Agefi reports that Gougenheim Investments, the hedge fund launched this week by Philippe Gougenheim, former portfolio manager at Man Investments and then head of fund of hedge fund activities at Unigestion, is aiming for USD1n in assets in three years. A first fund, domiciled in the Cayman Islands, will be launched in June. “The initial size of the fund will be USD50m,” Gougenheim has told the newspaper, adding that the vehicle may eventually approach USD200m, depending on the interest received from invetors. The fund will be based on a global macro strategy.
Quilvest, created to manage the wealth of the Bemberg family, is planning to double its size in the next five years to EUR8bn, Les Echos reports. The CEO of Quilvest, Michel Abouchalache, says that “a major rationalisation of the French market is to be expected, as after the years of crisis, the market is still overpopulated. At least 50% of investors in funds will disappear in the next few years.”
The Swedish investment fund association has for the first time since its inception in 1979 modified its membership rules, in order to widen its member base. Managers with asset management activities not previously defined as such may now join the association, which has also created a membership status for associate members, to apply to all firms with ties to the accounting and legal providers, system providers, and fund administrators. The association currently has 38 members.
Graham Elliot, CEO at BNP Paribas Investment Partners for the Middle East, on 1 January joined Robeco as CEO for the Middle East, the Netherlands-based asset management firm announced on 2 February. Elliot replaces Douglas Hansen-Luke, and will be responsible for distribution to institutional investors and key clients (including sovereign funds) in the Gulf region. Elliot will be based at the Dubai International Financial centre, and will aim to develop Robeco’s expertise in the area of frontier markets.
Following a one-time write-down due to depreciation of the goodwill on its operations in the United States, BBVA has announced a contraction of 34.8% in its net profits in 2011, to EUR3bn, excluding one-time elements. Profits without taking the depreciation into account fell 12.8% to EUR4bn.Net profits for the wholesale banking and asset management unit, which includes corporate and investment banking, global markets and asset management, totalled EUR1.122bn, compared with EUR1.224bn in 2010.BBVA states that total assets in asset management worldwide (investment and pension funds) as of the end of December totalled nearly EUR73bn.
Fonds Professionell relays reports in dpa/AFX and Bloomberg that only four financially solid asset management firms are still in the running to acquire the asset management unit of Deutsche Bank (excluding DWS Germany, Europe and Asia): they are the Australian firm Macquarie and the US firms JPMorgan, Ameriprise Financial (owner of Columbia and Threadneedle) and State Street. The second round of bidding will conclude at the end of next week.
By GAAP accounting standards, the Blackstone Group has seen a net loss of USD269m, compared with USD370m in 2010, both of which take into account net charges related to the group’s IPO and acquisitions.As of the end of December, total assets under management were up 30% compared with the end of 2010 to USD166bn, while fee-earning assets were up 25% to a record USD137bn.
“Our product range has lined up well with current market demand at the start of this year, as investors have largely wanted to take on risk again. That applied to institutional investors and funds of funds in particular,” Hervé Thiard, CEO of the Paris office of Pictet & Cie Europe has told Newsmanagers. This taste for emerging market debt, credit, high yeild and US equity products has resulted in net inflows of about EUR150m, putting assets at about EUR2.7bn. Assets under management totalled EUR2.8bn thirteen months ago (see Newsmanagers of 13 December 2010), but 2011 was a year of transition, with major flows in both directions, while 2010 will go down as an outstanding fiscal year which brought Pictet inflows of a net EUR800m to high-risk assets.
BNY Mellon has announced the recruitment of Yolanda Plaza-Charres as director of sales in its wealth management division for Latin America. She had previously served as director of private banking at BlackRock for the Americas.
