p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The School Employees Retirement System of Ohio, a pension fund with USD9.7bn in assets, is seeking a total of Usd24m, which it lost on operations related to securities lending, from Wachovia, and therefore Wells Fargo, which acquired the firm, the Wall Street Journal reports. The pension fund says the bank reinvested the cash collateral in transactions which were not a part of the mandate it had been assigned, particularly with Sigma Finance, a structured investment vehicle.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Les Echos reports that US economists at the American Economic Association (AEA) would like to give some support to their credibility by setting up an “ethical code” to smooth relations between Wall Street and academic circles. At the annual conference, which will be held in Denver on 6 January, the executive committee of the largest global organisation of economists (17,000 professionals) will propose a new charter for its members which would require economists to make their consulting activities publicly known. The initiative comes a few months after the release of a documentary entitled “Inside Job” by Charles Ferguson, which revealed the sometimes incestuous relations between Wall Street and certain university professors.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Douglas A. Kelley, the court-appointed receiver for the business of Tom Petters, has filed several lawsuits against J.P. Morgan Chase and its affiliate One Equity Partners, seeking USD300m on the basis that they knew, or should have known, that money seized from the accounts of the fraudster were the proceeds of fraud, the Wall Street Journal reports. The amount sought represents the millions of dollars in these accounts as well as commissions earned from the acquisition of shares in Polaroid in operations related to a Ponzi scheme.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } ESMA, the new European market authority, will be created on 3 January in Paris, with the aim of harmonizing national regulatory frameworks, Les Echos reports. It will become a force to contend with for national market regulators, including the British FSA. To this end, it has new competences beyond those of its predecessor, the European Committee of Securities Regulators (CESR). The most important of these is the ability to declare technical standards applicable to all markets in Europe.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } As of 22 December, assets in the hausInvest fund, managed by Commerz Real, represented less than EUR9.98bn, compared with more than EUR10.81bn as of 1 October, Das Investment reports.This decline of nearly EUR1bn is due to rising equities and uncertainties related to the future of open-ended real estate funds. Despite the redemptions, Commerzbank is not planning a sales drive, says Markus Esser, spokesman for Commerz Real.HausInvest is the product born of the merger of the hausInvest europa and hausInvest global funds (see Newsmanagers of 25 March 2010).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } One week after selling two properties in Saint-Denis for EUR120m (see Newsmanagers of 24 December), Union Investment Real Estate (UIRE) has announced the sale of an office/commercial property in Hamburg for EUR44.6m to Aachener Grundvermögen Kapitalanlagegesellschaft mbH. The sale, like those of the two French properties, took place at a price higher than the most recent expert valuation.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The open-ended real estate fund CS Euroreal from Credit Suisse Germany, which has been closed to redemptions for several months (see Newsmanagers of 21 May 2010), on 17 December announced the sale for EUR184m of two properties in Paris: an office building located at 31 avenue Pierre I de Serbie, and a commercial property at 88 rue de Rivoli. The total sale price is higher than the most recent expert valuation.Credit Suisse also states that the fund on 14 December distributed EUR199.1m in dividends for the period to 30 September 2010, of which more than one quarter, EUR52.4m, were reinvested in the fund in the next three days.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The sun is rising over the Rhine. Major transactions are still expected in the German private equity industry, despite its collapse in 2009, and the fact that the recovery of private equity funds has been slower than expected, the Financial Times Deutschland reports. But investors estimate that the time is not right, and nothing is changing in terms of fundamental trends. Germany is nonetheless a privileged hunting-ground for large funds, due to the excellent financial health of many businesses which may represent potential targets. In this environment, major market actors have all built up funds with very good volumes of spending money, with more than EUR11bn at Apax, more than EUR6bnat BC Partners and about EUR10bn at Blackstone.
Eric Helderlé tells Newsmangers what's new at a rising star firm with EUR50bn in assets under management. The CEO of the company based in the place Vendôme in Paris isn't bashful about answering any questions, on topics ranging from recent appointments, the firm's founder, Edouard Carmignac, the success of the Carmignac Patrimoine fund, the limits of its popularity...
