Selon La Tribune, le régime des Sicaf - sociétés anonymes qui ont pour objet la gestion d’un portefeuille de valeurs sans être soumises à l’'obligation de rachat des parts à la demande du porteur - va être modernisé. Les dispositions majeures du nouveau dispositif sont notamment de faciliter la gestion à long terme et de définir un régime adapté à la cotation des fonds fermés.
Selon Les Echos, la ministre de l’Economie, Christine Lagarde a remis en cause le principe même des stock-options et pointé les «faiblesses» du système. De son côté, le député UMP Christian Estrosi menace de plafonner à 40.000 euros par mois la rémunération des patrons d’entreprises aidées par l’Etat.Pour sa part, le porte-parole de l’UMP, Frédéric Lefebvre, espère pouvoir revenir à la charge sur son concept de «dividende salarial», lequel permettrait d’accorder une rémunération variable à tous les salariés si leur entreprise fait des profits. Jérôme Chartier, lui, travaille sur une proposition de loi pour accroître la taxation des stock-options émises au premier semestre 2009. Dans le cadre du collectif budgétaire adopté en fin de semaine dernière, le rapporteur général du Budget, Gilles Carrez, a fait voter à l’unanimité un amendement obligeant les banques aidées par l’Etat à préciser leur politique de stock-options et d’actions gratuites.
La Financial Services Authority va chercher à déterminer si les administrateurs non exécutifs de Royal Bank of Scotland ont fait l"objet d"intimidations avant que la banque ait été renflouée par les contribuables, rapporte le Financial Times. Le régulateur devra aussi examiner si l"établissement a cherché à faire croire que sa situation était meilleure qu"elle ne l"était réellement.
Die Welt rapporte que la Commission européenne a décidé de porter plainte contre l’Allemagne devant la Cour de justice des communautés européennes pour entrave à la liberté de circulation des capitaux et à la liberté d'établissement. Bruxelles reproche en effet à l’Allemagne de taxer davantage les dividendes des sociétés allemandes versés à des étrangers que ceux servis à des Allemands.
Skandia has announced that, at the request of IFAs, it is increasing the number of passively-managed tracker funds on its platform Selestia Investment Solutions, and in its Life and Pensions range, with 8 new funds from Pictet, bringing the total of 21 funds on offer. Ten other tracker funds will be added to Skandia’s range in the next few months.
Jupiter Asset Management has ultimately decided not to launch the Jupiter China Sustainable Growth fund, as it has not achieved its target minimal volume of USD50m, Money Marketing reports. The project received the interest of come institutional investors, but the crisis clearly prevented the corresponding investments from materialising.
State Street Corporation is launching an expense management solution which will allow providers of investment funds to reduce their operating costs and risks associated with their management fees. The expense management service offered by State Street will provide a complete solution which can replace manual or partially automated management processes used in client fund operations. The solution will be integrated with the global accounting system from State Street, and makes it possible to automate account regularisation, budgeting, and payment processing processes as part of cost management, to proide investment fund promoters with the scope, precision and flexibility necessary to manage their expenses effectively. The new service follows integrated solutions for fund administration which include legal, treasury, financial reporting, fiscal reporting, and compliance support, all of which are designed to help investment fund promoters to outsource a larger number of operations to provide increased adaptability.
BlackRock Luxembourg has announced that it will be liquidating the Global Capital Securities Absolute Return Fund, which has assets of only USD37.56m, by 24 April at the latest, fondsweb.de reports. Subscriptions and redemptions of shares have already been suspended due to insufficient liquidity of assets in the fund. Liquidation costs will be charged on the administration commission.
Oddo AM is launching Oddo Opportunités, a diversified fund which aims to ?take advantage of attractive prices in all asset classes.? ?Whether it is corporate bonds or convertibles, value, thematic, or midcap equities, a wide variety of assets have been heavily punished by the markets, and are now undervalued. The mission of managers at Oddo AM is to select the shares which will be most likely to profit from a rebound on the financial markets,? a statement explains.Asset allocations will be targeted ?reactively? by the diversified management team, led by Mirela Agache. The team will also make use of forecasts determined by Group Oddo and Thierry Deheuvels, head of management.Currently, asset management privileges corporate and convertible bonds and also is invested in equities, though it highly selectively targets heavily devalued sectors. Commodities are being avoided at present. The fund has no exposure to currencies.Oddo Opportunités aims for high returns and is aimed at qualified investors willing to remain invested for the recommended period fo 5 years. In order to make it possible to direct asset allocation more coherently and to preserve outlooks for returns on investments, the fund has a limited subscription period and will be closed on 31 July 2009.