AXA Investment Managers (AXA IM) on Thursday, 2 February announced the appointment of Laurent Seyer as global head of investment solutions. He will begin in his new role on 2 May this year, and will then become a member of the management board at AXA IM. He will report to Dominique Carrel-Billiars, CEO of AXA IM. Seyer, who has been CEO of Lyxor Asset Management since 2006, replaces Thibaud de Vitry, who left Axa IM a few weeks ago (see Newsmanagers of 9 January 2012).“Laurent Seyer will aim to maintain our cutting-edge innovative solutions in all areas: ALM management (LDI, fiduciary management and Solvency II solutions), multi-asset class management, and management of funds of hedge funds integrated within global solutions, and to accelerate commercial development so as to create more visibility for our product ranges,” says Carrel-Billiard, CEO of AXA Investment Managers. At Société Générale Corporate & Investment Banking, the announcement of Seyer’s departure was followed on the same day by the announcement that Inès de Dinechin has been appointed as CEO of Lyxor Asset Management. The appointment will be effective from the end of March 2012.De Dinechin has spent most of her career in market activities, before being appointed as global head of fixed income, currency and credit structured products. She was appointed as director of human resources at Société Générale Corporate & Investment Banking in 2009, when sh also become a member of the extended executive board at SG CIB.“Her experience will be a real advantage in consolidating leadership at Lyxor Asset Management in her four areas of expertise: alternative management, index-based and ETF management, quantitative management, and structured management,” a statement from SG CIB says.
As of the end of December, assets under management at Franklin Templeton totalled USD670.3bn (see Newsmanagers of 13 January 2012), and the US-based asset management firm has announced on the occasion of the publication of its results, that it has seen net redemptions ni the first quarter of its fiscal year, ending on 30 September 2012, of USD15.6bn, compared with net subscriptions of USD3.1bn in July-September 2011, and USD3.2bn in the corresponding period of 2010.Net profits in October-December totalled USD480.8m, compared with USD416m in the third quarter of the calendar year 2011, and USD501.2m in October-December 2010.
The asset management firm Tikehau IM, a specialist in bond management, has posted inflows of over EUR300m in 2011, bringing its total assets under management to over EUR700m as of 31 December.Inflows went to the full range of funds on offer, including open-ended and closed funds, co-investment vehicles and mandates. More precisely, Tikehau IM has more than doubled its assets under management in 2011, with EUR150m in inflows to the open-ended fund and dedicated management mandate segment. With nearly EUR70m, the flagship fund Tikehau Crédit Plus, which follows a mostly high yield bond strategy, has tripled its assets.Another high-profile fund, TK Rendement 2016, a horizon fund launched on 7 December last year, has seen inflows of nearly EUR8m in less than two months. The fund has an indicative performance objective of 77% per year, and as of January 2012 has already earned 3.03%.In the closed and dedicated fund segment (FCT and FCPR), Tikehau IM has seen inflows of over EUR200m, “confirming the attraction for investors and issuers of ‘private debt,’ which has become the private equity of financing operations,” a statement says.
Affiliated Managers Group (AMG) has reported an increase of USD7.41bn, or 2.3% in its AUM for the 2011 fiscal year, to USD327.46bn as of 31 December. This increase represents only one third of net subscriptions, which totalled USD22.92bn. AMG has seen inflows to mutual funds (USD5.47bn), from institutionals (USD16.45bn), and from high net worth private clients (USD1bn).Net profits increased 16.6%, or USD26.3m, compared with the previous year, to USD164.9m.
Philippe Lecomte, CEO of Schroders France, is satisfied with the results for 2011. “We had a good year in 2011. Net subscriptions totalled EUR500m, 70% of it from institutional investors, who have been particularly interested in emerging markets equities, emerging market fixed income, and high yield credit,” the head of the Paris office says. In Paris, assets under management as of the end of 2011 totalled EUR3.5bn. In 2012, Lecomte is predicting subscriptions “on the same level as in 2011.” For the moment, the year appears to have started well, as “inflows are going well,” Lecomte says. In order to reach its inflow objectives, the CEO of Schroders France would like to launch a sales offensive, particularly in first quarter, for products dedicated to Asian equities such as the Schroder ISF Asian Bond Absolute Return and the Schroder ISF Asian Equity Yield.
