Guillaume Jonchères qui était président directeur général de la société de gestion de Cogefi jusqu’en avril dernier, vient de rejoindre la Banque Leonardo. Au sein du pôle de gestion d’actifs de l'établissement, il prend la responsabilité de la gestion du fonds Imago, un OPCVM long short equity investi sur l’Europe lancé il y a quelques jours. Le fonds restera en incubation quelques temps avant d'être commercialisé.
Jusqu’au 9 novembre, les banques du groupe Crédit du Nord (Crédit du Nord et les Banques Courtois, Kolb, Laydernier, Nuger, Rhône-Alpes, Société Marseillaise de Crédit et Tarneaud), commercialisent Etoile Garanti Novembre 2020, un placement reposant sur un titre de créance d’une durée d’investissement de 8 ans (hors cas de remboursement automatique anticipé) et offrant une garantie du capital investi à l’échéance, le 19 novembre 2020.Sa performance dépend de l’évolution de l’indice Euro Stoxx 50 (hors dividendes). Un mécanisme automatique de remboursement par anticipation dès la 4e année a été mis en place : chaque année, à partir de la 4ème année, si l’évolution de l’indice entre son niveau initial et le niveau intermédiaire annuel correspondant, atteint ou dépasse un seuil prédéfini de 6 % multiplié par le nombre d’années écoulées, un mécanisme de remboursement anticipé est automatiquement activé et le clientbénéficie de l’intégralité de sa mise majorée de 6% par année écoulée (soit un taux de Rendement Annuel Brut maximum de 5,53%). Dans l’hypothèse où les conditions de marché ne permettent pas d’atteindre les seuils d’activation de remboursement anticipé des années 4 à 7, le produit se poursuit jusqu’à l’échéance. A cette date, on observe la performance de l’indice entre son niveau initial et son niveau final. Si la performance de l’indice est positive ou nulle, le client bénéficie le 19 novembre 2020 de l’intégralité du capital investi majoré d’une performance positive de l’indice retenue à un niveau minimum de 48% (soit un Taux de Rendement Annuel Brut minimum de 5,02%) Caractéristiques : Nature juridique : Obligation de droit français émise dans le cadre d’un programme d’émission de titres de créanceEmetteur : SG Option Europe (filiale à 100% de Société Générale)Commission de souscription : 2,5% de la valeur nominale d’Etoile Garanti Novembre 2020 pour les investisseurs sur Compte Titres. Néant pour les assureursDates de commercialisation : Comptes-titres : du 1er octobre 2012 au 9 novembre 2012 / Contrat d’assurance vie ou de capitalisation : du 2 octobre au 8 novembre 2012(Sauf clôture par anticipation en cas d’atteinte du montant d’émission)
Vendredi, dernier jour de Mark Fetting au poste de CEO de Legg Mason, Nelson Peltz a vendu 1,82 million d’actions de la société de gestion pour environ 12,9 millions et sa participation se situe désormais à 9,54 % contre 10,9 % précédemment, rapporte Mutual Fund Wire en citant une notification de Trian, la société de Nelson Peltz, à la SEC.Mutual Fund Wire rappelle que Nelson Peltz a conclu un accord de non-agression (standstill agreement) avec Legg Mason jusqu’au 30 novembre. Cela lui permettra ensuite d’acquérir des actions supplémentaires s’il veut donner suite à son projet de prise de contrôle, puis de démantèlement de Legg Mason.De son côté, Ross Kerber, de Reuters, indique que le cabinet de chasseurs de tête Korn/Ferry a été sélectionné par Legg Mason pour la recherche d’un successeur à Mark Fetting.Selon l’agence de presse, les trois noms cités pour le poste de CEO sont ceux de Ronald O’Hanley, patron de la division gestion d’actifs de Fidelity Investments, Sallie Krawcheck, qui a dirigé le pôle gestion d’actifs et de fortune chez Bank of America, et enfin Peter Ciezko, l’un des dirigeants d’American Century Investments, qui a déjà travaillé chez Legg Mason auparavant.
