p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The Lyxor Hedge Fund Index gained 1.97% in September 2010. As of 30 September, the index had earned 2.82% since the beginning of the year. For the month, the alternative strategies which have posted the best returns are the Special Situations Index (4%), L/S Equity Long Bias Index (3.91%), and Global Macro Index (2.47%).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } As a part of the 2011 budget, the Norwegian finance minister on 7 October announced that a new strategy council will be created for the Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG, formerly known as the Oil Fund). The new structure, which will include four independent experts, will initially have as a task to write a report on the GPFG’s long-term investment policy by December 2010 at the latest. The board will be chaired this year by Elroy Dimson (London Business School). It will also include Antti Ilmanen (Brevan Howard), Øystein Stephansen (DnB NOR Markets) and Eva Liljeblom (Hanken School of Economics).
Over the past few months, Aberdeen Asset Management has raised capital for several of its pooled funds in the Nordic region to a total value of EUR127 million. The funds in question are domestic funds in Finland, Norway and Denmark as well as the group’s Pan-Nordic fund, says a press release.
The European Commission will open a consultation before the end of the year on proposed regulations which would cover all retail investment products, Sonia Cattarinussi, a member of the DG Market asset management team of the European Commission, announced on 7 October at the 9th annual asset management forum hosted by Agefi.The products are known by the acronym PRIPS (Package Retail Investment Products), which, Cattarinussi says, may lose the letter P, to become RIPS. These products would include collective management and some banking products, including stock market investment products and all or part of life insurance and retirement products.Precontractual information would be distributed in the KID format (the simplified prospectus containing key information for the investor) under UCITS IV, while for the second phase, advising at the point of sale, MiFID regulations now in course would form the basis for harmonisation.
The Committee of European Banking Supervisors – made up of representatives of the 27 EU countries – plans tougher-than-expected restrictions on bankers’ pay, people familiar with the talks told the Financial Times. The group is due to issue draft regulations within days. The document calls on banks to set a maximum ratio between salary and bonuses.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Die Welt reports that the Munich-based management firm UBS Real Estate KAG on 7 October announced a further freeze, for a period of one year, on redemptions from the open-ended real estate fund UBS (D) 3 Sector Real Estate Europe. Redemptions from the German-registered product (EUR364m) had already been frozen from October 2008 to October 2009. Redemption demands since the beginning of September have totalled EUR42m. The fund management firm says the outflows are due to the announcement of a new investment law which will require longer retention periods and a punitive charge on redemptions thereafter. In addition, the closure of an Allianz Global Investors real estate fund of funds to redemptions, and the announcement of the liquidation of the KanAm US grundinvest fund also triggered redemptions.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Vanguard has selected Wellington Management Company and Delaware Investments as investment advisers for the management of its Vangurd U.S. Growth fund, which has USD3.7bn in assets. The two firms replace AllianceBernstein L.P., which had advised Vanguard on the product since 2001. Wellington Management advises a total of 19 mutual funds from Vanguard.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The former Comptroller of the State of New York has ultimately decided to plead guilty to corruption charges related to the government pension fund, the Wall Street Journal reports. He has agreed to cooperate with the authorities investigating the “Pay to Play” scandal. On Thursday, Hevesi admitted to having negotiated access to the pension fund which he previously directed, in exchange for personal profit and political favours. Hevesi admitted that he had accepted nearly USD1m in the form of overseas travel, contribution to electoral campaigns, and other advantages for himself and those associated with him from a California asset management firm which received a USD250m mandate from the New York Common Retirement Fund. Hevesi was sole trustee of the fund.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The hedge fund management firm QVT has filed a suit in a Delaware court against Commerzbank, seeking USD68m in damages, the Börsen-Zeitung reports. Eurohypo, an affiliate of Commerzbank, in June refused to pay interest on USD226m invested by QVT in two subordinated Tier 1 issues placed in the United States, and dividend-right certificates held by QVT, on the grounds that Eurohypo ran at a loss in 2009. The European Commission forbids all banks which have received government assistance, which includes Commerzbank, from paying interest on hybrid capital if they show losses.