that for most advisers, a traditional allocation of 60% to equities and 40% to bonsd is no longer appropriate to obtain returns and manage risk (49%) in other countries.Two thirds (67.4%) also admit that financial advisers need to replace the traditional portfolio diversification and construction techniques with new methods (compared with 58.5% in other countries). “That should absolutely involve training and assistance for financial advisers. With that in mind, we have set up our Durable Portfolio Construction approach ,in order to help them construct portfolios which are able to stand up and adapt to unpredictable changes in market conditions,” says Christophe Point, director of Natixis Global AM in France. “This policy has met with strong interest, particularly in France: four adviseres out of five (80%) think they need more assistance with the construction of portfolios for their clients.” Lastly, so-called “alternative” investments are still underused as new investment strategies.
As of the end of September, assets under management by InverCaixa Gestión in funds were up 18.2% to EUR20.09bn of which EUR2.37bn were in net subscriptions in the first nine months of the year, Funds People reports.The asset management firm of La Caixa has nearly tripled its market share for funds in Spain, from 5.6% in 2007 to 14.2% as of 30 September.
Helen Copinger-Symes, who for six years served as director of relationships with consultants at AllianceBernstein, and then became head of business development & client relationships for defined benefit activities, has been recruited by State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) as managing director and head of consultant relations for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA).
The automation rate for orders and the use of ISO messaging standards has risen slightly in the first half of 2013 to a total of 77.8%, compared with 77.7% in December 2012, according to the most recent report by the European fund and asset management association (EFAMA), in partnership with Swift. The volume of orders totalled 14.3 million, up 15% compared with the second half of 2012. In Luxembourg, the automation rate for orders rose 1.2% to 74.9%, while in Ireland, the rate contracted to 83.9% in second quarter, compared with 85.3% in fourth quarter 2012. “In first quarter 2013, the increase in automation and standardisation has continued due to increased use of ISO messaging standards. This is good news for the sector, since more automation goes hand in hand with improved cost-effectiveness. In the longer term, an automation rate of more than 80%, supported by an ISO standardisation rate of 50%, will represent a mid-term objective,” says Peter de Proft, CEO of Efama, in a statement.
With Spain joining the ranks of European markets that have emerged from recession, investors committed record-setting amounts of new money to Europe and Spain equity Funds during the third week of October, EPFR Global reports. Investors also warmed to emerging markets equity funds as fears of ‘tapering’ by the US Federal Reserve faded deeper into 2014.Overall, equity funds took in a net USD21.4 billion during the week ending October 23, according to statistics from EPFR Global.Bond funds absorbed a modest USD527 million. Europe high yield funds and Europe bond funds, however, posted significant inflows. Commitments to Spain bond funds crossed the USD4 billion mark.Flows into money market funds were just shy of USD66 billion as the agreement on the US debt ceiling lifted the specter of default that drove the previous week’s massive outflows.
At a recent conference in London, Dominic Rossi, global CIO for equities, has explained that Fidelity Worldwide Investment takes extra-financial data into consideration in its management process, but that as it does not have all the necessary analysis capacities internally, the firm buys in information from an external provider, MSCI, for environmental, social and governance (ESG) ratings.“However, we try to go beyond these figures,” says Rossi. “And, since we can’t specialise in all three components of ESG, Fidelity Worldwide Investment has chosen to focus on the ‘G.’ We employ a team of six people in Europe for engagement, and these specialists are responsible for focusing on appointments and remuneration in particular. On this latter point in particular we have held specific meetings with 150 companies in 2012.”
Funds People reports that Natixis Global Asset Management has registered a selection of seven funds with the CNMV with a view to selling them on the Spanish market, from its SRI division, Mirova.They include five equity funds (Mirova Global Climate Change, Mirova Global Sustainable Equity, Mirova Europe Sustainable Equity, Mirova Euro Sustainable Equity and Mirova Europe Life Quality) and two bond funds (Mirova Euro Sustainable Corporate Bonds and Mirova Euro Sustainable Aggregate).
Following very large inflows into the Alken Small Caps Europe recently, Alken has decided to hard close the strategy to new subscriptions as of 25 October 2013 at 16:00 CET. The reason behind this is to protect existing investors’ returns that could be jeopardised by these strong and sudden inflows into the strategy. The Board of the fund, together with Alken Asset Management will review this decision on an ongoing basis, according to a statement. Such measure does not affect whatsoever the existing shareholders’ right to exit the Sub-Fund at any time, stresses Alken.Alken has already soft closed a first fund at the beginning of the month - Alken Fund European Opportunities.
