Entre fin 2008 et fin février 2010, les gestionnaires étrangers sont parvenus à augmenter de 2,3 points leur part du marché espagnol, à 15,8 %, d’après l’association Inverco : leur encours représente 30 milliards d’euros, alors qu’il était d’environ 50 milliards fin 2007, mais, en 2009, ils ont enregistré des souscriptions nettes de 2,54 milliards d’euros pendant que les gestionnaires espagnols supportaient des remboursements nets de 11,64 milliards d’euros.JPMorgan demeure de loin le premier gestionnaire étranger, avec 4,81 milliards d’euros, même après la fusion de SGAM et CAAM qui place Amundi en deuxième position avec 3,28 milliards d’euros. BNP Paribas et Schroders sont au coude-à-coude avec 2,77 milliards chacun et Pioneer (UniCredit) affiche 1,51 milliard d’euros.
Depuis le 12 février, Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management (EDRAM) déploie une intense activité en Espagne. Le gestionnaire français a déjà fait enregistrer par la CNMV neuf de ses fonds, rapporte Funds People. Il s’agit des Saint-Honoré Signatures, Global Convertibles et Vie-Santé, puis, vendredi dernier, d’Asie Rendement, Commosphère World, Ecosphère Europe ainsi que des LCF Croissance Globale, Monde Flexible et Patrimoine Flexible. La politique d’Edram est manifestement de faire enregistrer en Espagne la totalité de sa gamme, qui se compose d’environ 35 fonds.
Selon Funds People, Merrill Lynch Wealth Management est sur le point de faire enregistrer une société de gestion de fonds en Espagne, rapporte Funds People. L’objectif consiste à confier à cette entité la gestion des mandats obtenus par la division de banque privée, une activité qui est jusqu'à présent assurée par la succursale bancaire du groupe.Cette démarche s’inscrit dans le plan stratégique de Merrill Lynch Wealth Management lancé en 2007. L'établissement souhaite se renforcer en Espagne en mettant en œuvre un «service intégral» combinant gestion/conseil, adaptation au profil du client et planification patrimoniale.
DWS Investments (Spain) a fait enregistrer le 26 février le fonds alternatif de droit espagnol Arcano Credit Fund, FIL par la CNMV.Ce produit à liquidité mensuelle sera investi dans deux compartiments de la filiale luxembourgeoise d’Arcano, l’Arcano Onshore Opportunities et l’Arcano Offshore Opportunities, des fonds de crédits aux entreprises pour les opérations de achat avec effet de levier (LBO).L’encours du fonds DWS sera réparti à hauteur de 70 % dans le Arcano Onshore, qui se focalise sur le Royaume-Uni, l’Irlande du Nord et l’Italie, et de 30 % dans l’Arcano Offshore qui est centré sur l’Europe continentale hors Italie.Les crédits pris dans le portefeuille auront une échéance moyenne de quatre ans. DWS prévoit une période de lock-up de 33 mois, un délai de préavis de trois mois pour les demandes de remboursement et une souscription minimale de 150.000 euros.
A compter du 1er mars, les fonds immobiliers de la société de gestion Caam Real Estate Italia SGR, soit CAAM RE Italia et CAAM RE Europa, changent de nom et deviennent Amundi RE Italia et Amundi RE Europa.
Société Générale Private Banking Hambros (SGPB Hambros) on 2 March announced the recruitment of two senior private bankers, Rebecca Constable and Andrew Wimble, who will be based in the new Newbury regional office, and will provide wealth management services to high net worth clients. QAGPB Hambros will continue its policy of regional development in the United Kingdom, following the opening last year of offices in Manchester and Yorkshire. Constable and Wimble were previously at Kleinwort Benson.
Brevan Howard Asset Management LLP is continuing to recruit from Morgan Stanley. According to Bloomberg, the mortgage trader Ahsim Khan is expected to join the London-based hedge fund giant next month. Since September of last year, Brevan Howard has recruited at least four people from the US bank.
Roberto Lampl, senior investment manager at ING Investment Management, has been recruited by Baring Asset Mangement as head of Latin America equity (a newly-created position) from 1 March. He will be based in London, and will report to Tim Scholefield, head of equities. Currently (as of 31 January), Barings has assets of GBP11.6bn on emerging markets, of which GBP1.1bn are in Latin American equities. With his team, Lampl with be in charge of managing Latin American allocations for all segregated and pooled products from the British group, including the Baring Latin America Fund (USD836m).
