Tuesday, 14 June 2011

Bernheim, Dreyfus & Co. launching new Ucits M&A Fund

Bernheim Dreyfus, the Paris-based investment manager, launched last week a mergers and acquisitions fund regulated under UCITS III rules to meet increased investor demands for more liquid and transparent investments in this sector of market activity. 
The Diva Synergy (Ucits) fund is regulated by the French Financial Authority (Autorité des marchés financiers) and replicates the event-driven Diva Synergy Fund which gained over 27% last year successfully exploiting the increase in M&A activity during 2010.

Amit Shabi, partner at Bernheim Dreyfus, expects the volume of M&A activity will continue to rise through 2011 creating an exceptional range of investment opportunities. ‘M&A picked up momentum in 2010 and continues to grow rapidly. We’re forecasting global deal activity to increase by as much as 40% this year, by comparison to 2010’’.
The Diva Synergy (Ucits) fund started investing in June 1st and has initial committed capital of $10mln. The target is to manage $100mln within 1 year.
Explaining the decision to launch a UCITS product Shabi said, ‘’During the financial crisis it became clear that many hedge funds were not in line with investors’ expectations in terms of liquidity and transparency. The Diva Synergy (Ucits) fund will offer transparency and liquidity as we respond to investor requirements for products which conform with the EU Directive.’’.
Bernheim, Dreyfus & Co.
Paris-based Bernheim, Dreyfus & Co was founded in 2006 as an alternative investment firm focusing on M&A-related strategies, managing an event driven hedge fund – Diva Synergy.

Diva Synergy is managed by Amit Shabi and Lionel Melka.  Lionel Melka has 10 years’ of experience as an M&A advisor for blue chip clients in prestigious banks as Lazards, Calyon and Rothschilds.  He has been involved in more than 20 major transactions totaling more than $50 billion.

Amit Shabi has long experience in asset management and capital markets with Rothschilds, the Man Group and others.

Wednesday, 27 April 2011

Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange Receives Trading Authorisation



Gold-Futures Contract To Commence Trading on May 18

HONG KONG, 27 April, 2011 – The Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange (“HKMEx”) today announced that it has received authorisation from the Securities and Futures Commission to operate as an automated trading services (“ATS”) provider. Approval has also been given for its trading debut on May 18, 2011.

The ATS authorisation grants HKMEx the right to offer market participants, through its member firms, the use of its state-of-the-art electronic platform to trade commodities.  The Exchange will begin trading with at least 16 members including some of the world’s largest financial institutions and trading firms as well as several well-established brokerages in Hong Kong.

“We are very excited about this historic day. It allows us to establish a liquid and vibrant international commodities exchange based in Hong Kong, linking China with the rest of Asia and the world,” said Barry Cheung, chairman of HKMEx. “Global demand for core commodities has in recent years been driven by Asia, especially China and India.  However, market participants in the region have had to rely on Western exchanges for price discovery, bearing the basis risk exposure in the process.  Our new platform will offer Asia a bigger say in setting global commodity prices.  It will also enable market participants to more actively manage their risk exposures, using products tailored to Asian market needs.”

HKMEx’s broking members at launch include BOCI Securities Ltd, Celestial Commodities Ltd, CES Capital International Co. Ltd, Chief Commodities Ltd, ICBC International Futures Ltd, Interactive Brokers LLC, KGI Futures (Hong Kong) Ltd, MF Global Hong Kong Ltd, Morgan Stanley Hong Kong Securities Ltd, OSK Futures Hong Kong Ltd, Phillip Commodities (HK) Ltd, Tanrich Futures Ltd and TG Securities Ltd.  Its three clearing members are Interactive Brokers (UK) Ltd, MF Global UK Ltd and Morgan Stanley & Co International Plc.

