In first half, Henderson underwent total net redemptions of GBP2.86bn, despite GBP575m in net subscriptions to its retail funds. Assets under management have nonetheless increased by GBP12.8bn, or 21%, since 31 December, to a total of GBP74.4bn, This is largely due to the integration of assets from Gartmore, which totalled GBP15.7bn when the acquisition was concluded.The firm has earned underlying pre-tax profits of GBP86.4bn, up 78% compared with first half 2010. But it has seen a pre-tax loss of GBP3.1m, due to one-time elements related to the Gartmore acquisition.
Peter Clarke has left the investment advising agency Calimere Point Advisors to join Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP) as of 8 August, as institutional sales director. He will be specialised in the British market, and will report to Gordon Phillips, Interim Co-Head of Distribution and Client Management.
Assets under management by the British management firm Liontrust Asset Management as of 30 June totalled GBP1.31bn, of which GBP414m were from institutional clients. As of 16 August, assets under management totalled GBP1.216bn, down 7.1% compared with 30 June, due largely to market movements. However, Liontrust has continued to attract capital for the fourth consecutive quarter, this time with net inflows of GBP13m. Between 1 July and 15 August, this growth continued, with net inflows of GBP28m.
The managing director of Bluefin Wealth Management, Suvan de Soysa, left the firm in May 2011 to pursue other interests in the United Kingdom and Australia. He has been replaced by Simon Hellier as head of the Axa group affiliate. Hellier was previously head of Oval Financial Services.
Fidelity is to offer commission-free shares in its generalist funds, in order to prepare itself for the Retail Distribution Review (RDR) reforms, Money Marketing reports. The management firm has recently introduced Y share classes for some funds, which charge fees of 1%, and carry no commissions.
Insead OSEE Data Services (IODS), created under a partnership signed in late 2010 by the Insead Foundation, the European savings observatory, the Caisse des dépôts and the Viel group, has launched the first European portal for economic and financial data aimed at researchers, as well as to finance professionals.The data available at http://www.iods-data.eu/ is organised into four major areas: Market data Financial data about European businesses Data about financial products, with particularly detailed information about each investment fund Data about savings and credit These data will be updated regularly, and access will be available to over 35 years of past data.
The Dow Jones Credit Suisse hedge fund index rose 0.69% in July, according to the most recent estimates, with six sectors posting positive returns. Managed futures earned the best returns of the month, with gains of 4.03%.
The wealth management division of the Barclays group, Barclays Wealth, has recruited Anne Luke as head of client solutions for Asia, Finance Asia reports. She will be based in Singapore. In her new role, Luke, who previously worked at UBS, will be in charge of organisation, structuring and distribution of solutions aimed at ultra-high net worth (UHNW) clients.
The New York-based management firm Van Eck Global on 17 August announced the launch of Market Vectors Mortgage REIT Income ETF (acronym on NYSE Arca: MORT), which until 1 May 2013 will charge fees of 0.40%. The fund replicates the performance, before fees, of the Market Vectors Global Mortgage REITs Index, which covered 25 companies as of 31 July.The index includes exclusively firm which earn at least 50% of their revenues from mortgage REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts), a category which in recent years has generated higher returns than equity REITs. Unlike other ETFs focused on mortgage REITs which are already available on the market, the index used by Van Eck includes no shares in mortgage financing companies or savings associations.Van Eck states that this is its first ETF dedicated to mortgage REITs, its tenth bond ETF, and the 36th ETF in its product range.
Net inflows to British funds of funds in first half totalled GBP3.8bn, of which GBP2bn were in second quarter, according to statistics from the British investment management association (IMA). Assets under management in funds of funds as of the end of June totalled GBP63.5bn, representing 11% of all assets under management. They are up 37% compared with second quarter 2010. Inflows to tracker funds totalled GBP313m in second quarter, down compared with an average of GBP515m in the past four quarters. Assets under management totalled GBP40.5bn as of 30 June, up 33% compared with second quarter 2010. Ethical funds, for their part, posted net inflows of GBP94m, a level not seen since fourth quarter 2007. Assets under management in ethical funds as of the end of June totalled GBP7.1bn, up 23% compared with second quarter 2010.
The British management firm LV=Asset Management has finalised an operation to outsource the management of GBP8.5bn in assets to Threadneedle, under a “long-term” partnership, according to a statement published on 15 August. By the terms of the agreement announced last month, most of the funds transferred will retain their current structure. The transfer will be undertaken at the end of October.
