The Frankfurt-based independent asset management firm Lupus alpha on 6 December announced that the previous evening it launched the Lupus Alpha Dividend Champions fund, which focuses on European high yield equities in the universe of small and midcaps. The managers are Marcus Ratz and Markus Herrmann.Götz Albert, a partner at Lupus alpha and director of management of smidcaps portfolios, says that the objective is to select a concentrated sample of 30 shares with a convincing track record in terms of dividends, and whose returns from dividends in the future are expected to continue to average 3% to 4%. Volatility must be lower than that of the Stoxx Europe TMI Small Net Return in euros, and beta must be “considerably lower” than 1.CharacteristicsName: Lupus alpha Dividend ChampionsISIN code: DE000A1JDV61Front-end fee: maximum 5%Management commission: 1%Performance commission: 20% of performance exceeding the Stoxx Europe TMI Small Net Return index with high watermarkMinimal initial subscription: EUR10,000Initial value of shares: EUR100
In Austria, the fund industry is gradually returning to its all-time highs. The investment fund market is recovering, and for the first time since 2006, is showing positive inflows, with EUR8.8bn in net subscriptions since the beginning of 2012 as of the end of October. This increase represents 6.5% of assets, which now total EUR126bn.Raiffeisen Capital Management, which has published the figures, has posted net subscriptions of about EUR1bn as of the end of October. Market effects accounted for EUR1.5bn. Assets managed by the Austrian asset management firm now total EUR27.8bn, up 0.3% since the beginning of 2012.
With the Ultra Short-Term Bond Fund (ticker: TRBUX), T. Rowe Price is launching a bond fund for very short-term investment in public or private investment grade bonds with a residual time to maturity equal to or less than 1.5 years.The portfolio is managed by Joseph K. Lynagh, and the TER is 0.35%. Minimal subscription has been set at USD2,500 (or USD1,000 for retirement savings plans or gifts to minors).
The BlackRock Public-Private Investment Fund, founded in October 2009 as part of the Legacy Securities Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP), has reimbursed its investors, the US Department of Treasury and its private clients, a total of 1.74 times their initial investment, corresponding to an internal rate of return of 23.5%.The Treasury will have received a net USD917.1m on its investment of USD528.2m, with profits totalling USD388.9m.
The average coverage rate for the liabilities of US corporate pension funds rose to 74.4% in the month of November, up 0.8 percentage points compared with the previous month, according to estimates by BNY Mellon. In the month under review, assets in pension funds increased 0.7% due to the strength of stock markets, while liabilities fell 0.3%. The actualisation rate rose 4 basis points to 3.76% for businesses rated Aa. Despite the rebound in November, the average coverage rate for liabilities in the first eleven months of the year are down by 0.9 percentage points.
Jupiter is planning to convert its European Income fund into a global vehicle entitled Jupiter Global Equity Income, Investment Week reports. Sebastian Radcliffe and Gregory Herbert will become co-managers, succeeding Cédric de Fonclare, who will dedicate himself exclusively to European equity mandates. Subscribers to the fund will vote on the subject on 19 December.
GLG Partners will reopen its Japan CoreAlpha range, managed by Stephen Harker, Neil Edwards and Jeffrey Atherton, Investment Week reports. The funds, based in the United Kingdom and Ireland, were closed to new subscribers in March in order to protect existing investors against potential liquidity risks. GLG Japan CoreAlpha had GBP1bn in assets before its closure.
Banca Generali has posted net subscriptions in November of EUR51m, bringing net inflows since the beginning of the year to EUR1.5bn, Bluerating reports. Of this total, EUR1.41bn is due to collective management.
The hedge fund Diamondback Capital Management on Thursday told investors that it will be closing up shop and liquidating its funds after receiving redemption demands representing more than one quarter of its assets, which would leave only USD1.45bn in assets, the Wall Street Journal reports. “Rather than continuing to manage the capital of investors while restructuring the firm to manage this lower level of assets, we have decided that the more prudent course is to liquidate the fund and reimburse investors,” the founders say in a letter to investors. The move comes at a time when a former Diamondback manager is facing trial for insider trading.