The first product to trade on the Exchange will be a 1-kilo gold futures contract offered in US dollars with physical delivery in Hong Kong.  Trading hours will run between 0800 to 2300 Hong Kong Time, overlapping commodity markets in Europe and the US.  “This helps to promote cross-continent trading and boost liquidity,” said Albert Helmig, president of HKMEx.  “It also offers participants extensive opportunities for hedging, arbitrage and effective risk management.”

In the pipeline are standardised products which will either be physically or financially settled, covering precious and base metals, energy, agriculture and commodity indices. 

HKMEx is uniquely positioned to take advantage of the liberalisation of the renminbi in Hong Kong.  “China’s pilot scheme for the settlement of overseas direct investments in the Chinese currency has not only increased cross-border trade settlement and liquidity, but also created a strong demand for renminbi-denominated investment instruments,” said Mr. Helmig. 

All transactions on HKMEx will be cleared through London-based LCH.Clearnet – a leading independent clearing house serving major international exchanges.

HKMEx has attracted shareholders from around the globe including China’s ICBC and COSCO Group as well as Russia’s En+ Group, among others. 

“We are very fortunate to have such a strong shareholder base in addition to a board of directors who are of the highest calibre in their own fields.  Our management experience, together with cutting-edge technology, market focused products, and Hong Kong’s strategic location and infrastructure will ensure HKMEx a promising future,” said Mr. Cheung.

Wednesday, 6 April 2011

Bernheim, Dreyfus & Co. partners with the French Foundation for Disabled (APSH 34)

APSH 34 is charitable association which helps the psychiatrically disabled through their rehabilitation and the process of reintegration into society.
For over 30 years APSH 34, together with the Fondation de France and the Montpelier Public Hospital, has also worked to reintegrate the disabled into formal employment (and also to meet their housing needs).   
Amit Shabi, co-founder of Bernheim, Dreyfus & Co, declares : We are very proud to be able to help APSH 34 in its noble mission which also underlines our total commitment to community initiatives.  
Paris-based Bernheim, Dreyfus & Co was founded in 2006 as an alternative investment firm focusingon M&A related strategies, managing an event driven hedge fund – Diva Synergy.

Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Connect & Trade: Mexico Monday April 11th 2011

Connect & Trade: Mexico


Accessing Mexican Financial Markets

Join executives from Bolsa Mexicana (Mexican Exchange) for an interactive panel discussion designed to help achieve unparalleled access to one of the leading equity and derivatives marketplaces in Latin America.

Attend this exclusive event to learn about investment opportunities in Mexico, as well as receive insight into new trading rules that streamline Direct Market Access trading (DMA), which benefit traders, institutional investors, hedge funds, high frequency traders, banks, FCMs and brokerages.


Monday, April 11th 2011
16:00 HRS
Clothworkers’ Company
Clothworkers’ Hall
Dunster Court, Mincing Lane. London, EC3R 7AH


16:00 hrs – Panel Discussion and Audience Q&A
                       Livery Hall

18:30 hrs – Cocktail Reception
                       Reception Room


R.S.V.P
Catherine Alexander / +44 20 7490 8062



BMV is the second largest stock exchange in Latin America with a total market capitalization of over US$ 453.8 billion. The Exchange is home to some of the most recognizable and profitable global corporations, including beverage giant Grupo Modelo, whose brands include Corona Extra and Pacifico, América Móvil, one of the largest telecommunications companies in the world; CEMEX, the world’s biggest building materials supplier, and Televisa, the largest media company in the Spanish-speaking world, among many others.

The Mexican Derivatives Exchange is the third largest derivatives exchange in Latin America. Launched in 1998, it offers options and futures on interest rates, stock indices, currencies and single stocks.



Friday, 4 March 2011

29 March 2011: Charlie Anderson at the Royal Opera Arcade Gallery

WE GOT CULTURE
The Directors and Staff of RostronParry take great pleasure inviting you to a show by

Charlie Anderson

From 6.00pm, Tuesday 29th March
Royal Opera Arcade Gallery, 5b Pall Mall (Lower Regent St and Haymarket), London SW1Y 4UY.