After two initial waves of mystery visits in 2010 and 2012, the AMF has continued the experiment in 2013, with identical scenarios (riskophilia and riskophobia), to which a new profile has been added (young active client seeking to invest directly in equities). The AMF is seeking to evaluation over the long term the quality of questioning of prospective clients and the pertinence of commercial offerings. By undertaking these mystery visits, the AMF is seeking to strengthen its preventive actions in the area of protecting savings through monitoring of the sales conditions on the market for retail financial products. The new mystery visits carried out in 2013 have repeated the same scenarios as in 2010 and 2012, with two types of clearly differentiated profiles: savings investors who are too averse to risk (riskophobic) and savings investors who are prepared to take a certain dose of risk (riskophilic). In 2013, it was observed that offerings were more differentiated from one scenario to the other, which has accentuated since 2010. Investment products of the OPCVM and PEA type were offered more to riskophilic prospects. A new profile was also tested in April 2013: a young, active homeowner expressing a desire to invest directly in equities. Many client advisers were hesitant to assist with this request. Surprisingly, the PEA was infrequently offered to this prospect. The major findings of visits carried out in 2013 are the following: sometimes insufficient getting to know the prospect, a spontaneous oral presentation of fees which could be perfected, a presentation of the benefits and drawbakcs of products offered hich remains unbalanced. Mystery visits also found some commercial offerings which were manifestly inappropriate even when the sales offers are sometimes more steered by sales policy for the brand than on really taking into account the requests expressed by the prospect.
Under the headline “How to invest and make money with the March family, whether the Ibex is rising or falling,” the Spanish newspaper Cinco Días reports that the Sicav fund of the Madrid March family, Torrenova de Inversiones, has become the largest Sicav in Spain, with more than EUR600m in assets, in addition to which there is also Torrenova Lux, a sub-fund with EUR400m of the Luxembourg Sicav March International.The two products are managed by Juan Berberana, with the objective of beating euro zone inflation over the mid- and long term. The particuarity of Torrenova is to accept external subscribers, with a minimal investment of only EUR10. Since 2002, Torrenova has shown a loss (of 5.4%) only in 2008. Over 10 years, its average performance has been over 4%, with very low volatility.
“Due to the environment of low interest rates and to falling net asset values and the closure of redemptions from several real estate funds in the portfolio (Axa Immoselect, Axa Immosolutions, UBS 3 Sector Real Estate, DEGI German Business et DEGI Global Business),” the German private bank Berenberg “estimates that it is no longer very possible to meet the objectives of its real estate fund of funds Berenberg Select Income Universal (ISIN codes: DE0002016441 and DE000A0RB9L1).”The fund will be gradually liquidated by 30 September 2014, a statement says, adding that from 23 October, subscriptions and redemptions are suspended.Initially, Berenberg will sell 57% of assets in the funds (EUR151.67m as of 22 October) held in the form of fixed incme securities. The corresponding amount will be very rapidly disstibuted to shareholders.For the remaining 43%, redemptions will depend on those received by the fund from real estate funds in the liquidation process held in its portfolio, as these sell assets.
Without ending its co-operation with Deka, the central asset management firm for the German savings banks, the Sparkasse Bremen, the savings bank of Bremen, has announced the launch of eight German-registered funds, whose asset management firm is the Hamburg-based Hansainvest, and the depository bank is Donner & Reuschel, Fonds professionell reports.The funds in question are the following:BremenKapital Kompakt Ertrag (ISIN: DE000A1J67B6)BremenKapital Kompakt Ertrag Plus (ISIN: DE000A1J67G5)BremenKapital Kompakt Wachstum (ISIN: DE000A1J67J9)BremenKapital Kompakt Dynamik (ISIN: DE000A1J67F7)BremenKapital Aktien (ISIN: DE000A1J67E0)BremenKapital Renten Standard (ISIN: DE000A1J67C4)BremenKapital Renten Offensiv (ISIN: DE000A1J67H3)BremenKapital Zertifikate (ISIN: DE000A1J67K7)
For its real estate fund Fidelity Eurozone Real Estate Fund, Fidelity Real Estate Investment Management, the real estate fund management affiliate of Fidelity Worldwide Investments, has acquired the “Le Verdi” office complex in Issy-les-Moulineaux, near Paris. The property is the global headquarters of Nestlé Waters. The acquisition was financed partly by a guaranteed credit of EUR22m.
Fidelity has launched two new funds which come as additions to its “multi-asset income” range, Money Marketing reports. The two new funds, Fidelity Multi Asset Balanced and Fidelity Multi Asset & Growth, will be co-managed by Eugene Philalithis and Nick Peters. The two vehicles will aim for total returns of 4% to 6%, with the first aiming for total returns of 6.5%, and the second for 7%. With a bond allocation of 50%, the balanced fund will have a tactical allocation that may vary from 20% to 60% to equities and infrastructure, and expected volatility of 7.5%. With a bond allocation of 25%, the Growth & Income Fund will aim for a tactical allocation that may vary from 25% to 80% to equities and infrastructures, with an expected volatility of 11%.