Le français Amundi ETF indique avoir fait enregistrer en Espagne deux produits obligataires, l’Amundi ETF Euro Corporates Financials iBoxx, qui réplique le Markit iBoxx EUR Liquid Financials Index (TR), et le Amundi ETF Euro Corporate Ex Financials iBoxx, qui s’efforce de suivre l'évolution du Markit iBoxx EUR Liquid Non-Financials Index (TR).Ces deux produits, chargés chacun à 0,16 %, portent à huit le nombre d’ETF Amundi enregistrés en Espagne. Les cinq premiers avaient été agréés en mars et le sixième en juillet.
Le groupe italien d’aérospatiale et de défense Finmeccanica a reçu une manifestation d’intérêt de la part du Fondo Strategico Italiano (FSI) pour sa filiale AndalsoEnergia, rapporte L’Agefi citant une information de Reuters. L’offre, qui semble porter sur les 55% détenus par Finmeccanica dans sa filiale énergie, serait formulée de concert avec un groupe d’hommes d’affaires italiens.
Nobles Crus, l’un des principaux fonds d’investissement dans le vin au monde, valorise ses actifs à des prix bien plus élevés que ceux utilisés par dix de ses rivaux, a appris le Financial Times Fund Management. Ce différentiel soulève des questions sur la précision des valorisations sur le marché des grands vins, qui a attiré des milliards de dollars ces dernières années. Peu de fonds sur le vin ont fait mieux que Nobles Crus, lancé en 2008 avec 2 millions d’euros et représentant désormais 109 millions d’euros, note le FTfm.
Le fournisseur de recherche indépendante Morningstar a annoncé l’acquisition d’une participation minoritaire de 34% dans la société suédoise Financial Europe AB qui fournit des estimations de consensus sur des données spécifiques d’une entreprise, par exemple des prévisions de vente par division.Le montant de la transaction n’a pas été dévoilé.
La société de gestion spécialisée dans l’immobilier AEW Europe a annoncé lundi avoir cédé à la Société Immobel l’immeuble de bureaux Parc Seny propriété du fonds «BNL Portfolio Immobiliare». Le bien totalisant 13.000 m² est géré par BNP Paribas REIM situé à Bruxelles. Les locaux sont loués à 85% de la surface totale aux sociétés Sodexo, Omnicom et Bull. Le montant de la transaction n’a pas été divulgué.
Selon les informations d’Investment Week, fidelity Worldwide Investment envisage de lancer en 2013 un fonds de revenu s’appuyant sur des actions asiatiques à dividende élevé. Ce produit serait destiné à concurrencer des fonds similaires de Newton, Liontrust, Schroders ou Henderson.
La Société Générale vient d’annoncer la nomination de Laurent Depus au poste de directeur général de Société Générale Private Banking Japon à partir du 1er octobre 2012. Il sera rattaché à Jean-François Mazaud, directeur de Société Générale Private Banking et remplace Christophe Billard, appelé à de nouvelles fonctions au sein de la banque. Laurent Depus conserve par ailleurs son rôle de responsable Pays du Groupe Société Générale pour le Japon et les missions du groupe qui y sont associées, précise un communiqué.Par ailleurs, Guillaume Burtschell remplace Laurent Depus en étant nommé responsable de Société Générale Corporate & Investment Banking pour le Japon et président de Société Générale Securities, Tokyo Branch (SGSNP). Il sera rattaché à Hikaru Ogata, responsable de Société Générale Corporate & Investment Banking pour la région Asie-Pacifique.
Entre janvier et août, Raiffeisen Capital Management a collecté environ 450 millions d’euros en Italie, déclare Donato Giannico, responsable Italie de la société de gestion autrichienne, dans un entretien à Soldi&bluerating. La société a par ailleurs l’intention de lancer trois fonds sur le marché italien des particuliers : un fonds d’allocation stratégique, un fonds obligataire qui gérera la duration et les devises et un fonds de fonds obligataires composé uniquement de fonds de Raiffeisen.