The earliest initial estimates had already suggested that 2009 would be a very strong year for the management firm M&G. Inflows last year are estimated to have totalled EUR15bn, a 296% increase year on year. For retail activities, net sales totalled EUR8.3bn, a new record, and 259% higher than the previous year. Activities were particularly dynamic on the British market, with net inflows of EUR6.7bn. Bond funds accounted for the lion’s share of inflows throughout the year. For institutional products, net sales totalled EUR6.7bn, a 354% increase year on year, including a fixed income mandate totalling EUR4.4bn. Gross sales also set a new record, at EUR27.7bn, of which EUR15.1bn were for retail products. M&G points out in a statement that the exceptional performance observed last year will not be reproducible in 2010. Inflows are expected to return to their previous usual levels. For 2009 overall, assets under management are up 23% to EUR193bn, thanks to exceptional inflows but also to positive market effects. Assets for external clients totalled EUR77.8bn as of the end of 2009, 40% of total assets. Operating profits totalled EUR197m, 22% down year on year. But excluding exceptional elements, underlying profits are up 14% to EUR202m.
Sigbjørn Johnsen, Norwegian finance minister, has announced that the Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG), formerly known as the Oil Fund, has signed up to two new directives for responsible investment. The ethical standards defined in 2004 are now replaced by two sets of directives, one of which is based on exclusionary criteria and the observation of businesses, while the other involves responsible management and the exercise of shareholder rights by Norges Bank. The minister points out that in some cases, it may be more useful to put a firm under surveillance rather than to exclude it, particularly if there is still uncertainty about how the situation will evolve. The GPFG will closely monitor businesses which are placed on the watch list to ensure that they take measures to remedy the situation before a final decision on exclusion is taken. The finance minister has also signed the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (UN PRI).
Selon Les Echos, la chambre franco-britannique de compensation LCH.Clearnet a choisi un financier versé dans les risques systémiques pour diriger les travaux de son conseil d’administration, Jacques Aigrain, l’ancien directeur exécutif du réassureur helvète Swiss Re qui remplacera Chris Tupker, dont le départ était connu depuis plusieurs mois, à partir du 6 avril prochain.
En 2009, les fonds Ucits ont collecté 123 milliards d’euros, contre des sorties de 356 milliards d’euros enregistrées en 2008, selon les statistiques de l’Association européenne de la gestion d’actifs (Efama). L’association souligne que cette dynamique de croissance, initiée en avril 2009, ne s’est pas démentie depuis. Les fonds Ucits domiciliés au Luxembourg et au Royaume-Uni ont représenté 81% de ces 123 milliards de collecte, avec des parts de respectivement 54% et 27%, largement devant l’Allemagne, la France et la Suède, tous trois affichant une part de 7% chacun.Les fonds Ucits de long terme (hors fonds monétaires) ont enregistré une collecte nette de 165 milliards d’euros sur l’ensemble de l’année, grâce à des flux positifs de 66 milliards d’euros pour les fonds actions, de 72 milliards pour les fonds obligataires et de 44 milliards pour les fonds diversifiés.L’érosion des fonds monétaires s’est traduite par des sorties de 43 milliards d’euros après une collecte de 64 milliards en 2008. La demande de fonds non-Ucits a en revanche été forte : les fonds dédiés réservés aux institutionnels ont collecté 48 milliards d’euros en 2009, les fonds immobiliers 4 milliards d’euros. Au cours du seul quatrième trimestre, seize pays ont enregistré une collecte positive, notamment le Luxembourg (13,6 milliards d’euros) et le Royaume-Uni (7,4 milliards d’euros). En revanche, la France a subi une décollecte nette de 27,7 milliards d’euros, sous l’effet des sorties nettes des fonds monétaires pour près de 35 milliards d’euros.Sur l’ensemble de l’année 2009, l’encours des fonds d’investissement en Europe a enregistré une croissance de 15,6% à 7.039 milliards d’euros, les fonds Ucits représentant 75% du total. L’Efama souligne que le statut international des fonds Ucits a contribué à la forte progression des ventes en dehors de l’espace européen, notamment en Asie. Les donneurs d’ordres de la région Asie-Pacifique ont ainsi représenté 35% du total des volumes de commandes enregistrés l’an dernier au Luxembourg. Une progression de cinq points de pourcentage par rapport à l’année précédente.
