Le board de T. Rowe Price Group Inc (391,1 milliards de dollars d’encours fin juin) a autorisé mercredi soir le rachat de 15 millions d’actions supplémentaires, pour atteindre 22,4 millions de titres. Actuellement, le gestionnaire d’actifs compte environ 262 millions d’actions en circulation.
Selon les proches du dossier, rapporte The Wall Street Journal, le hedge fund Advantage Plus de John Paulson a accusé en août une perte de 4,3 %. Il continue à souffrir de ses paris prématurés sur une reprise de l'économie. Sur les huit premiers mois de l’année, la perte cumulée atteint 11 %. En revanche le Gold Fund de Paulson a enregistré une performance de 9 % pour août.
Le 3 septembre, Janus ETF Trust et Janus Capital Management ont soumis à la SEC une demande d’exemption du droit commun pour être autorisés à lancer des ETF actifs ouverts pouvant investir en actions ou en obligations cotées aux Etats-Unis ou à l'étranger, en opérations de réméré (repo) et reverse-repo, voire dans d’autres fonds ou ETF. Ces fonds ne seront cependant pas autorisés à investir en options, futures ou swaps.
Depuis le début de la semaine, la State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council ou SASAC, le fonds souverain chinois, a un nouveau président, rapporte le Financial Times Deutschland. Wang Yong, un expert de l’aéronautique et de l’espace, remplace Li Rongrong à la tête d’un empire qui détient des participations souvent majoritaires dans 123 entreprises chinoises dont le chiffre d’affaires combiné représente 7.800 milliards de yuans, soit environ 45 % du PIB chinois. Les bénéfices ont atteint au premier semestre 543 milliards de yuans ou 62 milliards d’euros, 60 % de plus que pour la période correspondante de l’an dernier.
D’après un proche du dossier, le fonds souverain Government of Singapore Investment Corp. (GIC) serait à un stade avancé de négociation avec le magnat brésilien André Esteves en vue de l’acquisition de 15 % dans le Banco BTG Pactual pour 2,4 milliards de dollars, rapporte The Wall Street Journal. Pactual gérait environ 34 milliards de dollars fin mars.
Le 3 septembre, la CNMV a enregistré la sicav luxembourgeoise Clariden (Leu) Lux I qui comprend quatre compartiments : Corporate Bond Fund, Money Market Fund EUR, Short Term Bond Fund EUR et Sovereign Bond Fund EUR.Ces produits du gestionnaire helvétique (groupe Credit Suisse) seront commercialisés en Espagne par Allfunds Bank.
Selon Asian Investor, Paul Rubens a quitté le hedge fund basé à Singapour Black Horse pour rejoindre Franklin Templeton à New York.Dans ses nouvelles fonctions, Paul Rubens devrait notamment accompagner les équipes d’investissement de Templeton en Asie, entre autres les co-entreprises sur le sol chinois avec Sealand Securities et China Life Insurance, ainsi que les antennes au Japon, en Inde et en Corée du Sud. Il devrait également intervenir dans d’autres régions, comme l’Amérique latine.
Selon Asian Investor, deux sociétés de Hong Kong spécialisées en gestion d’actifs, la firme de conseil Convoy Asset Management et la société value Zeal Asset Management tentent de lever 100 millions de dollars de Hong Kong pour lancer un fonds d’actions négligées ou sous-évaluées afin de profiter de la croissance économique en Chine.Le fonds, Voyage Zelec China Fund, se propose d’investir dans 35 à 50 valeurs, dont 70% sont cotées à Hong Kong. Le reliquat sera constitué d’actions B à fort potentiel cotées à Shenzhen et à Shanghai. Le fonds devrait être lancé le 20 septembre prochain. Les frais de gestion ont été fixés 1,75% par an avec une commission de performance de 15% par an. Le montant minimal à la souscription est de 50.000 dollars de Hong Kong.