The US firm BNY Mellon Asset Servicing has been selected by the China Construction Bank (CCB) as international custodian for the QDII (Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor) fund which will be launched in China by Manulife Teda Fund Management Co (Manulife Teda FMC), entitled Manulife New Economic Pattern Fund. Manulife Teda FMC is a joint venture founded in 2002, which already manages 16 funds.
The Zurich-based wealth-management firm VZ Holding on 18 August announced inflows of CHF528m in first half 2011. Assets under management as of the end of June totalled CHF8.1bn, compared with CHF7.8bn previously. Net profits at VZ Holding were up 8.4% in first half, to CHF25.1m. In the past few months, the wealth management firm has opened four new locations in Switzerland and Germany, and increased its personnel by 20, to 522.
Lloyds International Wealth has announced that it is adding to its executive board, with the appointment of Alex Tsikouras as Head of Customer Management, Agefi Switzerland reports. Tsikouras, who was previously employed at Deutsche Bank, joined Lloyds TSB Private Banking two years ago as Head of International Affluent team. He will be based in Geneva, and will be in charge of setting up a new client management function, and will be responsible for activities to acquire new clients. Chris Gowland becomes Proposition Director. He joins the executive board from the UK Retail Products division of the bank, where he was previously Acquisition Director for the Lloyds Banking Group Mortgages division.
As of the end of June, assets under management by the Swiss alternative management firm Harcourt (Vontobel group) totalled USD4.9bn, compared with USD4.8bn as of the end of 2010. The firm says that growth in assets under management has been slowed by adverse market conditions. Harcourt has reported net subscriptions for its two flagship funds, Blevista Commodity and VONDA Ucits, as well as for the Belmont Commodity Trading Fund. Most inflows are coming from institutional clients.
Assets under management at the Banque cantonale vaudoise (BCV) increased by 3%, or about CHF2.4bn, in first half 2011, to a total of CHF78.2bn, the bank announced on 18 August in a statement. The impact of the consolidation of the Banque Franck Galland totalled CHF3bn. Net inflows in first half totalled CHF854m. Net profits rose 6% to CHF154m.
The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports that Swiss Life has announced that it has reduced the proportion of its investment portfolio (totalling CHF114bn overall) dedicated to equities from 3.1% to 1.1% in first half, in order to invest more in corporate bonds and real estate. This reduction corresponds arithmetically to CHF2.3bn, or CHF2bn. As of 30 June, the equities portfolio was composed 51% of Swiss shares, 35% of French shares, and 16% of German shares. However, Swiss Life faces a considerable currency risk on its corporate bond portfolio, as 50% of it is denominated in euros, and 25% in US dollars.
The British management boutique Jupiter Asset Management on 17 August announced that it is adding to its distribution team in Germany and Austria, with the recruitment of Bernard Vogel as Sales Manageer, Germany & Austria. Vogel, who was responsible for the acquisition of funds from Axa Lebensversicherung, will report to Martina Günzl, Sales Director, Europe. The recruitment follows the opening of an office in Munich in 2010, which aimed to improve services to existing clients and to develop new opportunities for growth.
After three years as a specialised investment adviser at Deutsche Bank, Holger Schröm on 1 August returned as director of sales at JPMorgan Asset Management (JPMAM) in the Distribution Sales Team focused on financial advisers, which is led by Christoph Bergweiler. The press spokesperson for Frankfurt Trust has also joined JPMAM as head of public relations. He will report to Jean Guido Servias, head of marketing for the German-speaking countries (Germany, Austria and Switzerland).
After ten years in management positions at Telefónica and positions of operational responsibility at Banco Português de Investimento (BPI), Antonio Viana-Baptista has been appointed as CEO at Credit Suisse for the Iberian peninsula, replacing Fernando Abril-Martorell, who resigned in March, but will remain as senior adviser. Abril-Martorell will be based in Madrid, and will report to Fawzil Kyriakos-Saad, CEO of Credit Suisse for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA).
The Austrian management firm FTC Capital GmbH, a specialist in managed futures, has announced the recruitment of Helmut Spitzer, who for a long time was one of the directors of Superfund. Spitzer will become Director Business Development, both for institutional client advising and for development of distribution via partners.
The Taiwan-based management firm Fubon Asset Management, which a few months ago received an allocation of USD100m as a qualified foreign institutional investor (QFII), will launch an ETF at the end of September which will replicate the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) 180 Index, and will be listed on the Taiwan stock exchange, Asian Investor reports. Fubon hopes to raise TWD3bn, more or less equivalent to the USD100m quota it has received.
