The widespread use of “value at risk” to measure the risk exposure of funds is a “time bomb” which could provoke a serious crash on the markets, according to Jeremy Monk, chief investment officer at Akro Investicni Spolecnost in Prague, cited by Financial Times fund management. He estimates that in the case of a fall on the equity markets and a rise in volatility, fund managers would have to sell equities, which would exacerbate the fall.
The Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems (CPSS) and the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) on October 15 published for public comment a consultative document on the Public quantitative disclosure standards for central counterparties. In order that the risks related to the use of central counterparties (CCPs) can be properly understood, CCPs need to make relevant information publicly available, as stated in the CPSS-IOSCO Principles for financial market infrastructures, published in April 2012. To provide guidance on what should be disclosed by a CCP and other financial market infrastructures, CPSS and IOSCO published a Disclosure framework in December 2012, primarily covering qualitative data that need relatively infrequent updating (for example, when there is a change to a CCP’s risk management framework). To complement that disclosure framework, the document now being published sets out guidance on the quantitative data that a CCP should disclose more frequently. Comments on the report are invited from all interested parties and should be sent by 13 December 2013.
The financial ratings agency Moody’s on 15 October launched a call for comments on proposed modifications to the ratings methodology for asset management firms. This would more systematically evaluate risk factors concerning alternative management firms, while also increasing the number of risk factors on the balance sheets of traditional asset management firms.
Neil Woodford, a colossus in British asset management, is leaving Invesco Perpetual after a quarter century, the Financial Times reports. Shares in Invesco, its US parent company, fell 5% on the news. Woodford controls half of funds under management at Invesco Perpetual, and some financial advisers predict large-scale redemptions. He has GBP33bn in assets under management (more than any other British fund manager), and has one of the best track records around. The manager hopes to found a new asset management firm in April, once he has left his employer.
The British firm Hargreaves Lansdown has reported growth of 8% in its assets under administration of its first quarter 2013-2014 to the end of September, which have reached a total of GBP39.3bn, comapred with GBP36.4bn at the end of June, according to interim results released on 15 October. The firm calls the activity in first quarter “exceptional,” as this time of year is generaally very quiet. The number of active clients on the platform increased by 20,000 to 528,000. In the first quarter of the previous year, the number of clients increased by only 7,000.
At the 6th annual national ethical investment week in the United Kingdom (13-19 October), the extra-financial research agency EIRIS has determined at assets in “green” and ethical retail funds now total a record GBP12.2bn. They totalled only GBP4bn in 2001. EIRIS counts 80 funds, of which 10 have seen increases of more than 50% in their assets in the twelve months to the end of June 2013, while 23 have seen an increase in their total assets of 20% to 50%.Meanwhile, on the basis of a survey of 2015 adults, EIRIS has found that 18% of respondents would like their pension fund to be totally invested in shares in companies which do not contravene best practices in environmental, social and governance areas.For its part, Triodos Bank has determined that 17 million British citizens potentially hold assets which do not correspond to their ethical convictions. And only 20% of investors say they are aware of the exact percentage of their fund activities, pension fund or stocks and bonds that they hold are genuinely ethical or not.
CPR Asset Management has announced the launch of the CPR Consommateur Actionnaire fund, a European equity fund eligible for investment from PEA accounts. The product has the primary objective of benefiting from household consumer spending worldwide. The managers of the fund, Nicolas Johnson and Caroline Canard, select the best-performing European businesses in sectors which are affectd by household spending. “The investment universe of CPR Consommateur Actionnaire is not limited to the ‘household’ basket but takes an interst in all sectors directly affected by household consumer spending worldwide. It is a fund whose vocation is to track the evolution of ‘trends’ while respecting the profile of household consumption. The particularly of the investment strategy is to construct the portfolio with a balance between the weight of the varius household spending areas,” a statement says. Currently, 10 areas are listed (housing, transportation, health, clothing, leisure, clothing, eduction, consumer, etc.). CharacteristicsISIN code: P share class FR0010258756 / I share class FR0011554237Subscription commission not paid to the FCP maximum 3%Recemption commission not paid to the FCP P and I share classes: noneMaximum annual management fees P share class: 1.50% in cluding all tax / I share class: 1% including all taxPerformance commission P and I share clases: 20% including all tax on performance exceeding the MSCI Europe, up to 2% of net assets
After the success of the Bravo I Fund, with USD2.35bn, which has proven that it is possible to make a lot of money (34% per year) with NPLs, Pimco is preparing to launch the Bravo II (Bank Recapitalization and Value Opportunities), which is expected to raise USD4bn by a closing scheduled for February, Handelsblatt reports.The lead portfolio managers are Dan Ivascyn and Josh Anderson, who also manage the Bravo I.