Drinks and nibbles.

RSVP
SIMON ROSTRON
ROSTRON PARRY, LONDON
+44 20 7490 8062

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Financial News: Meet Verena Ross Esma's executive director

Ashlee Godwin

Europe’s newest financial regulator, the European Securities and Markets Authority, is now fit for purpose after a slow start, with the long-awaited appointment of an executive director.

Esma, which was established on January 1 by the European Commission to oversee supervision the region’s securities industry, has named Verena Ross to its most senior position under chairman Steven Maijoor.
Ross is a German national and career-regulator with extensive experience in capital market policy and financial services supervision, following stints at both the UK’s Bank of England and Financial Services Authority. She has also previously appeared in Financial News’s FN100 Women list of the most influential women in European markets.
She joins Esma from the FSA, where she has led its international division since October 2009 and engaged in the debate on reforming the oversight of both European and global financial markets. Ross coordinated the division’s international and European committee work and provided strategic technical advice on EU and policy issues.
The appointment secures a rare senior role for the City of London among Europe’s three new super-regulators.
All three chairman positions in the new bodies have gone to Europeans: Italian Andrea Enria at the European Banking Authority; Maastricht University professor Maijoor at Esma; and Portuguese regulator Gabriel Bernardino at European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority.
The EBA is the only one of the three organisations to be based in London.
Ross's appointment follows the EC’s surprise move in January to appoint a little-known Dutch regulator to Esma’s top post. The appointment of Maijoor, a director at the Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets, as chairman was confirmed by the European Parliament earlier this month. As first executive director, Ross will oversee Esma’s initial development and day-to-day management.
Anthony Belchambers, chief executive of the Futures and Options Association, welcomed the appointment: “Whoever holds the position will have to achieve a difficult balance between satisfying public policy objectives to make the market safe while at the same time making sure the markets can meet the demands of investors.
“Verena is a good appointment to do that. She has lots of common sense and a good strong regulatory background.”
Peter Beales, managing director at the Association for Financial Markets in Europe, said: “This is a good appointment for ESMA. Verena is a well respected regulator who is expert in capital markets and supervision issues. In addition, her international experience will stand her in good stead as international convergence increasingly dominates the financial regulatory agenda.”
Esma was created to replace the Committee of European Securities Regulator, which advised the EC from 2001 to 2010 on policy issues surrounding the securities industry.
The long-awaited appointment of Ross comes as Esma prepares to begin implementing two sweeping pieces of financial regulation in Europe; the updated Markets in Financial Instruments Directive, and the European Market Infrastructure Regulation.

Monday, 28 February 2011

No IT? No Comment!

The financial crisis and its concomitant regulatory reaction have dramatically increased the pressure on pension fund trustees who increasingly find themselves having to juggle the demands of boosting investment returns and managing assets, calls for greater clarity and reporting and the effects of including alternatives in the overall portfolio.  Neil Puri, Chief Executive of SRL Global explains the problem and the answer which, to translate Audi’s famous slogan, is:  Progress through Technology.

Tarzan has given up his life of swinging on lianas and has become trustee of a major pension fund.  One day, he comes home from work and immediately tells Jane to mix him a drink ... and another.  At his request for a third drink, Jane says, “Tarzan, what’s the matter?  I’ve never seen you drink like this.”  “Jane,” Tarzan replies, “it’s a jungle out there.”
Which all goes to show that it’s tough being a trustee of a pension fund these days.  Not that the job was ever easy but the recent financial crisis has thrown up all sorts of new demands and flagged risks that, hitherto, had rarely been recognized and, even more rarely, considered.
For example, until recently, a DB pension scheme trustee’s attention was largely focused on scheme liabilities.  Dramatic changes to life expectancy and annuity rate often meant that the pensions promise given to scheme members was becoming harder and harder to keep bringing to mind the late Nathan Rothschild’s description of political party manifestos: “the promises and panaceas that gleam like false teeth.”