On Monday, Citigroup announced that it has taken Sanjiv Sawhney back on board as global head of funds services in its securities & fund services division. Sawhney will report to Neeraj Sahai, global head of securities & fund services, and will be in charge of hedge fund, private equity and mutual fund administration worldwide. Sawhney was previously head of fund services at JP Morgan for Europe, and managing director and administrator of JPMorgan Bank Luxembourg. With 17 years of experience in securities services, Sawhney has already spent 15 years at Citigroup, where among other positions he was director of fund administration for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA).
John Holcombe, head of wealth management services for the external distribution division of T. Rowe Price, on 1 March joined JPMorgan Asset Management (JPMAM) in the newly-created position of senior relationship manager specialised in distribution to banks and trust departments, Mutual Fund Wire reports. Holcombe will report to Jed Laskowitz, head of distribution to broker-dealers, insurers, banks and registered investment advisers (RIAs).
With subscriptions of EUR20.8bn in fourth quarter, the Italian asset management sector finished 2009 with net inflows of over EUR35bn, Assogestioni, the Italian association of management professionals, reports. As of the end of 2009, assets under management by the sector overall totalled EUR950bn, of which 82% was managed by Italian firms. Open-ended funds finished the year with assets of EUR438bn, thanks to net subscriptions of EUR6.4bn. Assogestioni emphasizes that assets in foreign-registered funds outweighed those in Italian-registered products, with 52% of assets in the former, totalling EUR226bn, and 48% in the latter, at EUR212bn.
Stoxx Limited announced on Monday that it is dropping the “Dow Jones” prefix to the name of all its indices. The changes, which will take effect immediately, will affect European regional and thematic indices. The removal of the name reflects the new shareholder structure of Stoxx: Deutsche Börse and Six Group have acquired Stoxx Limited, which was previously owned by Dow Jones. The use of the Dow Jones name in the names of licensed financial products is authorised until the end of 2010. All Stoxx regional indices covering European markets will also now include the word “Europe” in their names.
The New York-based provider of corporate governance and risk management products and services RiskMetrics Group has agreed to be acquired by MSCI for a total of USD1.55bn in cash and shares, equivalent to USD21.75 per share. The index provider will pay USD16.35 per RiskMetrics share in cash, plus 0.1802 of a MSCI share per share in RiskMetrics. The new entity will have annual revenues of USD750m, with 2,000 employees in 20 countries. The transaction will be completed in third quarter.
Franklin Templeton Investments has announced that Aman Gupta has been appointed as an analyst for healthcare and its subsectors worldwide for Franklin Mutual Series, the group’s deep value affiliate. Gupta was previously at Evergreen investments, the management firm of the Wachovia group which was absorbed a month and a half ago into Wells Fargo Advantage Funds (see Newsmanagers of 15 January). Gupta will be based in Short Hills, New Jersey, at the headquarters of Mutual Series.
CalPERS is considering reducing the projected rate of return used by the giant pension fund to make investment decisions. Since 2003, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System has assumed that the value of its stocks, bonds and other holdings would increase by 7.75% a year. The board has been encouraged to shrink its projected rate of return to as low as 6%.
Kenneth E. Oliver, who has been president of the firm since 2006, will additionally become CEO of Dodge & Cox from 31 March 2010. On 31 March 2011 he will become chairman, replacing John A. Gunn, who is chairman and CEO of the firm until 31 March 2010, and who will become chairman emeritus one year later. Olivier will remain a member of the investment policy committee at the management firm. Dodge & Cox also states that Dana M. Emery and Charles F. Pohl, currently executive vice president and senior vice president, will become co-presidents of the firm from 31 March 2011. They will retain their respective positions as head of fixed income and CIO.