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Professionals do not believe the official version of the story, according to which Klaus Kaldemorgen is voluntarily giving up his position as administrative head of DWS (EUR274bn in assets) in order to concentrate on management of equities funds, Handelsblatt reports (see Newsmanagers of 30 December 2010).Sources familiar with the matter say that the transfer or departure of Kaldemorgen and other senior officers from the management firm (Andreas Feiden, who is moving to Fidelity, Ingo Gefeke and Axel Schwarzer, who are leaving the group) is due to insufficient profits for the investment fund activitie and to the fact that the heads of Deutsche Bank, would haveve wished to see DWS develop more internationally. In addition, open-ended funds from DWS in 2010 saw net outflows of over EUR1.6bn.The new CEO is Wolfgang Matis, 54, who had been planning to retire. He was a colleague of Anshu Jain, the head of the investment banking division of Deutsche Bank. Jain is credited with the best chances of succeeding Josef Ackermann, chairman of the board.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to statistics from VDOS Stochastics, Spanish funds as of 24 December had assets of EUR144.54bn, 15.35% less than at the end of 2009. In December, assets under management were down by EUR324m, due to the fact that gains of over EUR1.59bn were not enough to offset net redemptions of nearly EUR1.92bn.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Luis Hernández, formerly of Cetelem as well as BNP Banque Privée, has been appointed CEO of BNP Paribas Wealth Management in Spain, following the merger with Fortis, Expansión reports, relayed by Funds People. He will be assisted by Jaime Hap, former CEO of Fortis Banca Privada, Alfonso Martínez Parras, head of sales, and Bertrand Léger, administrative director. BNP Paribas Wealth Management (200 employees, two thirds of whom come from BNP Paribas and the rest from Fortis) manages about EUR5.5bn. It has 4,500 individuals or families as clients, and has reduced its personnel by 65 as part of the merger. Hernández says that net inflows in 2010 totalled about EUR200m, which were offset by market effects, meaning that asset volumes remained stable.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Juan Carlos Acitores, European equities fund manager at Ahorro Corporación, has been recruited as head of sales at Threadneedle for the Iberian peninsula and Latin America.He joins the Madrid office of the British asset management firm, where he will work with Leonardo López, head of sales for Spain. He will report to Rubén García, head of distribution for the Iberian peninsula and Latin America.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Although “mirror funds” provide access to some of the largest hedge fund managers, La Tribune asks whether their returns are the same as those of the original offshore funds. HedgeFund Intelligence has undertaken a study of 62 offshore products and their clones. Across all strategies, the average difference in performance between the two types of fund is 3.38%, the newspaper reports. HFI states that there are nearly as many UCITS funds that ouperform as underperform the offshore products. “The difference in performance depends on the strategy replicated and on structuring costs,” explains Serge Darolles, deputy head of the Lyxor R&D team, and author of a study on the subject.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The US financial services firm Raymond James Financial has announced that it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Howe Barnes Hoefer & Arnett, a brokerage firm based in Chicago, which also has a wealth management unit with USD1.9bn in assets under management.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The German AmpegaGerling Asset Management (Talanx group) and the Austrian foundations San Gabriel and T.R. just before Christmas notified the German (BaFin) and Austrian (FMA) regulators that they have reduced their stakes in the Austro-German asset management firm C-Quadrat Investment (nearly EUR5bn in assets). AmpegaGerling AM, which is planning to retain 25.1% of capital, says it has reduced its stake to 29% from 32.59%, acquired from the receiver of AvW (see Newsmanagers of 14 October). San Gabriel and T.R., for their part, respectively controlled by Thomas Riess and Alexander Schütz, the two founders of C-Quadrat, have announced that as of 20 December they have sold a total stake of 3.51% in its capital. They now respectively control 21.95% and 21.359%. C-Quadrat Investment has informed the FMA in a market statement that it is planning to sell its 25.1% stake in the Austrian group Ariconsult Holding to other shareholders, who have first right on it, for a total of EUR0.5m. The offer is valid for two months.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } 2011 may be an excellent year for equities, many managers predict. The question, of course, is which ones. There is no agreement on this subject. Several major US managers are sticking by their picks, despite criticism from their peers, Bloomberg reports. The chairman and chief investment officer of Legg Mason, Bill Miller, estimates, that 2010 was the right time to buy large caps. He persists and claims that 2011 will be a year to bring that prediction to fruition, despite 2010 having given it the lie. His flagship fund, dedicated to large caps, the Legg Mason Capital Management Value Trust, with about USD4bn in assets, gained 6.6% in 2010, less than 98% of funds in the same category, according to Bloomberg statistics. However, Miller’s fund dedicated to midcaps (USD2bn), the Legg Mason Capital Management Opportunitey Trust, has gained 17%. Donald Yacktman, who in 2000 predicted that US equities would gain ground in the next ten years, is also backing large caps. His fund, the Yacktman Focused Fund (USD1.9bn), did less well than 75% of similar funds. “In 40 years, I have rarely seen a situation where so many large and profitable multinational companies were selling at such low prices,” Yacktman says.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Laffitte Capital Management (LCM) now manages EUR85m, equally divided between institutional, retail and multi-management clients. According to La Tribune, the management firm is aiming for EUR250m by the end of 2011. The firm is also studying the possibility of developing managed accounts. The arrival of a new manager is also planned.