Lyxor Asset Management has appointed Arnaud Llinas as global head of ETF & index-based solution activities. He will begin in the new role on 1 January 2013, and will report to Inès de Dinechin, CEO of the asset management firm. Llinas also becomes a member of the board of directors at Lyxor. Llinas, who will be based in Paris, will work with Clarisse Djabberi, deputy head of ETF & indexing, Raphaël Dieterlein, head of Portfolio management, and François Millet, head fo business line in charge of development for indices. Llinas will help to develop Lyxor’s expertise in the area of index-based management, in order to offer innovative solutions appropriate to the needs of investors, Lyxor notes. Alain Dubois, chairman, will remain in contact with market authorities in relation to innovative ETFs (including “smart beta”). In a statement, the asset management firm says that Llinas joined Société Générale Corporate & Investment Banking in 2004, and for four years served as head of trading for market products including market making and ETF structuring, which allowed him to participate in the development of Lyxor ETFs.
At a presentation of its investment strategy for 2013, Nicolas Bouët, deputy CEO of Invesco, announced in Paris that assets for French clients at the asset management firm currently total USD3.5bn. At the end of May, they totalled USD2bn (see Newsmanagers of 1 June). PowerShares ETFs represent more than one quarter of that total, while open-ended funds account fro 50% of intermediated volumes.Gross inflows totalled about USD1.2bn YTD, more than half of which corresponds to net inflows.Invesco Paris also has about EUR500m in multi-management, of which 20% are integrated into the assets of Invesco Paris, and EUR400m managed for foreign clients.In 2013, Bouët plans to place the emphasis on high yield products, including extra-European products, and coupon funds, while continuing to push IBRA (Invesco Balanced-Risk Allocation), which was highly successful with IFAs in 2012.Invesco on 4 December also received a sales license for eight funds, four Asian (Asian focus Equity Fund, managed by Invesco Perpetual, China Focus Equity Fund, Renminbi Income Fund and Asian Bond Fund, managed by Invesco Hong-Kong), two US funds (US Equity Fund and US High Yield Bond fund), one other bond product (Global Total Return (EUR) Bond Fund, and one equity fund, Pan European Focus Equity Fund, managed by Invesco Perpetual in Henley.
EFG Financial Products (EFG FP) has announced the appointment of Roman Kurmann as its new chief financial officer and a board member at the group. Kurmann, currently Managing Director at Credit Suisse, will begin in his new position in firt quarter 2013, pending approval by Finma, according to a press statement released on 6 December. He will succeed Michael Hartweg, who will concentrate on his responsibilities as vice president and head of the Structured Solutions unit. Kurmann has been CFO of Clariden Ley, a large Swiss banking affiliate. He also served as COO and head of Investment Products in 2011, at a time when Credit Suisse finally integrated Clariden Leu. He served a central role in that process, and participated substantially in divesting the activities of that wealth management bank from Credit Suisse.
The DSGV association of German savings banks has announced that DekaBank will take control of the asset management firm LBB-Invest, which will be spun off from the Landesbank Berlin (LBB), as will Berlin Hyp, which will become an independent real estate financing organism, Fondsprofessionell reports. LBB itself will be downgraded to the status of a large savings bank for Berlin under the name of Berliner Sparkasse.DekaBank, the central asset management firm for the savings banks, will also take over the securities trading activities of LBB.The complete plan will be unveiled in Berlin on 12 December.
The hedge fund firm TCI has seen a fall of 60% in its net profits for the period to the end of February, at slightly over GBP17m, according to its most recent results cited by Financial News. But returns have improved.
The head of British equity management at Jupiter, Anthony Nutt, also a significant shareholder in the firm, will transfer the management of his retail portfolios next year, ahead of his departure from the firm in 2014, Investment Week reports. Nutt, who will be 60 next year, has been working at Jupiter since 1996, and has managed by Jupiter Income Trust, whose assets under management total about GBP2bn, since 2000.
The alternative asset management firm Man Group on 6 December announced the appointment of John Rohal as executive chairman for North America, a new position at Man group, which is seeking new areas for growth outside the United Kingdom. Rohal will begin on 1 January, and will work to develop distribution of Man products in North America, and to strengthen commercial relationships with institutional clients. He previously worked at Makena Capital Management, where he supervised equity investments.
The head of multi-asset class funds at Aviva Investors, Yoram Lustig, will be leaving the firm, Investment Week reports. Jonathan Abrahams, a senior analyst on the team, has also left.
Apson, a hedge fund boutique which received seed capital from Howard Marks of Oaktree Capital Management, has announced that it will be closing 18 months after its launch, Financial News has learned. The firm was not able to make money in an environment characterised by “a lack of trends and low volatility.”