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Nomura has launched the Nomura C10 Fund, a UCITS III-compliant fund which aims to give investors directional exposure to Chinese economic growth. The algorithmic strategy, developed by fixed income research and structuring teams at Nomura, takes long positions each month on 10 liquid currencies, selected on the basis of the ratio of exports to China from each country as a percentage of GDP. The fund offers daily liquidity and is available in euros, US dollars or pounds Sterling, and is available to institutional and retail investors. It is already licensed for sale in Ireland, and will soon be registered in most major European countries.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Merchant Capital, a provider of UCITS hedge fund vehicles, is launching a third fund on its platform, Hedgeweek reports. The Merchant Global Resources UCITS Fund is an absolute return strategy dedicated to natural resources worldwide. It will be launched this month, and will have USD15m in assets under management, from European institutional and private investors. The strategy follows a top-down approach, with bottom-up analysis, to select 100 to 150 shares of the energy, mining, precious metals and agriculture sectors. The fund is aimed at European investors, IFAs, retail distribution chains, family offices, pension funds, funds of hedge funds, private clients and high net worth individuals (HNWI).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The High Dividend Selection sub-fund of the Luxembourg Sicav Pictet Funds (see Newsmanagers of 14 and 21 June), launched on 14 May 2010, has already attracted EUR95m as of 6 October; the fund had EUR84m as of the end of September. The product is the UCITS-compliant version of a Japanese fund with USD11bn in assets, launched in 2005. Karen Kharmandarian, one of the managers of the product, stated on Thursday in Paris that Pictet will serve subscribers a minimum annual dividend of 4% (or 33 basis points per quarter), and that it will redistribute the remainder at the end of the fiscal year (30 September). Gross returns for the portfolio of about 70 positions currently (of which 86% are investment grade), with good visibility, are about 5 ½%, or a net 4.3-4.4%. The top 10 positions account for about 35% of the total, and the portfolio turnover rate is on a gradual increasing trend, towards 30%. The fund has the quadruple objective of offering higher returns than bonds, diversifying currencies of investments, investing worldwide, and providing good protection against inflation (due to automatic adjustment mechanisms). Pictet has chosen the infrastructure segment, and as benchmark index, the MSCI ACWI top 50% Yield EUR. Geographical diversification serves to minimise regulatory and political risks. Kharmandarian says the fund tends to underperform on strong markets, to be defensive and lose less on falling markets, and to outperform when prices oscillate at high amplitudes.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } BBVA Asset Management on 9 September launched Fon-Plazo 2014, a guaranteed fund which guaranteed 108.17% of the initial liquid value as of 15 November 2010 at maturity on 15 October 2014, which represents an effective overal rate of return of 2%. Minimal initial subscription is set at EUR600 (except for employees, pensioners, or pre-pensioners of the BBVA group). The fund, which offers daily liquidity, will invest in public debt repurchase agreements, assets on the money markets issued in euros by entities in OECD countries, among others. The average duration, from 15 November 2010, will be less than 3 months, and the average rating must be at least A- for 75% of the portfolio (the management team may allocate up to 25% of assets to papers rated BBB- to BBB+.Characteristics Name: BBVA Fon-Plazo 2014 C, FIISIN code: ES0113823001Front-end fee: 5%Penalty for exit before maturity: 1% (except at “liquidity windows”)Management commission: 0.1% (up to and including 15 November 2010) and 1.05% (from 16 November 2010).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } A spokesperson for the private bank Bankhaus Lampe (Oetker group) on 7 October confirmed that an offer to acquire BHF-Bank is under study, in cooperation with the private equity investor KKR, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. Among the other three candidates to acquire the private and business bank which Deutsche Bank has put up for sale are LGT Bank and the private equity investor Apollo. BHF was previously owned by Sal. Oppenheim, which was acquired by Deutsche Bank. BHF employs 1,500 people, and manages over EUR40bn in assets. Its book value is estimated to EUR650m. Bankhaus Lampe has 600 employees and manages EUR14bn.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } A general meeting of the BVI association of management firms on 7 October elected Klaus Kaldemorgen, spokesman (president) of the executive committee at DWS, as a member of its board. He replaces Thomas Richter, a member of the executive committee at DWS, who has recently been appointed a member of the executive team at BVI, and who stepped down from the board of the association on 1 October.