L’autorité australienne de la concurrence (ACCC) a annoncé le 9 septembre sa décision de maintenir son rejet de l’offre de National Australia Bank (NAB), à hauteur de 12,2 milliards de dollars américains, pour la reprise d’Axa Asia Pacific Holding (Axa APH), filiale d’Axa.L’autorité de la concurrence australienne (ACCC) a estimé que la proposition de NAB de se séparer de certains actifs, après un premier rejet de la transaction en avril, ne suffisait pas à lever les craintes concernant des risques de position dominante en Australie dans la gestion d’actifs. «Les différentes propositions formulées par les parties en présence n’offrent pas une garantie suffisante de répondre aux inquiétudes de l’ACCC», indique dans un communiqué le vice-président de l’autorité de la concurrence, Peter Kell.NAB souhaitait acquérir 100% d’Axa APH, dont elle comptait céder à Axa 100% des activités asiatiques pour garder, pour l’essentiel, les activités australiennes et néo-zélandaises. L’ACCC avait bloqué l’opération en avril mettant en avant un risque de position dominante de NAB, quatrième banque australienne, dans la gestion d’actifs en Australie. Le régulateur avait accepté de réexaminer la situation si Axa APH se séparait de sa plateforme d’investissement North et la cédait au groupe de services financiers IOOF Holdings Limited.L’ACCC souligne dans son communiqué qu’une «majorité» des acteurs de l’industrie consultés s’inquiètent encore du fait que la cession de North «n’offre pas les conditions d’une concurrence efficace».
Pioneer, le pôle de gestion d’actifs du groupe UniCredit, aurait 25 prétendants, selon les informations du journal italien Il Messaggero. Aucun n’est italien. Et seuls 5 d’entre eux sont intéressés par l’intégralité de la société de gestion. Parmi les candidats au rachat, le quotidien transalpin cite aussi GAM et Invesco.
L’assemblée générale extraordinaire du fonds d’indemnisation roumain Fondul Proprietatea a confirmé le mandat de gestion attribué à Franklin Templeton Investment Management Limited ou FTIML (lire notre article du 1er mars) , rapporte Fonds Professionell. Mark Mobius, président du Templeton Emerging Markets Group, a indiqué que cette décision ouvre la voie à une cotation de fonds sur la Bourse de Bucarest.Récemment, FTIML a ouvert un bureau dans la capitale roumaine avec 17 salariés. Le fonds affiche un encours de 2,7 milliards d’euros.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } GAM has announced the launch of its first market neutral credit fund, which is managed by the US firm CDI LLC, and is entitled GAM Star Diversified Market Neutral Credit. The UCITS-compliant product, which has been listed on the Irish stock exchange since 2 July, aims for absolute returns with low correlation to bond markets, investing in a highly diversified long/short portfolio of undervalued credit, most of it investment grade. DCI uses quantitative methods to determine default risks, and to precisely value credit issues. The management firm then constructs risk-adjusted and diversified long/short portfolios to exploit inefficiencies.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The board at T. Rowe Price Group Inc (USD391.1bn in assets as of the end of June) on Wednesday evening authorised the buyback of a further 15 million shares, bringing the total of 22.4 million shares. Currently, the asset management firm has about 262 million shares in circulation.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } OFI Asset Management on Wednesday, 8 September announced the arrival of Jean-Philippe Dorp as a member of its research and credit analysis teams. Dorp will be in charge of a transversal, multi-sector credit research team which will include 6 people, a statement says. Since 2006, Dorp worked at Solent Capital Partners (London), where he was a credit manager and head of credit analysis.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } On 3 September, Janus ETF Trust and Janus Capital Management applied to the SEC for an exemption allowing them to launch open-ended actively-managed ETFs which would invest in equities or bonds traded in the United States or abroad, in repo and reverse-repo operations, or in other ETF funds. The funds would, however, not be authorised to invest in options, futures, or swaps.