The private equity firm TPG Capital has announced that it has made a formal offer to acquire the fund administrator GlobeOp for a total of about USD800m. GlobeOp found the terms of TPG Capital’s offer “honest and reasonable.” Assets under management at TPG Capital, largely in financial services, total about USD48bn.
Société Générale Corporate & Investment Banking a annoncé le 2 février la nomination d’Inès de Dinechin au poste de Directeur Général de Lyxor Asset Management. Elle remplace Laurent Seyer qui quittera prochainement le groupe Société Générale pour poursuivre d’autres opportunités (lire par ailleurs). Cette nomination sera effective à compter de fin mars 2012.Inès de Dinechin a effectué l’essentiel de sa carrière dans les activités de marché, occupant plusieurs postes de responsable marché (ingénierie et vente de produits dérivés) avant d'être nommée responsable mondial des produits structurés de taux, change et crédit. Elle a été nommée Directeur des Ressources Humaines de Société Générale Corporate & Investment Banking en 2009, date à laquelle elle est également devenue membre du Comité Exécutif élargi de SG CIB."Son expérience constitue un véritable atout pour consolider le leadership de Lyxor Asset Management dans ses quatre domaines d’expertise : la gestion alternative, la gestion indicielle & ETF, la gestion quantitative, et la gestion structurée», souligne un communiqué de SG CIB.
OFI Infravia, an infrastructure sector specialist asset management firm which manages the investment fund InfraVia, with about EUR200m in assets, has announced the recruitment of Bruno Candès as chief investment officer, and Vincent Ménager and Romain Dechelette as account managers. Candès had previously been a founding member and principal chief investment offiver at Fiera Axium Infrastructure. He has also served as director of the infrastructure division of Babcock & Brown for North America, and in the Infrastructure Capital group at the bank ABN Amro, where he was responsible for development and financing of infrastructure projects in the areas of transport, renewable energies, and social infrastructures. Ménager had previously worked at Amber Infrastructure; he joined that firm after serving in the project financing teams at Natixis. Dechelette previously worked at ETDE, the energies and services unit of the Bouygues Construction group, largely in the development of public-private partnership contracts.
Wolfgang Pinner, who was already head of the sustainable investment team at Erste Sparinvest, has been appointed as Chief Sustainability Investment Officer. The Austrian asset management firm has assets of EUR630m in its sustainable investment funds, and Pinner will aim to develop cooperations with businesses and institutions in the sustainable development sector, to establish strategies for the exercise of voting rights at shareholders’ meetings, to develop key performance indicators, and to define exclusionary criteria. In this connection, Erste Sparinvest has also announced that since the beginning of this year, all of its actively-managed investment funds are barred from investing in businesses which are active in the area of weapons prohibited by the United Nations. To this end, Erste Sparinvest will rely on the assistance of the German ethical ratings firm oekom research.
The multi-management specialist Swan Capital Management on 2 February announced the launch of an absolute return fund of funds entitled Alpha Multistratégies. The French-registered FCP fund, under the regulatory authority of the French financial market regulator, the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF), will aim to earn returns higher than those of the capitalised Eonia, over a recommended investment duration of over 3 years, with volatility near that of the bond market, and certainly lower than 6%. Alpha Multistratégies aims to meet increasingly strong demand from clients, institutional investors, businesses and retail investors to earn positive returns higher than those of money market instruments and euro-denominated insurance policies, with the lowest possible correlation to the movements of the financial markets. In order to satisfy the objectives it has set itself, namely to provide decorrelated investments that deliver regular returns with a relatively low level fo risk, excellent liquidity and total transparency, Alpha Multistratégies will rely on diversification of asset classes, managers and strategies. Depending on the expected direction of the markets, the absolute return construction of the Alpha Multistratégies fund will be the result of several absolute return or directional funds. More precisely, 75% to 100% of the portfolio will be invested in absolute return strategies, while the remaining 1% to 25% will be invested in convex directional strategies via equity, bond, convertible, currency and commodity funds. Major characteristics of the fund ISIN code: FR0011163732 Front-end fee: maximum 1% Management fee: maximum 1.5% Performance commission: 10% of net performance exceeding the Eonia Size of fund at launch on 23 January 2012: EUR9m
Axa Investment Managers (AXA IM) has launched new share classes which will aim to weather the current shocks that equity investors are confronting on the markets, through the use of an overlay strategy (hedgeing for various asset classes). The share classes, entitled SolEx, are aimed at institutional investors, and overlay equity management with a systematic hedging strategy through the use of liquid derivative instruments, a statement says. SolEx shares are currently available for the Axa WF Framlington Eurozone fund, and will soon be available for other funds of the Axa World Funds range.