The Australian businessman Hilton Nathanson pocketed USD123.7m from the sale of his alternative management firm, Marble Bar Asset Management (MBAM) to the Swiss management firm EFG International (see Newsmanagers of 3 December 2007). The Sunday Times reports that this amount was invested in the fund, which made money in 2008, at a time when hedge funds lost 18.3% on average.
The Sunday Times reports that the private equity investor Hellman & Friedman, in partnership with Carlyle and two other private equity firms which may be TPG and Apax, are offering Barclays USD5bn fro iShares (USD1trn in assets). Bain Capital is also reported to be leading another consortium of interested buyers.Barclays is offering to finance 80% of the transaction, a sign that it would like to close the deal before 31 March in order to avoid being nationalised as a result of being compelled to rely on the UK government’s toxic asset buyback programme.
Although the chairman of the board, Franz Waas, has done much to restore stability at DekaBank since his arrival in early 2006, and he was wise enough to reduce the exposure of portfolios before the crisis began, he reinvested too soon, and worse, these investments went into derivative activities, which have suffered most heavily, the Frankurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. The central management firm for the savings banks is now being required by its shareholders to cut back its portfolio of structured products, which represented EUR44bn in assets as of the end of June 2008. The firm will also have to call off plans to enlarge market activities, and it is not certain that the board’s term will be extended after the 2008 fiscal term.
Fidelity Investments has annoucned that it has recruited Christopher Sullivan, who was previously managing director and co-head of US fixed income at Goldman Sachs Asset Management, where he was in charge of about USD150bn in assets, as president of its bond group. Sullivan will report to Michael E. Wilens, head of asset management, and will lead a team in charge of managing more than USD170bn in assets (as of the end of February).
Expansión reports that 427 investment funds currently have assets of less than EUR3m, the minimum established by the CNMV. If they cannot bring their assets above this level within one year after falling below it, they may be liquidated at the order of the regulator. The only exception to the EUR3m is a 6-month extension for newly-launched funds. Between November 2008 and February 2009, the number of funds in Spain fell from 3,060 to 2,881. In addition, there are about 300 funds with total assets of EUR3m-EUR5m, which are therefore vulnerable if the market continues its downward trajectory.Average assets under management are EUR60m in Spain, compared with EUR160m elsewhere in Europe, and more than EUR1bn in North America. And 10% of funds worldwide are Spanish, although they account for only 2% of assets.About half of all the funds with less than EUR3m in assets come from only 10 promoters, of whom Ahorro Corporación (57), La Caixa (45) and Santander (29) top the list.
Allianz Global Investors (AGI) is planning to complete its integration of cominvest by the end of 2010; the cominvest brand will then disappear, Financial Times Deutschland reports. In 2008, open-ended funds from AGI saw net redemptions of nearly EUR10bn, while cominvest managed to bring in net subscriptions. AGI and cominvest together had assets as of the end of 2008 of more than EUR300bn in assets, which makes it the top German asset management firm. But, as AGI’s clients are largely institutional investors, the integration of cominvest will not bring it higher than fourth place in the rankings of open-ended fund providers. With EUR70bn, AGI trails behind Deka (savings banks), DWS (Deutsche Bank), and Union Investment (co-operative banks).
Three French managers have been given their first Citywire ratings this month: Céline Lemaitre, who manages the Liberté Euro PEA at Dubly Douilhet Gestion; Olivier Rudez, for the Optalis Expansion at CAAM, and Stéphane Furet, for Dorval Manageurs at Dorval Finance. All three received an A rating, Citywire reports.
Vanguard has launched the Vanguard FTSE All-World ex-US Small-Cap Index Fund, for which initial subscriptions will close on 2 April. The fund offers a share class for retail investors, with a TER of 0.60%, and a class for institutional investors with a TER of 0.35%, and an ETF share class with an 0.38% TER. The fund will replicate the performance of the FTSE Global Small Cap ex US index (3,300 shares from 47 countries), which, says Vanguard, is currently the only index which provides exposure to small caps in developed countries outside the United States and emerging markets.Vanguard says that minimal subscription for the retail and institutional share classes are USD3,000 and USD5m, respectively. An exit fee of 0.75% will be charged.The management firm says that assets in tracker products currently represent about USD400bn, and that in 2008, its tracker funds and ETFs posted subscriptions of USD50bn.
In January 2009, assets in ETFs worldwide fell by USD52.2bn compared with their levels at the end of December, for a total of USD658.8bn, a 7.3% decline, which is less than the 8.8% decline for the MSCI World index in US dollars, according to figures by Deborah Fuhr and her team at iShares (Barclays Global Investors). At the end of January, there were 1,602 ETF funds listed 2,683 times, from 83 providers, and listed on 42 stock markets. In January, 14 new ETFs were launched, while 613 were under development.In Europe, assets in ETFs totalled USD135.73bn, in 633 funds (1 more than at the end of 2008), from 29 issuers, listed on 20 markets. Assets under management fell 5% in January, while the MSCI Europe index lost 11.4% in US dollars.