According to Asian Investor, Sandra Lee will become Asia-Pacific head of sales in Hong Kong at iShares (BlackRock). She was previously regional deputy to Morgan Stanley IM’s Asia chief executive. Her predecessor was David Gardner, who relocated to Europe as head of Northern Europe and the Middle East in February.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Natixis Asset Management has created a department dedicated to international fixed income and currencies (see Agefi Weekly magazine of 7 October). The new team is directed by Brigitte Le Bris, who joined the firm at the beginning of October from Amundi (she was previously at SGAM). She is accompanied by Clothilde Malaussene and Sébastien Thénard.
Chris Leavy will join BlackRock as chief investment officer of U.S. fundamental equity – a newly created position. Most recently, he served as chief investment officer of equities at OppenheimerFunds. In his new role, Chris Leavy will be responsible for overseeing BlackRock’s USD150 billion U.S.-based fundamental equity business. He will report to Quintin Price, head of and global chief investment officer for fundamental equity.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Groupama Asset Management has adopted a new slogan: “Responsible management: our committment.” With this slogan the asset management firm “reaffirms its desire to be an actively responsible investor,” it explains in a press release. “This engagement goes beyond a simple publicity concept. It is part of the company’s DNA, and is carried by all teams at Groupama Asset Management,” says Francis Ailhaud, CEO of the asset management firm.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Daewoo Securities and Harcourt Investment Consulting have signed a strategic partnership agreement. Daewoo Securities will assist the management firm to sell funds of hedge funds to South Korean investors. The two funds will also join forces to provide investment advising to a category of institutional clients.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } OppenheimerFunds on 6 October announced the promotion of Art Steinmetz as chief investment officer. The New York firm has also announced the promotions of George Evans as director in charge of all equities investment teams, and Krishna Memani as director of fixed income. Steinmetz, who replaces Christopher Leavy, who has moved to BlackRock (see article elsewhere in today’s Newsmanagers), will have expanded responsibilities. He will continue to co-manage several funds (Oppenheimer International Bond Fund, Oppenheimer Global Strategic Income Fund and Oppenheimer Global Allocation Fund).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Ali Ould Rouis, chairman of the managing board at the Franch Robeco Gestions, announced on 7 October at the second half-yearly SRI conference Robeco SAM Paris Forum that Robeco Rotterdam will soon increase the number of specialists in its engagement & voting team to 10, from 7 currently. Marc Olivier, a sustainability analyst at SAM, based in Zurich, says that the number of businesses responding to the questionnaire is increasing by more than 10% per year. However, for the 2010 issue of the Yearbook, 2,617 businesses were contacted, and only 698 filled the questionnaire. In total, SAM has analysed 1,393 businesses, of which 685 were reviewed solely on the basis of public information. Olivier explains that the rate of response is satisfactory, although it is relatively low due to a “fatigue effect” due to a rising number of questionnaires. Although SAM is virtually the only asset management firm to undertake such an effort, there are many specialists in other industries which contact companies, and the cost of these efforts could potentially be financially onerous for the latter.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Fidelity International will soon announce the appointment of Deborah Seto, formerly of Invesco, as its new head of institutional client relationship management in Hong Kong, Asian Investor reports.
Tikehau IM a annoncé hier le lancement de TSS2, un deuxième fonds destiné aux dettes européennes en situations spéciales, rapporte l’Agefi. Suravenir, filiale d’assurance du Crédit Mutuel Arkéa, et Tikehau Capital Partners, apportent une partie de l’encours initial de 50 millions d’euros, sur un objectif de 300 millions. TSS2 adopte un statut de fonds commun de titrisation avec une structure de souscription offrant 3,5% de coupon annuel plus une part résiduelle capturant les flux excédentaires générés afin de tendre vers au moins 12% de taux de rendement interne (TRI). Pour cela, TSS2 sera investi en recherchant des décotes sur les prêts et créances bancaires ou obligations en situations spéciales.