The Committee of European Securities Regulators (CESR) on 1 March announced that it has established a specific database on its website to meet the transparency requirements of the MIF directive for information on shares added to trading on regulated markets, which will be available to all market participants. With this in view, the CESR has announced that it will establish an amended protocol describing the cooperation agreements between CESR members, and the Committee secretariat to manage the calculation and publication of data which ensure the transparency of the market, as required by the MIF directive. The guide states that collection of market data also concerns the three largest trading platforms in terms of market share, which are BATS, Chi-X and Turquoise.
In 2009, UCITS funds saw inflows of EUR123bn, compared with outflows of EUR356bn in 2008, according to statistics from the European fund and asset management association (EFAMA). The association points out that this growth dynamic, which began in April 2009, has not lost momentum since that time. UCITS funds domiciled in Luxembourg and the United Kingdom represented 81% of these EUR123bn in inflows, with 54% and 27% of the market, respectively, far ahead of Germany, France and Sweden, which had 7% of the market each. Long-term UCITS funds (excluding money market funds) posted net inflows of EUR165bn for the year as a whole, due to positive inflows of EUR66bn to equities funds, EUR72bn to bond funds, and EUR44bn to diversified funds. The erosion of money market funds resulted in outflows of EUR43bn, following inflows of EUR64bn in 2008. Demand for non-UCITS funds was strong, however: dedicated funds for institutionals saw EUR48bn in inflows in 2009, while real estate funds saw inflows of EUR4bn.
Management firms are seeking to fill a gap in the lending market ignored by the banking sector and governments, Financial Times Fund Management reports. Many firms are seeking to raise capital for funds which would offer loans to businesses with an urgent need for credit, or provide financing for infrastructure development. FT FM cites the examples of Hastings Fund Management, Trafalgar Capital Advisors, and Aviva Investors.
The British financial market regulator, the FSA, on 1 March published its new policies for fines. The new framework is more consistent and transparent, and may potentially result in maximum fines three times higher than previously.The new matrix for calculating fines ties penalties more closely to revenues, up to 20% of earnings from the activity deemed to be improper in the period concerned, and up to 40% of remuneration (including bonuses) for employees. A minimum fine of GBP100,000 will be set for serious market abuse cases. The new regime, which has received far from unanimous support from the financial industry, will come into force on 6 March. According to the FSA, record fines were already levied in 2009, but the new approach will increase the dissuasive effect of fines.
After a one-year contraction of 16.75% to USD15.9bn as of the end of 2008, assets in ETF funds which replicate China indices more than doubled last year to a total as of 31 December 2009 of USD32.3bn, in 53 products from 28 issuers, listed on 21 stock markets worldwide. Deborah Fuhr (BlackRock) says that the United States alone account for USD12.47bn, with 21 ETF funds, while Hong Kong represented assets of USD9.97bn in 12 ETF funds, and in China, the eight local ETFs had USD5.87bn in assets under management. Net subscriptions represented USD3.1bn last year for ETFs domiciled in the United States and Europe, in addition to which USD3.7bn in net inflows came into emerging market funds replicating indices such as the MSCI Emerging Markets index, in which the Chinese market represents 18.3% of the total. iShares is the largest asset management firm in the Chinese ETF segment, with 11 products and assets of USD18bn, which represents a market share of 55%. The second-largest management firm, far behind the leader, is China Asset Management, with only two funds and USD3.8bn in assets, or 11.7% of the market. These two actors between them thus account for two thirds of the market. Hang Seng Investment Management and E Fund Management are in third and fourth place, respectively, with assets of USD2.2bn and USD1.3bn, and respective market shares of 6.7% and 4.1%.
Anthony Bolton will personally invest GBP2.5m in the new Fidelity China Special Situations fund, Citywire reports. Fidelity International will put GBP15m in the fund. The group is hoping to raise a total of GBP650m.
US Judge Burton Lifland has ruled in favour of a plan by Irving Picard, the trustee in charge of recouping losses from Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, to repay bilked investors based on how much money they originally invested in the fraud. The ruling is a blow to investors who sued Mr Picard to change the formula to one that would allow losses to be recouped based upon investors’ final financial statements before the scheme unravelled in December 2008. When using the final financial statements of Mr Madoff’s fraudulent fund as a measure, the scheme cost investors USD65bn. However, based on the amount of money actually invested in the fund the number is closer to USD21bn.