Close Encounters
But, as all pensionistas now know, liabilities are only one side of the story.  The financial crisis of 2008/09 brought the issues of investment returns and, moreover, the management of scheme assets straight onto the middle of the screen.
Trustees were faced by an Armageddon scenario not dissimilar to that encountered by Will Smith in ‘Independence Day’ as scheme liabilities were increasing at the same time that asset values were plummeting.  There was suddenly a new awareness that Assets, with a capital ‘A’, are what will ultimately deliver the pensions promise and that both liabilities and assets needed urgent attention and were of equal, critical significance to trustees.  As Smith said, “Now that’s what I call a close encounter!”  
What the financial crisis really highlighted was just how much the asset management industry had evolved over the last twenty years.  Investment was no longer just in the blue chip equities of companies we all knew.  Cash was held with Icelandic banks and somehow UK building societies and banks were brought down by exposure to sub-prime mortgage debt on the other side of the globe.  Investment had increased in complexity one hundred fold.

No outsourcing of Responsibility
Here is a list of some of the multiple considerations charged to trustees when deciding upon, or indeed modifying, a pension scheme’s investment strategy:
»          Any limitations on investments contained in the trust deed and rules
»          Legal or regulatory requirements, in particular ERI in the case of a sponsored scheme
»          Fiduciary duty to choose investments that are in the best financial interests of the scheme members – for example, a trustee must not allow ethical or political convictions get in the way of achieving the best returns for the scheme
»          Suitability of different asset classes to meet the needs of the scheme and future liabilities
»          The risks involved in different types of investment and the possible returns that may be achieved,   and
»          Appropriate diversification of the scheme's investments – in other words not 'putting all your eggs in one basket'.
All investment decisions taken by trustees are in light of appropriate advice taken from professional advisers such as the scheme actuary and investment consultants. What is clear is that whilst trustees can outsource the investment functions and decisions, they cannot however outsource the responsibility.

“’Tisn’t beauty, so to speak, nor good talk necessarily. It’s just IT.”
(with apologies to Kipling)

It might be argued that where before there was an expectation to see boxes checked, there is now a growing demand by trustees to check the working behind the tick. Trustees must establish, operate and maintain adequate internal control mechanisms for the purpose of monitoring that the scheme is being effectively administered and managed in the interests of the members and beneficiaries under the scheme rules.
And, to be optimal, those control mechanisms should take advantage of the new generation of IT solutions currently becoming available to the pensions industry. 
Take, as an example, the last point of the list above, the requirement to diversify, and tie it to the approach defined by the Pensions Regulator in Q4 2010 to regulating ERI ‘Employer-related investments, often called ‘self-investment which limits investment in any employer.
One of the side effects of the financial crisis was that it flushed out many forms of risk which the previously rising markets hid. With the benefit of hindsight many of these risks were obvious and their rediscovery has created an understandable concern amongst regulators to improve corporate governance and oversight of scheme’s assets needs.  The collapse of financial markets coupled with a series of high profile bankruptcies has raised the question of diversification and dependency and whether all of a scheme’s eggs are in one basket residing with one broker, custodian or counterparty or indeed the corporate sponsor, with respect to the employer covenant.
Turning from the general to the specific, one of the features of the new regulatory approach mentioned above is that it’s not just about direct investment in an employer’s shares but also restricts indirect investments through, for example, trusts that may hold such shares, through other types of securities: options, single stock futures, ETFs etc and so on. 
Without extensive IT identification, valuation and analytical systems it is extremely difficult, arguable impossible to be able to gather the level of information about the content of an investment portfolio that the regulator now requires.  It’s not simply a process of drilling down to discover the holdings of all the managers and but again to drill down again to see if, through any of those instruments, there is any further exposure - across all asset types and complex derivatives.