The Swiss financial market will in the next few years need to become a leader in asset management, according to a study by the Swiss Bankers’ Association (ASB) published on 6 December. The association has created a working group with the Swiss Fund Association (SFA) to show how to achieve this goal. Asset management should form one of the pillars of the sector, alongside wealth management, retail banking and business banking the ASB says in a statement. At a time when Switzerland is largely known internationally for wealth management, asset management, a major provider of products and services for private and institutional investors, is largely overlooked in Switzerland and abroad. Although a large proportion of Swiss banks have asset management activities, they are rarely considered activities in their own right. According to a study by the ASB and the agency Boston Consulting Group, scaling up asset management activities would bring up gross revenues by GBP1.8bn by 2015. The study targeted eight areas for action, which would allow for the establishment of this strategy of the creation of the necessary underlying conditions. These objectives include establishing asset management as a brand, guaranteeing surveillance of the sector. Improving access to the market, developing infrastructure, creating an optimal fiscal environment, and offering adequate training. A majority of these initiatives may be put in place by financial establishments, the study funds. But regulation, access to the market and taxation depend on the policies of the authorities, who should “add their brick to the structure.” Asset management products and services may be demanded by private as well as institutional investors. Unlike traditional activities such as credit and insurance, asset management has more limited systemic and reputational risks. It is thus “less capital-hungry,” the study says. The plans “should make Switzerland a top actor” in asset management, the chairman of the ASB, Claude-Alain Margelisch, says in a statement. “We would like the federal administration and the surveillance authorities also to support this project. If we want to offer the financial market a larger basis, let’s minimise systemic risks and seize opportunities for the future,” he added.
Nicolas Deblauwe, country head Benelux at J.P. Morgan Asset Management (JPMAM), has announced “to clients and partners” that from 3 December, Antonio Grieco has joined his team as senior sales manager for Belgium and Luxembourg in partnership with Tom Vermeulen. He replaces Arnaud van der Elst, who in October joined J.P. Morgan Private Bank.Grieco had previously been head of institutional business at Dexia Asset Management in Luxembourg.
Credit Suisse et Sberbank auraient renoncé à lancer un fonds de private equity d’un milliard de dollars destiné au marché russe, faute d’intérêt de la part d’investisseurs, rapporte Bloomberg. La banque suisse et son homologue russe prévoyaient d’abonder le véhicule à hauteur de 100 millions de dollars chacune. Sberbank avait annoncé ce projet en avril 2011.
L’Institute of International Finance (IIF), qui rassemble les principales banques et compagnies d’assurance du monde, s’est dit optimiste sur le succès de l’offre de rachat de dette grecque. L’opération vise 66 milliards d’euros de dette nominale et doit permettre à la Grèce de réduire sa dette d’environ 20 milliards en net en déboursant 10 milliards pour les rachats. Les créanciers doivent donner leur réponse cet après-midi. La participation des banques grecques et des fonds de sécurité sociale du pays, qui détiennent autour de 22 milliards de dette, garantirait quasiment le succès du plan.
La Bundesbank a révisé à la baisse vendredi ses prévisions de croissance du produit intérieur brut (PIB) allemand pour 2012 à 0,7%, contre 1,0% précédemment, et pour 2013 à 0,4%, contre 1,6% jusqu'à présent. Cette initiative intervient au lendemain de la révision à la baisse des prévisions de la BCE, justifiée par la dégradation des perspectives en Allemagne, en France ou aux Pays-Bas. «La Bundesbank ne s’attend pas à un ralentissement prolongé mais anticipe au contraire un retour rapide à la croissance», ajoute la banque centrale allemande, avec une hausse de 1,9% du PIB en 2014. Elle prévient toutefois qu’il n’est pas impossible que l’Allemagne entre en récession, définie par deux trimestres consécutifs de contraction, «au dernier trimestre 2012 et au premier trimestre 2013».
L’agence de notation Standard & Poor’s anticipe une poursuite de la hausse du taux de défaut des entreprises européennes de catégorie spéculative pour l’an prochain. L’environnement économique fragile devrait continuer de peser sur les marges des entreprises de la zone euro.
Le représentant du Collège de l’AMF reproche au courtier, adossé à BNP Paribas, de ne pas avoir respecté ses obligations en matière de prévention des délits d’initiés lors de l’augmentation de capital réalisée par Lafarge en février 2009. Un salarié a aussi été mis en cause.
L’autorité de régulation allemande était au courant des accusations portées par trois anciens cadres contre Deutsche Bank qui aurait délibérément sous-estimé de près de 12 milliards de dollars (9,2 milliards d’euros) des pertes latentes sur son portefeuille de dérivés de crédit durant la crise de 2008, selon le journal qui cite des sources au fait du dossier.