La société de gestion suédoise Wiborg Kapitalförvaltning ferme le hedge fund Consepio «qui a récemment déçu à la fois les investisseurs et les gérants de portefeuilles», annonce la société. Depuis le début de l’année, il perd 17,14 %. Le fonds était un long/short sur les actions, avec un biais sur les marchés nordiques. Ses encours à fin avril étaient de 322 millions de couronnes suédoises. Son rendement annuel moyen depuis son lancement le 1er février 2002 ressort à 6,14 % et sa performance à 88,75 %. Le fonds était géré par Ragnhild Wiborg et Aline Reichenberg Gustafsson.
Mutual Fund Wire has reported on a BlackRock “ViewPoint” which issues proposals for money market reforms. The proposals seek a compromise with the Treasury and the SEC, particularly in accepting the notion of short-circuits, similar to the “gates” which Secretary fo the Treasury Tim Geithner has proposed to protect money market funds from massive capital outflows. Meanwhile, BlackRock has adopted a more conciliatory attitude to proposals by Mary Schapiro, chairwoman of the SEC, to introduce floating net asset value: a study is said to have shown that these proposals “would change but not destroy” the sector.
The French firm Amundi ETF has announced that it has registered two bond products in Spain, the Amundi ETF Euro Corporates Financials iBoxx, which replicates the Markit iBoxx EUR Liquid Financials Index (TR), and the Amundi ETF Euro Corporate Ex Financials iBoxx, which aims to track the evolution of the Markit iBoxx EUR Liquid Non-Financials Index (TR).The two products, which charge 0.16% each, bring the number of ETFs from Amundi registered in Spain to eight. The first five were licensed in March, and the sixth in July.
The Swedish asset management firm Wiborg Kapitalförvaltning is closing the Consepio hedge fund, “which has recently disappointed both investors and portfolio managers,” the firm has announced. Since the beginning of the year, the fund has lost 17.14%. The fund was an equity long/short product, with a bias for Scandinavian markets. Its assets as of the end of April were SEK322m, Its average annual returns since launch on 1 February 2002 come to 6.14%, and its total returns to 88.75%. The fund was managed by Ragnhild Wiborg and Aline Reichenberg Gustaffson.
On 1 October, Union Investment released an additional fund in its Riester product range (subsidized retirement savings), the UniProfiRenteSelect. It is aimed at the most elderly clients, for whom the minimal duration for a Rieste UniProfiRente policy (10 years) is too long. The minimal duration is not part of the conditions for Select, which will allow holders of Riester policies with other providers to transfer their policy to Union Investment, even shortly before their retirement date.Subscribers hoping to receive gains beyond the legal savings guarantee period may take out an optional additional guarantee.
In London and Frankfurt, Goldman Sachs Asset Management (USD836bn in assets as of the end of June) on 1 October announced the release of the Goldman Sachs Liberty Harbor Opportunistic Corporate Bond Portfolio, a Luxembourg-registered long-only fund of corporate bonds with no constraints or benchmark index, managed actively by its affiliate Liberty Harbor. The team responsible for the fund (launched on 4 April) will aim to keep a short duration. The fund is now licensed for sale in Germany.CharacteristicsName: Goldman Sachs Liberty Harbor Opportunistic Corporate Bond PortfolioManagement commission: 1.50% for basic distribution shares in US dollars ( LU0727289802), for A shares (in US dollars, LU0751755405) and for E shares in euros hedged for currency rates (LU0751755231).A and E shares carry a distribution commission of 0.50%.Minimal subscription: USD5,000 for basic shares, and USD1,500 or EUR1,500 for A and E shares.