What’s the Alternative?
The reference to ‘complex derivatives’ in the previous paragraphs, brings the new world of alternative investments to mind, an area, increasingly explored by trustees who recognize that while “points win prizes”, performance keeps promises.  And a well managed portfolio of alternative investment managers should deliver excess performance largely uncorrelated with the direction of shares – and often with lower risk.
By ‘alternative investment managers’, we often mean hedge fund managers and for many trustees, these three words conjure up a nervous frisson akin to being presented with one’s first oysters – are they desirable and/or will they cause us to be ill?
Why, for some are hedge funds frightening?

Reasons to be Fearful, part ...
»          Is it because hedge fund performance is often too strong at a time when preservation is the accepted goal i.e. how trustworthy can a manager be if he’s making 25% these days?
»          Is it because hedge funds tend to be funded by small flexible partnerships rather than by institutionalized committees (and see the point above)?
»          Is it because there have been a series of well-publicised collapses from Long Term Capital Management to Madoff?  (But note, Madoff was a crook not a hedge fund manager; sitting in a dealing room makes you no more a hedge fund manager than sitting in a garage makes you a car).
»          Is it because, by their nature, many hedge fund strategies are more complex than traditional investment strategies and thus more difficult to understand?  And thus in some cases, to value?
»          Or is it primarily because, despite assurances to the contrary, hedge fund managers and hedge fund strategies are perceived to add risk to a pension scheme portfolio rather than reduce the thrill of the roller-coaster ride?
The pension fund industry is clearly in the process of a major evolution in its use of alternatives and in particular, hedge funds. There are implications on portfolio allocations, whether schemes allocate to complex investments such as hedge funds and how they achieve their hedge fund exposure. However, since the Madoff scandal and the unravelling of the credit markets, few financial institutions have been more publicly vilified than hedge funds. Whilst the merits are clear, the associated risks may not be fully understood.  But it can be with the right tools and, as Bill Gates said in 1997, “Technology is just a tool.”

Risk and Reward
There are two distinct pressures on trustees.  Firstly there are commercial pressures to improve the returns on assets therefore having to take a more sophisticated approach to investing.  At the same time the regulator is pressing for greater oversight and knowledge of investments.  Lessons learnt over the recent past have illustrated that knowing your managers and knowing what your managers are doing, is not the same thing!  And costly uncertainty can apply to exposure. 
There were professional investors who at crisis points over the last few years have not known their exposures to Lehman Brothers stock, whether they owned (albeit indirectly) Greek or Irish Government debt , or indeed the impact on their overall asset values of BP’s Deep Water Horizon oil spill.  Ignorance is not bliss on this occasion (actually it’s rarely ‘bliss’ except perhaps on St Valentine’s Day) and the transition to a state of knowledge and understand is easily achieved although the IT required is, itself complex. 

The Last Word on Transparency
There is no longer a holistic view of underlying inventory.  Multiple data sources and the challenges from using out-of date valuations of an increasing complex market means that historic reliance on custodians and other service providers in the investment chain are no longer viable options.
Whether it’s the treasurer, CFO, trustee or pension’s manager, regularity and precision in an open and auditable way is paramount.  As a result, schemes must, for the first time, understand and manage how all their individual fund allocations fit into their portfolio of investments in aggregate.  This may be achieved by technology enabling schemes to analyse all the holdings of their constituent allocations together, both traditional and alternative, as if they held all the underlying positions directly.
Independently from their investment advisors, schemes must strengthen oversight capabilities through the provision of an independent audit trail of investment activity, exposures, restrictions and compliance failures.  Holdings need to be interpreted proactively to deliver a completely new level of insight and authority to trustees. Total transparency, consistent information, cross manager visibility and instant access to the right data at the right time will empower all scheme stakeholders to turn information into insight.
In conclusion, this article has ameliorated one key risk.  As Churchill once said: “This report, by its very length, defends itself against the risk of being read.”