According to a survey by MC4MS and the University of Mainz of 374 distributors, the three management firms with the best image in the eyes of external distributors in Germany are, in order, DWS (Deutsche Bank), Carmignac Gestion, and DJE Kapital. Carmignac Gestion even takes first place for its reputation among primary decision-makers, Fondsprofessionell reports. Respondents assign most importance to the quality of products, ahead of brand image and product range. However, price and distinctions play only a secondary role for external distributors.
Global Pensions reports that the pension fund CalPERS has identified four firms which exhibit both poor performance and suboptimal governance. The companies are Eli Lilly, Hill-Rom Holdings, Hospitality Properties Trust, and ImsHealth. Rob Feckner, chairman of the board at CalPERS, argues that in the current economic climate, no company should oppose an improvement in corporate governance, which all four of these companies did.
On Wednesday, BlackRock registered its absolute performance fund, European Absolute Return Strategies, a sub-fund of the Luxembourg Sicav BlackRock Strategic Funds (BSF), with the CNMV. The sub-fund has recently gone on sale in France, Germany and Austria (see Newsmanagers of 19 March).
The asset and wealth management firm MPC Capital, which is traded on the SDax, on Friday announced net losses of about EUR96m in 2008, compared with net profits of EUR38m in 2007. The deterioration is due not only to falling demand for investment products as a result of the crisis but also to a write-down of EUR80m on the firm’s stake in HCI Capital. Excluding one-time elements, operating results were positive but totalled under EUR10m.
The pension fund CalPERS and the Texan real estate firm Hines have told the SEC that the HCS Interest fund, created in mid-2006 to invest in residential projects in Spain, will not receive its planned allocation of EUR183m. Cinco Días reports that, due to the financial crisis and the condition of the Spanish real estate market, the size of the fund will be limited to EUR35m.
In April, shareholders int eh Goldman Dynamic Opportunities Fund (GBP370m) will vote at a general assembly on a proposal to liquidate the fund of hedge funds, whose net asset value has fallen in the past twelve months to less than 5% of the value of assets in the portfolio, Handelsblatt reports. Goldman Sachs has already warned that, if the product is liquidated, investors will receive only 90% of their capital by 2012, due to lock-ups of hedge funds in which the fund is invested. The remaining 10% corresponds to investments in funds which have completely ceased redemptions and for which it is not known when subscribers will be able to recuperate their investments.
In the 2008 rankings of net results at major European banks by Les Echos, Santander tops the list, with record profits (EUR8.88bn), ?despite its presence in two markets (the United Kingdom and Spain) heavily affected by the real estate crisis,? the newspaper observes. Santander has overtaken the Chinese-British HSBC group, which got a boost from its Asian activities last year, and which has fallen to fourth place. BBVA is in second place, followed by Barclays. Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), Fortis and UBS are the big losers in the rankings, with losses of up to EUR25.6bn.
L’Agefi Switzerland reports that heads of private banks fear the sector may be entering the worst crisis wealth management has seen since the 1930s. They predict that there will be a major wave of consolidation, according to a study undertaken by the strategy consulting firm Booz & Company of 20 leading decision-makers in Swiss wealth management. Thus far, the effects of the crisis have had only a limited impact on the annual reports from private banks. Several firms have even posted major inflows of capital. But the real problems are yet to come. A heavy decline in assets under management and eroding margins have already impacted results. In the 2008 fiscal year, private banks saw a decilne of as much as 20% to their revenues. According to estimates by Booz, if the financial markets do not recover significantly in 2009, heavier losses are to be expected, of about 30%.
Investigations into the Madoff fraud are far from finished, the Financial Times reports David Friehling, Bernard Madoff’s auditor for nearly 20 years, may be the only other person implicated in the case. But questions persist about four members of the Madoff family, who worked in the eponymous firm, and about long-standing employees of the consulting firm.
The 2007 accounts for the lead hedge fund from Weavering Capital, audited by Ernst & Young, do not mention British Virgin Islands, the offshore company controlled by its founder, Magnus Peterson, which it has recently emerged was the fund’s largest underwriter, the Financial Times reports. BVI’s inability to fulfil its obligations caused the collapse of Weavering and its fund.
The US authorities have no other choice but to avoid the catastrophic bankruptcy of large financial institutions in the current market environment, Ben Bernanke stated on Friday, the Financial Times reports. The chairman of the US Federal Reserve said the central bank would buy up assets, including government debt, to support the economy, and that a time will come when this support will no longer be necessary.
Bernard Madoff will remain in prison until his sentencing in June, the Financial Times reports. A federal appeals court in New York supported the verdict of a judge to immediately incarcerate Madoff following his guilty plea last week.