The central asset management firm for the German co-operative banks, Union Investment, has announced that it has already attracted EUR50m from institutional investors for its new Luxembourg-registered specialised investment fund (SIF), which will invest 70% of its portfolio in wind energy on land, and up to 30% of its assets in solar energy.Union will focus on countries at the core of Europe, such as Germany, France and the United Kingdom, and will add selective investments in Scandinavia and Poland.The objective is to reach EUR300m in owners’ equity, and annual returns averaging 6% to 8%. Initial subscriptions are set at EUR2.5m.
The Alternative Investment Management Association (AIMA), the global hedge fund industry association, has announced the formation of a new AIMA Council, its board of directors. The new non-executive chairman was named by AIMA last week as the former US Securities and Exchange Commissioner Kathleen Casey. She replaces out-going AIMA non-executive chairman Todd Groome, who had been in the role since 2009. Kathleen Casey is joined on the new AIMA Council by Olwyn Alexander, Partner, PwC; Mark O’Sullivan, Partner, Ernst & Young LLP; Phil Schmitt, President, Summerwood Capital Corp.; and Henry Smith, Global Managing Partner, Maples and Calder. Those continuing their Directorships of AIMA are Andrew Baker, Chief Executive Officer, AIMA; Andrew Bastow, General Counsel, Director of Government & Regulatory Affairs, Winton Capital; James G. Dinan, Founder, Chairman & CEO, York Capital Management; Chris Pearce, Asia COO, Marshall Wace Asia Ltd; Paul Sater, Partner, Ernst & Young; and Phil Tye, Co-Founder and Managing Director, DragonBack Capital Limited.
The Swiss federal financial market surveillance authority, Finma, has elected Franz Wipfli to the board of directors, and appointed Paul Müller, currently a member of the same board, as its vice-chairman. The business economist Wipfli has had a long career in the insurance sector, concluding as CEO of the affiliate of the Zurich insurance group in Austria, and member of the extended board of the Zurich Financial Services group. The new vice-chairman of the board of directors, Müller has been a member of the board since 2009, and succeeds Monika Mächler in the role.
Dominik Kremer, who has been head of European distribution at Threadneedle Investments for slightly over two years, dedicated more than three quarters of his time to developing Threadneedle’s business in continental Europe. The results have been rather good. With a team of 30 people, 23 of whom are dedicated to sales, Kremer finds that the results have been all the more satisfactory as the environment remains cacophonous. Since the beginning of the year, net inflows total in the hundreds of millions of pounds as of the end of August, in continental Europe alone. The figures for the United Kingdom are even better, but the difference from the continent is not as marked as in the past. As of 30 June 2012, assets under management totalled about EUR92bn, compared with nearly EUR88bn as of the end of December 2011. The cause of this performance is, firstly, the quality of the funds offered on both sides of the channel by Threadneedle, which as of the end of August, had far outperformed their benchmark indices. For example, 78% of assets under management in equity funds have outperformed their benchmarks as of the end of August, while the percentage is 74% year on year, 88% over three years, and 95% over five years. The independent ratings agency Feri ranks Threadneedle at the top of all asset management firms in all the countries it covers (Austria, Germany, France, Italy, Switzerland, Sweden, the United Kingdom). The most popular products currently include US funds, with two or three star products, commodities, and European equities. Then there is the important work Kramer has done to develop Threadneedle’s business in continental Europe. “Our presence was too narrow. We had not really developed in several years,” says Kremer. The head of Euorpean distribution therefore set up an analysis grid which takes into account the various European markets, the various client segments (institutional, wholesale and retail), and the appropriateness of products for clients. This tool has allowed Threadneedle to approach continental Europe must more agressively, and Kremer hopes to gradually position the company among so-called “Tier One” clients, or major institutional investors. Threadneedle opened an office in Sweden this May, in the hopes of developing a presence for the firm in the wholesale segment, including major distribution networks, with an offering in equities, an asset class which is traditionally very popular in Sweden. A proximity strategy has been adopted in Italy for the past two years, with the establishment of strategic partnership agreements with major distribution networks such as Fineco, Montepaschi and Generali. For the German market, however, Kremer claims that the retail market, which is already overworked, does not offer much in the way of prospects. Hence the choice to instead develop the institutional market, with the recent appointment of an “institutional sales director,” Hartwig Rosipal, who has already brought home at least one major mandate. On the French market, Threadneedle, with a team of three people since the recruitment earlier this year of Philippe Lorent, is continuing its efforts in the institutional and major network client segments, but is also planning to develop on the retail market. “We are currently exploring the possibility of developing on the retail market, but we haven’t yet taken that step,” says Kremer. Meanwhile, Kremer is considering other initiatives which may favour development in Europe. The UK asset management firm is now hoping to enrich its product range, with a drive in two strategic areas: multi-asset management, with the recent launch of a multi-asset class fund, and global opportunities bonds.