The euro has only a 20% chance of surviving in its current form for the next ten years, according to the British research institute CEBR (Centre for Economics and Business Research), which on 31 December published its ten major predictions for 2011.In its commentary on the euro, at the top of the list of predictions, the CEBR points out that Spain and Italy will need to refinance EUR400bn of their debt in spring, which could potentially create a new crisis in the euro zone. The euro may disintegrate at that time, even if European directors are capable of responding to such a crisis.“If the euro does not fall apart, 2011 could be the year when it weakens substantially, towards parity with the dollar,” says the CEO of the CEBR, Douglas McWilliams. “I think that the thing which will put an end to the euro will be the failure of most countries to adopt remedies that include the necessary constraints to make their economies competitive over the longer term,” the CEBR chief explains.The British think tank estimates that Germany will continue to play the role of a super-star in the Western world. It points out that the success of the German economy is partly due to the contribution of its immigrants, particularly from Turkey. However, Japan, whose debt now represents 200% of its GNP, may be facing a new financial crisis.The CEBR gives itself a positive verdict on its predictions for 2010, but admits that its sporting predictions were nearly all wrong. For 2011, the CEBR is nonetheless giving it another try. In football, it plucks for Manchester United for the British championship, and Real Madrid for the European title. New Zealand will beat Australia in the rugby world cup final, it says.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The US management firm Van Eck is planning to launch a new mutual fund on 3 January, the Van Eck CM Commodity Index Fund, Mutual Fund Wire reports.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Since 2009, Dynamic Funds (DundeeWealth group) has had six funds on sale in the United States.As of 27 December, the Wall Street Journal reports, its US Growth Fund, managed by Noah Blackstein, has gained 52% in one year, and posted USD14m in net subscriptions in fourth quarter, doubling its assets. It is the best leverage-free diversified US equities fund of 2010.The Dynamic Gold & Precious Metals Fund, an equities fund managed by Robert Cohen, has earned the highest performance for any type of fund in 2010, with 71%.Dynamic Funds, which represents most of the CAD33.8bn in assets under management at DundeeWealth, is struggling to retain most of its star managers now that Scotiabank has announced plans to acquire DundeeWealth (see Newsmanagers of 23 November 2010). Blackstein has announced that he is planning to remain in place.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Government Pension Fund – Global (GPFG), formerly known as the Petroleum Fund, has recently obtained permission to invest up to 5% of its assets (currently NOK3trn) in real estate, Handelsblatt reports. Previously, the fund was allowed to invest 60% of its assets in foreign equities and 40% in bonds, but the proportion in bonds has now been limited to 35%.The CEO of the GPFG, Yngve Slyngstad, soon afterwards announced the acqusition of a 25% stake in 113 properties in Regent Street in London from The Crown Estate, for NOK4.2bn (EUR513.8m). Further real estate acquisitions are planned in the United Kingdom, Germany and France, but no investments will take place in the United States before 2012.Slyngstad and Svein Gjedrem, governor of the Norwegian central bank, are currently in talks with the government to get an approval for the GPFG to invest in private equity.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The British firm Hargreaves Lansdown has withdrawn the SVM global opportunities fund from its list of 150 recommended funds, pointing to its increased volatility since the beginning of the financial crisis, Money Marketing reports. The fund has very significantly underperformed its benchmark sector in the past three years, down 24.6%, compared with gains of 8% for the Global Growth sector.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Money Marketing reports that Gemini Investment Management is considering new funds which may be dedicated to South America and Africa. Gemini is also planning to launch alternative vehicles. Two funds may already be available in first quarter, the managing director of Gemini, Stuart Alexander, says. In November, Gemini launched the Gemini Most India fund in partnership with the Indian broker Motilal Oswal.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Agefi reports that a New York state judge, Harold Baer, on Thursday rejected lawsuits filed by hedge funds related to the financial disclosures made by Porsche in 2008. The judge thus strengthened hopes that the merger of Porsche and Volkswagen would go ahead as planned in late 2011. The 40 hedge funds, led by Elliott Associates and Black Diamond, which lost USD2bn in the takeover bid by the largest European auto maker for its specialist compatriot, may now be defeated, the newspaper notes. Porsche did not disclose its real intentions to the hedge funds, which had short-sold shares, provoking a “short squeeze” effect when the funds were required to buy back the shares in catastrophic conditions.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } In 2010, only one quarter of Italian managers succeeded in outperforming their benchmarks, compared with 43% in 2009, Il Sole – 24 Ore reports. The two fund categories which suffered most were money markets and short-term bonds, with only 10.7% and 9.1% outperforming their benchmarks. Most funds analysed (60%) had returns 0% to 2% higher or lower than their benchmarks. Only 10% were more than 5% away from the index (13 in a positive and 34 in a negative direction).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Agefi Switzerland reports that the private banking sector in Switzerland is seeing limited demand for Sharia-compliant financial products. Pictet & Cie launched a thematic fund based on the methods of Islamic finance two years ago, and closed it last year. “There is an inexplicable scepticism on the part of Geneva private banks about giving a mandate to a consulting firm specialised in Sharia-compliant investment. As of now, no major institution of this type which is respected internationally is yet established in Switzerland, though they are in London and Luxembourg,” says John Sandwick, independent manager in Geneva, cited by the newspaper.