Philipp Orth, Nadejda de Lousanoff and Umberto Prandi have been recruited for the institutional sales team at Pimco for the German and Austrian markets, and will report to Frank Witt, executive vice president and head of institutional customer relationships for Germany and Austria.The first of these becomes vice president and CRO. He had previously been director of customer relationships at Vescore. De Lousanoff joins from Banesto, where she had been head of distribution of structured products in Germany and the Scandinavian countries for the Spanish firm Santander. She is appointed as head of clients at Pimco.Lastly, Prandi is leaving Infineon Technologies, where he had been manager for mergers and acquisitions, to become a client adviser at Pimco.
According to NDR info radio, the Landesbank of Schleswig-Holstein and Hambourg, HSH Nordbank, in August sold its division HSH Real Estate for a symbolic one euro. That includes real estate funds with assets of EUR2bn and properties valued at EUR320m. A spokesperson for HSH Nordbank declined to comment on the reports, Fondsprofessionell says.
Syed Elias Alhabshi, senior advisor at Threadneedle Investments in Singapore since September 2011, has been appointed as chairman for Malaysia by UK asset manager Threadneedle, which is planning to offer Sharia-compliant products to institutional investors (sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, insurers, government and semi-government entities, businesses and charities).Mohd Farid bin Kamarudin (CEO of Malaysia) is also taking over the duties of senior fixed income fund manager, and will be based in Malaysia. He will report to Clifford Lau, head of fixed income Asia Pacific, Alhabshi and Andrew Chan, chief administrative officer, Asia Pacific. He will be responsible for putting Sharia-compliant investment capacities in place. He will be a senior member of the global investment team. He had previously been executive director and head of sukuks and alternative investments at AMIslamic Funds Management in Malaysia.Lastly, Sabrina Wong has been recruited as a fixed income analyst in Malaysia, and will report to Mohd Farid bon Kamarudian and Clifford Lau. She was previously a fund manager at Investec Asset Management, and also at Bank Negara.
Assets under management in sovereign wealth funds are approaching the USD6trn threahold, according to statistics communicated by the SWF Institute.In October this year, assets under management in SWFs totalled USD5.9998trn. Of this total, slightly over USD3.500trn were in sovereign funds depending on oil and gas resources.
German asset management firms posted net subscriptions in August of EUR3.4bn, of which EUR2.8759bn were for institutional funds, and EUR839.2m for open-ended funds, while mandates saw net outflows of EUR313.6m. In July, net inflows totalled EUR17.66bn, according to the German BVI association of asset management firms, of which EUR9.26bn went to Spezialfonds, EUR5.29bn to Publikumsfonds, and EUR3.1bn for mandates.However, in the first eight months of the year, net subscriptions totalled EUR62.4bn, comapred with EUR48.72bn in the corresponding period of 2012, of which EUR44.97bn, compared with EUR40.52bn for Spezialfonds and EUR16.87bn compared with EUR10.02bn for open-ended funds.The BVI states that as of the end of August, assets in open-ended and institutional real estate funds totalled EUR121bn, distributed over 3,300 properties in 35 countries. The portfolios include about 1,800 properties located in Germany, representing 63% of assets in institutional funds, compared with 42% of open-ended funds. France is the top destination country abroad, with 263 properties, followed by the Netherlands, with 247.In terms of asset management firms, Allianz Asset Management in the first eight months of the year has posted net inflows of EUR5.1447bn for open-ended securities funds, out of a total of EUR13.238bn for the sector overall. The Deutsche Bank group, for its part, has posted net inflows of EUR2.9254bn, less than Universal-Investment, a white label product specialist, which attracted EUR5.0364bn. These three asset management firms alone have thus posted more in net inflows than the entire profession combined.Union Investment is still has not put up with the loss of a mandate in April for EUR4.4bn outside the perimeter of the BVI, and shows net outflows of EUR2.1678bn. Deka has had net redemptions in the first eight months of the year which are down to EUR1.2741bn, from EUR1.38bn as of the end of July.
London-based asset manager Finisterre Capital has injected USD55m of seed capital into its new long/short bond fund dedicated to emerging market debt, the Finisterre Emerging Market Debt Fund, Citywire reports. It is an Irish-registered product which has a sales license in most European countries. The managers are Paul Crean, co-founder and CIO of Finisterre, and Christopher Watson.The portfolio will invest in all bond segments (government, corporate, high yield, hard or local currncies) with a more diversified long/short strategy and a lower turnover than for other hedge funds from Finisterre. It will also have a longer investment horizon.
State Street Global Advisors has suggested that it may double the number of ETFs which is manages in Europe, Ignites, a service from the Financial Times, reports. Scott Ebner, global head of product development at SSgA, thinks that there is room for about “100 ETFs” in the range from the company. SPDR, the ETF arm of the firm, currently has 52 products, compared with 13 when it restarted its European activities in 2010.
M&G Investments has registered its M&G Short Dated Corporate Bond fund in Italy, Bluerating reports. The fund is 80% invested in short duration investment grade corporate bonds (0-3 years).