Between January and August, Raiffeisen Capital Management has posted inflows of about EUR450m in Italy, Donato Giannico, head for Italy at the Austrian asset management firm, has announced in an interview with Soldi&bluerating. The firm is also planning to launch hree funds on the Italian retail market: a strategic allocation fund, a bond fund which will manage duration, and a fund of bond funds composed solely of Raiffeisen funds.
In a letter to the CEOs of 24 providers, networks and IFAs, the FSA points out it is likely certain distribution deals are in breach of RDR rules and it is probable the regulator will take action against them, Money Marketing reports.Nick Poyntz-Wright, head of department, life insurance, declined to reveal what specific action the FSA could take but added there were a range of options available.Examples of inducements that are concerning include:- providers contributing to the costs of adviser training, conferences and seminars. - providers paying advisers for help with promoting the provider’s retail investment products. - payments from providers to distributors for the development of software as part of an integrated provider/distributor IT solution.
The independent research provider Morningstar has announced the acquisition of a minority stake of 34% in the Swedish firm Financial Europe AB, which provides estimates of the consensus on specific data about businesses, such as sales projections for a particular division. The transaction price has not been disclosed.
Six private infrastructure funds have held a final closing in third quarter, to raise a total of USD2.7bn, down 48% compared with second quarter, according to statistics released by Preqin. However, ten infrastructure funds have held intermediate closings in third quarter totalling a cumulative USD14bn, an increase of 33% quarter on quarter.
From 31 December 2012, UBS Global Asset Management will offer B-class shares in all of its retail funds domiciled in the United Kingdom, Investment Week reports. They will comply with the Retail Distribution Review, and will be available from GBP50 per month, or GBP1,000 as a single investment. Annual fees will vary from 0.4% to 1.1%, depending on the strategy.
According to reports in Investment Week, Fidelity Worldwide Investment is planning to launch an income fund in 2013 which will focus on Asian high-dividend equities. The product would aim to compete with similar funds from Newton, Liontrust, Schroders and Henderson.
Guillaume Jonchères, who had been president and CEO of the asset management firm Cogefi until April this year, has joined Banque Leonardo. In the asset management unit of the firm, he becomes head of management for the Imago fund, a long/short equity fund investing in Europe, launched a few days ago. The fund will remain in incubation for some time before being released for sale.
With its new electronic trading platform for corporate bonds, known as Aladdin Trading Network, BlackRock is venturing into terrain which has hitherto been dominated by Wall Street banks, but which they have been neglecting, the Financial Times reports. The system will allow buyers and sellers of this kind of debt to trade with each others directly, rather than going through a bank. The activity has been developed by Richard Pager, who joined BlackRock three years ago, and who is global head of trading.
A manager of a division of SAC Capital Advisors, Michael Steinberg, has been placed on paid leave after his name appeared in a government investigation into insider trading, a source familiar with the matter cited by the Wall Street Journal states. Steinberg had been working at Sigma, a division of SAC, since 1997, and is close to the founder of SAC, Steven A. Cohen. The scandal is related to the trial of Jon Horvath, a former SAC analyst, who is cooperating with the government, and has confessed to obtaining insider information. He is said to have shared it with Steinberg.