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The arrival of François Carlotti at Métropole Gestion as deputy CEO and director of development (see Newsmanagers of 06/09/10) – while Eric Boutchnei becomes deputy CEO and director of strategy at the managemetn firm – is a clear means for Métropole Gestion, the management firm led by François-Marie Wojcik, to realise its international ambitions. “Our goal,” he explained at a press conference on 8 September, “is to become the European management firm of reference in value management.” To achieve this, Métropole Gestion has engaged the services of the former chairman of the board at Sal. Oppenheim France and former manager of Franklin Templeton Investments, who the firm says is a global leader in value management. Eight more people will also soon be added to the sales team. The firm has already set up shop outside France, and international investors now represent 15% of the total, with regular presence in London as well as activities in Belgium, Switzerland and Luxembourg, which are operated from Paris. In addition, this year saw the opening of an office in Germany with three people, which will aim to cover the German-speaking countries, including Austria and German-speaking Switzerland. Sweden is also on the agenda for the management firm, as well as the Middle East. In the next two to three months, Métropole Gestion is also planning to open an office in Milan, Italy. The firm’s goal is to attain assets under management of EUR3bn by 2012, and EUR5bn by 2015. When asked about the products the firm is planning to offer abroad, Wojcik confirmed that the market would ultimately decide. Clearly, equities funds will represent the firm’s foremost offerings, but multi-management wealth funds and corporate bond funds (Métropole MM Convictions Patrimoine and Métropole Corporate Bonds) may also be part of the selection.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } DWS Investments on Wednesday announced the recruitment of Michael Hughes as director and senior account manager. He will be in charge of relations with banking and broker-dealer clients in the United States, national and regional. Hughes will be based in Chicago, and will report to Michael Woods, managing director, CEO and US head of distribution at DWS Investments Distributors Inc. Hughes was executive director in national accounts at Van Kampen, a retail asset management firm which was sold off in late October by Morgan Stanley to Invesco (see Newsmanagers of 20 October 2009). He had responsibility for the same activities which he will now direct at DWS.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } As several segments of the private management industry are growing faster than the market average, including Ultra High Net Worth Individuals (up 7.2% per year, compared with 6% for the market as a whole) and independent wealth management (third-party managers, IFAs, multi-family offices), BNP Paribas Wealth Management announced on Wednesday, 8 September that it is planning to strengthen its specific approach to these segments with a dedicated team. The firm has appointed Rémi Frank as head of UNHWI and independent wealth managers. He joins the executive board of BNP Paribas Wealth Management, alongside Jacques d’Estais (CEO), Mignonne Cheng (head for Asia-Pacific), Marie-Claire Capobianco (head for domestic markets), Pascal Boris (head for International Europe), Patrice Crochet (head for Luxembourg), Olivier Maugarny (head of Products & Services) and Vincent Lecomte (COO). Frank was previously head of sales and equities derivative structuring at the investment and finance bank. He was a member of the executive board for GECD (global equities and commodities derivatives) within CIB (corporate and investment banking). The resources dedicated to these two priority segments comes as part of an initiative to reorganise the profession, announced in July 2010, a statement says. The team dedicated to UNHWI and independent wealth managers comes as part of an effort to develop the 5 geographical regions (Asia Pacific, Euro domestic markets, new domestic markets, International Europe, and Luxembourg).
According to the Financial Times, Goldman Sachs is facing a fine thought to be near GBP20m from the Financial Services Authority. The UK’s regulator opened its investigation into the bank in April after the SEC charged Goldman with misleading investors in a complex mortgage-backed security known as Abacus.