Sylvie Terris, Directeur Financier Délégué d’Agrica Epargne dans une table ronde organisée par amLeague et Newsmanagers, le 18 janvier 2012: J’ajoute que nous ne sommes pas trackers pour l’instant, mais on peut se poser la question et essayer de comprendre et bien connaître les spécificités de gestion, les mouvements dans la vie des sociétés de gestion, car les process, les équipes changent. Rien n’est stable. Je viens de rentrer dans cette société de gestion depuis un mois. Il y a tout un passé. C’est une société de gestion qui travaille avec une bonne partie des sociétés de gestion de la place, et affiche de nombreuses spécificités. En étant Agrica Epargne, nous avons pas mal de liens avec Amundi et Groupama. On ne regarde pas trop la volatilité, mais plutôt les ratios d’information. Mais, là aussi, cela bouge beaucoup. Reste que la donnée fondamentale, c’est la performance sur le long terme. La volatilité reste un peu fonction du marché. À partir du moment où on a une allocation stratégique qui est définie, nous acceptons la volatilité.
Créé dans le giron de la famille Bemberg, le pionnier du non-coté, Quilvest, entend doubler de taille d’ici à cinq ans, à 8 milliards d’euros, rapporte Les Echos. Selon le CEO de Quilvest, Michel Abouchalache, «il faut s’attendre à une forte rationalisation du marché français, qui reste, après les années de crise, encore surpeuplé. Au moins 50% des investisseurs et des fonds vont disparaître dans les prochaines années.»
OFI Infravia, la société de gestion spécialisée dans le secteur des infrastructures, qui gère le fonds d’investissement InfraVia d’environ 200 millions d’euros, vient d’annoncer le recrutement de Bruno Candès en tant que directeur d’investissement et Vincent Ménager et Romain Dechelette, tous en tant que chargé d’affaires.Auparavant, Bruno Candès était membre fondateur et directeur principal des investissements chez Fiera Axium Infrastructure. Il fut également directeur au sein de la division infrastructure de Babcock & Brown en Amérique du Nord et du groupe Infrastructure Capital de la banque ABN AMRO, où il était responsable du développement et du financement de projets d’infrastructure dans le domaine des transports, de l’énergie renouvelable et des infrastructures sociales.Pour sa part, Vincent Ménager travaillait jusqu'à présent chez Amber Infrastructure qu’il a rejoint après avoir exercé au sein des équipes de financement de projets de Natixis.Enfin, Romain Dechelette travaillait jusqu’à présent au sein d’ETDE, le pole énergies et services du groupe Bouygues Construction, notamment dans le développement des contrats de partenariats public-privé.