According to a survey by TNS Infratest on behalf of the Deutsches Aktieninstitut (DAI), the number of shareholders in equities funds and/or diversified funds in Germany as of the end of June came to 6,085 million, which represents 9.4% of the population.Compared with the end of December 2010, this total is up by about 117,000, while the increase compared with the end of 1997 was 3.8 million, or 163.6%. However, this number is 3.7 million lower than the all-time record set in 2001, a decline of 37.7%.
A survey by Schroder Property KAG of 112 German professional investors has found that one third of institutionals is planning to liquidate its investments in open-ended real estate funds in the next 12 months. About 65% of these investors currently have fund shares in their portfolios, but only 33% are planning to increase their exposure to these products in the next 12 months.In other words, new legislation which came into force in April 2011 (see Newsmanagers of 14 February) has not convinced respondents: 47% of specialists claim that the measures adopted are inadequate overall, and 84% say that the measures do not justify an increase in exposure to these funds.These results may complicate plans on the part of management firms to reopen 11 open-ended real estate funds which were obliged to freeze redemptions. Four managers have already decided to liquidate their products. The combined total assets in funds which are frozen or in a liquidation phase come to about EUR30bn.In the 12 months to 30 June 2011, total assets in open-ended real estate funds fell by EUR3bn, to EUR85.03bn. This is probably due in part to the fact that open-ended real estate funds last year suffered an average loss of 2.7% although property prices had been rising. But the price increase was mainly concentrated on residential estates, whilst funds are mainly invested in commercial properties.
With Fondsservice Hannover, the Hanover stock exchange on 17 August launched a segment on which investors may initially buy shares in 1,100 funds at the net asset value indicated by the asset management firm, without paying a front-end fee. The price will be a flat EUR15, regardless of the size of the order. Among the funds on offer are products from promoters such as DWS, Fidelity and Franklin Templeton.Unlike on the Hamburg stock exchange, there will be no all-day listing, and orders will be grouped at the end of each trading day and executed at the next fixing.
According to an annual survey by Fidelity International which since 2004 has covered funds of funds with a sales license in Germany, assets under management in these products increased again last year, by 8.7%, to a total of EUR52.5bn, in comparable figures. The figures in fact come from a study by Morningstar, which, in its October and April revisions, considerably reduced the perimeter of products with the right to be called funds of funds. By way of comparison, Fidelity International one year ago (see Newsmanagers of 25 August 2010) reported an increase of 15% in assets under management, to EUR52.6bn as of the end of 2009, from EUR44.9bn at the end of 2008.The survey also finds that the percentage of third-party funds of funds or funds which invest primarily in external funds was 65.2% (EUR34.23bn), compared with 64.2% (EUR30.99bn) one year earlier, while assets in these funds increased 10.5%, compared with only 5.6% growth for funds which focus completely or mostly on “inhouse” funds.The top three promoters of funds of funds as of the end of December were Deka/International Fund Management (savings banks) with EUR16.03bn, compared with EUR15.5bn one year earlier, for a market share of 30.5% compared with 32.1% as of the end of 2009, putting it far ahead of DWS (Deutsche Bank), with EUR5.23bn, compared with EUR4.75bn and 9.96% of the market, compared with 9.85%, and Union Investment (co-operative banks), with EUR2.62bn, compared with EUR2.01bn, for a market share of 4.99%, compared with 4.17%.For funds used as investment vehicles by funds of funds, the leader is Deka, with EUR8.27bn in 629 products, compared with EUR7.97bn in 597 funds one year earlier; but this asset management firm operates almost exclusively with a closed architecture model. It is followed by DWS, with EUR3.26bn, compared with EUR2.96bn (541 funds compared with 560), and JPMorgan, with EUR1.62bn, compared with EUR1.3bn, and 340 funds, up from 327. The only ETF issuer in the top 15 providers is iShares (BlackRock), with EUR1.62bn. Carmignac is in sixth place, with EUR1.28bn and 122 funds, compared with EUR1.08bn and 154 funds last year.
Mandats de gestion discrétionnaire de portefeuille dans un ou plusieurs thèmes d’investissement spécialisés: énergie (lot 1), agri-food (lot 2), real assets (lot 3), actions européennes large cap (lot 4), actions à haut dividend (lot 5). La valeur de marché (situation au 30.6.2011) de la part du portefeuille sur laquelle porte le présent marché, s'élève à 76 000 000 EUR. L'étendu du marché le nombre de points de base en fonction du patrimoine géré. Durée en mois: 60 (à compter de la date d’attribution du contrat) Pour lire l’avis complet: cliquez ici