Former Credit Suisse star Neil Gregson has joined JP Morgan Asset Management’s global equities team where he will work alongside Ian Henderson on the firm’s natural resources funds, writes Citywire.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Due to large-scale demand, the range of European bond ETFs from iShares, the ETF arm of BlackRock, has topped USD25bn in assets under management, a statement says. iShares has seen assets in the range increase 44% per year in the past two years, “demonstrating investors’ interest in the liquidity, diversification and transparency offered by these solutions,” the promoter says. For the bond tracker fund segment, iShares says that for the first half of 2010, inflows represented 23% of total inflows to European ETF markets. Investors have primarily invested in ETFs specialised in government bonds, corporate and emerging market debt. The ETF market is likely to remain dynamic. “At the beginning of the year 2008, iShares predicted that global bond ETF assets would increase by 200%, to over USD200bn by 2011. The industry is on track to meet this prediction, with global assets under management in bond ETFs currently totalling USD189.9bn,” says Alex Claringbull, Senior Portfolio Manager at BlackRock.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } The BarclayHedge hedge fund index of 835 funds which had published results as of 8 September reveals an average loss of 0.16% in August, and performance of 1.82% in the first eight months of the year. The largest gains in August were for the 6 equity short bias funds, with 2.23%, and the 16 convertible arbitrage funds, with 1.43%. However, the 93 equity long bias funds lost an average of 2.52%. In January-August, the 25 FI arbitrage funds finished on top, with performance of 8.35%, followed by the 16 convertibles arbitrage funds, which gained 6.77%. Equity long bias, however, has lost 2.25% in the first eight months of the year.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Despite the downturn in the last week of August, the HFS UCITS hedge fund index has posted growth of 0.43% for the month of August as a whole, Hedgeweek reports. Eight strategies out of eleven finished the month with positive returns, with the best results for fixed income (+2.24%), credit and multi-strategy (with +1.83% each). The three strategies which showed losses were L/S equity (-0.49%), arbitrage (-0.27%), and convertibles (-0.20%).
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } According to estimates by TrimTabs Investment Research and BarclayHedge, hedge funds in July saw net outflows of USD2.9bn, equivalent to 0.2% of their assets, Hedge Week reports. This is the second consecutive month of net redemptions, and funds have seen net outflows in three of the past four months. Assets in the sector have seen their third consecutive monthly decline, to a total of USD1.53trn, their lowest level since November last year.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Assets in the major funds of hedge funds were down 0.6% in first half, according to the most recent statistics from InvestHedge Billion Dollar FOHF Club, reported by Hedgeweek. This development is in line with the average performance of funds of funds in the same period. Assets in the largest funds of funds, those with assets under management of over USD1bn, totalled USD595bn in first half. The top ten funds saw an increase in their assets of USD6.4bn during the period.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } UCITS funds in second quarter 2010 posted a net outflow of EUR28bn, compared with inflows of EUR48bn in first quarter, according to statistics from the European asset management association (EFAMA). Long-term UCITS funds, excluding money market funds, finished second quarter with net inflows of EUR23bn, compared with EUR86bn in first quarter. This development is probably related to investor concerns over the Greek crisis. Net outflows from money market funds increased in second quarter to EUR51bn, compared with EUR38bn in first quarter. The total value of assets in UCITS funds was down 0.5% in the quarter under review, to EUR5.606bn as of the end of June. Equities funds saw the largest decline (EUR76bn), followed by money market funds (EUR45bn). Assets in non-UCITS funds, for their part, increased 2.6% to EUR1.888bn as of the end of June.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Bank Linth LLB on 8 September announced the appointment of Luc Schuurmans as a new member of its board, effective from 1 January 2011. On this date, the new director will take over as head of the newly-created Private Banking sector, with a team of five advisors. The direction of the four regions, 23 affiliates and four teams of client advisors will continue to be assured by David Sarasin, with the new title “private and business clientele.” Schuurmans previously worked at BNP Paribas (Switzerland) SA from 2002 to 2009.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Pioneer, the asset management unit of the UniCredit group, is said to have 25 suitors, according to reports in the Italian newspaper Il Messagero. None of the candidates is Italian, and only 5 of them are interested in acquiring the entirety of the asset management firm. The newspaper names GAM and Invesco as among the candidates to acquire the firm.
p { margin-bottom: 0.08in; } Asian Investor reports that Paul Rubens has left the Singapore-based hedge fund Black Horse to join Franklin Templeton in New York. In his new role, Rubens will assist Templeton’s investment teams in Asia, including joint ventures in China with Sealand Securities and China Life Insurance, as well as entities in Japan, India and South Korea. He will also assist in other regions, including Latin America.
Paulson & Co, the world’s third-largest hedge fund manager, has seen another painful month, according to the Financial Times. The firm’s USD9bn Advantage Plus fund, its largest, lost 4.26 per cent in August, wiping out gains made in July. The fund is down 11 per cent so far this year.