Sur 2011, le taux de couverture du fonds de pension néerlandais ABP s’est détérioré de 10 points à 94 % pendant que le volume des engagements gonflait de 36 milliards pour ressortir à 261 milliards d’euros. Dès lors, ABP a décidé sur une base provisoire d’abaisser ses prestations de 0,5 % à compter du 1er avril 2013, si la situation financière ne s’est pas améliorée.De plus, la cotisation supplémentaire temporaire de 1 point de pourcentage (tijdelijke herstelopslag) pour équilibrer les comptes est triplée à compter du 1er janvier 2012 et jusqu'à fin 2013, annonce un communiqué publié le 1er février. Déjà, l’an dernier, ABP avait renoncé à indexer ses prestations (lire Newsmanagers du 5 décembre) et annoncé que les mesures envisagées à présent pourraient être adoptées.L’objectif fixé par le régulateur, la Banque des Pays-Bas (DNB) consiste à atteindre un taux de couverture de 105 % pour fin 2013.Henk Brouwer, le président d’ABP, reconnaît que «ce n’est, hélas, pas une bonne nouvelle, mais (que) cette diminution de 0,5 % ne représente en fin de compte qu’un moins-perçu de 3,50 euros par mois en moyenne pour les bénéficiaires».
Suite à une charge exceptionnelle pour dépréciation du fonds de commerce aux Etats-Unis, le BBVA affiche pour 2011 une contraction de 34,8 % de son bénéfice net, à 3 milliards d’euros. hors éléments exceptionnels, le bénéfice a diminué de 12,8 % à 4 milliards d’euros.Le bénéfice net du pôle banque de gros et gestion d’actifs, qui coiffe le corporate & investment banking, les global markets et la gestion d’actifs, ressort à 1.122 millions d’euros contre 1.224 millions pour 2010. Le BBVA précise que l’encours mondial de sa gestion d’actifs (fonds d’investissement et fonds de pension) ressortait fin décembre à presque 73 milliards d’euros.
Avec le feu vert des actionnaires, le groupe de services financiers a conclu le rachat de Stelphia AM auprès de la Banque Postale AM et OFI AM, actionnaires historiques de la société de gestion. «Compte-tenu de l’image de marque développée ces dix dernières années, Stelphia AM conservera son nom au sein du groupe Assya, compagnie financière», précise le communiqué.
Ben Bernanke s’est livré à un exercice de funambule lors de son intervention hier soir devant le Congrès américain. Malgré des signes d’une amélioration de l’investissement des entreprises américaines, le président de le Réserve fédérale a indiqué que la crise européenne continue de menacer la reprise du pays et que la Fed fera tout pour éviter un effet de contagion. Une porte ouverte vers un QE3. Alors qu’il s’est engagé à maintenir des taux exceptionnellement bas au moins jusqu'à la fin 2014, Ben Bernanke a néanmoins précisé qu’il ne comptait pas sacrifier l’objectif d’une inflation stable à 2% pour relancer l’emploi. Un bras tendu au faucon de la Fed de Dallas, Richard Fisher, qui a réitéré hier concernant un éventuel troisième volet d’assouplissement quantitatif que «personnellement je ne vois pas comment cela pourrait se justifier compte tenu de l’état actuel de l’économie».
L’Autorité européenne des marchés a lancé hier le Central Rating Repository (CEREP) qui fournit des informations sur les notations de crédit émises par les quinze agences enregistrées ou certifiées dans l’Union européenne. Cette base de données va permettre aux investisseurs d’évaluer selon divers critères la performance et la fiabilité des notations de crédit à partir d’une plate-forme unique.
Selon l’étude publiée par Towers Watson, les actifs des fonds de pension institutionnels des treize marchés principaux ont affiché une croissance de 4 % en 2011, pour atteindre un record de 28 000 milliards de dollars, contre 26 000 milliards en 2010. Les actifs des fonds de pension globaux affichent une croissance moyenne de plus de 6 % par an depuis 2001.
En déplacement dans l’Essonne, Nicolas Sarkozy a estimé que le niveau actuel des droits de mutation était un frein à la mobilité des ménages et indiqué qu’il allait ouvrir en conséquence «le grand chantier de la réforme de la fiscalité sur l’immobilier». Une annonce de nature à tendre un peu plus les relations avec les collectivités locales qui perçoivent ces recettes.