Hedge funds and “distressed” asset managers are buying Puerto Rican debt, taking advantage of sales by traditional investors, the Financial Times reports. “Many traditional funds are selling these securities at a discount, and since several entities in Puerto Rico sell bonds, the liquidity is good. That is unusual in the municipal bond market,” says one manager. The monthly trading volumes on Puerto Rican bonds have increased to USD30bn at the end of September, compared with an average of UDS3-5bn, according to Citigroup.
Norges Bank Investment Management manager of the Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global, and Axa Real Estate Investment Managers have entered a European commercial real estate loan co-investment programme.The programme will target investments in large size senior loans, of up to EUR600 million, with a primary focus on the United Kingdom, France and Germany.
The British firm Liontrust has acquired North Investment Partners as part of its planned development in multi-asset class management, FundWeb reports. The head of North Investment Partners, John Husselbee, is expected to lead the new multi-asset class team at Liontrust. Paul Kim, formerly of LV=, will join the team as senior manager.
Henderson has hired Rob Gambi as chief investment officer. He will focus on the leadership and development of Henderson’s investment capabilities globally, including its growing resources in the US and Asia. Rob Gambi joins from UBS Global Asset Management where he was a group managing director and global head of fixed income with responsibility for over USD230 billion. In addition he was a member of the executive committee of UBS Global Asset Management.Previous to this he was head of equities and head of fixed income at AMP Asset Management (AMPAM) and Henderson. He will report directly to Henderson CEO Andrew Formica and sit on Henderson’s executive committee. He will start at Henderson in 2014.
At a time when the position of London as the major foreign offshore centre for the Chinese yuan outside Hong Kong has recently been strengthened, the Chinese and British authorities have announced three major agreements during a visit to China by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, Les Echos reports. Firstly, Chinese banks will be allowed to operate in the City as branches. The second agreement signed by the British delegation is an additional quota for direct investment in Chinese publicly-traded equities for British companies. Its maximum has been set at GBP8.2bn. Lastly, the two countries have agreed that the pound becomes the fourth currency, after the US dollar, the Australian dollar and the Japanese yen, to be allowed to be traded directly with the yuan, on markets in Shanghai and in licensed offshore centres. A timeline has not yet been set.
L’Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) a rendu un avis favorbale au rachat de Nyse Euronext par l’américain ICE, a annoncé mercredi à Marseille son président Gérard Rameix. Cet avis a été adressé au ministre de l’Economie, Pierre Moscovici, qui doit maintenant se prononcer à son tour sur cette opération et qui aura également en main le rapport commandé à Thierry Francq. «Dans l’avis, nous ne nous prononçons que sur la fusion entre ICE et Nyse Euronext, et pas sur l’introduction en Bourse d’Euronext (la branche européenne de l’opérateur transatlantique) qui sera une autre étape», a précisé Gérard Rameix, cité par l’AFP. Les deux groupes espèrent boucler leur fusion le 4 novembre, selon un communiqué publié la semaine dernière.
Les prix à la consommation ont augmenté moins que prévu en septembre, s'éloignant encore davantage de l’objectif de la Banque centrale européenne (BCE) en matière d’inflation, selon les données finales publiées par Eurostat. Sur un an, ces prix ont enregistré une hausse de 1,1%, contre 1,3% en août et 1,6% en juin et juillet.
Le gouvernement ne souhaite pas que la taxe sur les transactions financières (TTF) soit étendue aux opérations intraday, a appris Reuters auprès du ministère du Budget, au lendemain de l’ouverture de l’examen du projet de loi de finances pour 2014 à l’Assemblée. Un amendement adopté la semaine dernière en commission prévoit d'élargir la TTF aux transactions intraday. «Une telle extension de la taxe française reviendrait à revoir en profondeur la taxe actuelle alors que des négociations communautaires sont en cours, dans lesquelles la France joue un rôle moteur, qui doivent permettre d’aboutir à une taxe harmonisée à l'échelle européenne», a ajouté la source à Bercy.
Faisant fi des réserves allemandes, Olli Rehn est décidé à tenir compte de certains «investissements publics productifs» dans l’application des règles fiscales s’imposant aux Vingt-Huit. Dans une lettre de juillet 2013, le commissaire européen aux Affaires économiques avait précisé, à la demande des chefs d’Etat et de gouvernement européens, dans quelles conditions ces investissements pouvaient ne pas être comptabilisés dans le déficit public : croissance insuffisante, respect du plafond de 3% et participation à des projets d’infrastructure paneuropéens. «J’ai entendu que les ministres étaient divisés» sur cette question, a-t-il reconnu après la réunion du Conseil Ecofin mardi à Luxembourg, mais «la Commission a travaillé sur la base d’un mandat clair des chefs d’Etat». Ces nouvelles règles s’appliqueront donc dès l’examen des budgets nationaux pour 2014 qui commence ce mois-ci.