UBS GAM and Banco do Brasil DTVM Collaborate to Provide Brazilian Institutional Investors Access to Global Sustainable Equities

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Crecimiento, reformas, rentabilidad: 2015 será un año de escasez
CC-BY-SA-2.0, FlickrPhoto: Chris Potter. Variations on the Scarcity Theme

UBS Global Asset Management and BB Gestão de Recursos DTVM S.A (“BB DTVM”), the asset management arm of Banco do Brasil (“BB”), today announced a joint collaboration to provide Brazilian institutional investors the opportunity to invest in global sustainable equities.

“We believe that UBS’s Global Sustainable Equity strategy is an interesting offering to meet this growing demand.”

Global investing is increasingly capturing the attention of institutional investors in Brazil. The local pension fund system, with close to R$ 674 billion in total assets, is currently allocated almost entirely to domestic investments but beginning to invest internationally. In addition, sustainable investing is becoming a key focus for investors, with 17 leading Brazilian pension funds now signatories to the United Nations’ Principles for Responsible Investment.

To meet this growing demand, BB DTVM will launch a registered feeder fund (in compliance with CMN Resolution 3,792) giving investors access to the UBS Global Sustainable Equity portfolio. GSE seeks to maximize total return with a sustainable investment approach, using a unique positive screening process that combines material sustainability factors and fundamental valuation analysis. Managed by UBS Global AM’s Sustainable Equities team, GSE has a track record that dates back to 1997 and ranks2 in the top quartile of Global All Cap Core Equity managers (eVestment Alliance) over 1, 3 and 5 years.

UBS Global AM has committed USD 20 million (approximately R$62 million) to launch the local fund.

How Big is the US Offshore Market?

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¿Qué tamaño tiene el mercado offshore de Estados Unidos?
Photo: Ines Hegedus-Garcia. How Big is the US Offshore Market?

Latin America has more than a trillion dollars in offshore money, these figures were published recently in “Global Wealth 2015: Winning the Game Growth”, the Boston Consulting Group’s latest global wealth report, according to which Switzerland is no longer the main destination for this money, having been displaced by the US and the Panama-Caribbean region, each holding 29% of the offshore money with Latin American origin. Switzerland, which until last year was the main destination of this wealth, currently receives 27% of the money leaving Latin America.

In total, the United States holds almost 300 billion dollars of wealth from residents in Latin America, a figure that is growing compared to previous years. In fact, in 2014 the offshore wealth originating in Latin America has been one of the main sources of growth in the world, generating 100 billion dollars of new money which has left their home countries, mainly looking for stability in their destination offshore centers, due to the political instability in some of the countries in which that money originated.

In correspondence, Latin America is the number one source of all the offshore money which reaches the United States, representing 41% of the total. United States holds more than 700 billion dollars of offshore money, so that 41% brings us back to approximately that round figure of 300 billion dollars.

Miami, New York, Houston, and San Diego are, in this order, the four major US offshore centers which serve the owners of this Latin American wealth.

Other good news is that Boston Consulting Group expects this growth to continue. For the next five years, United States is, after Singapore and Hong Kong, the offshore wealth destination with higher growth prospects globally.

 

Huge Surge in UCITS Net Sales For the First Quarter of 2015

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The European Fund and Asset Management Association (EFAMA) has this week published its latest quarterly statistical release which describes the trends in the European investment fund industry during the first quarter of 2015

The finding include that UCITS net sales surged in the first quarter of 2015 to EUR 285 billion, up from EUR 49 billion in the fourth quarter of 2014.

Long-term UCITS, i.e. UCITS excluding money market funds, also posted a steep increase in net sales during the quarter to EUR 240 billion, up from EUR 53 billion.Demand for bond funds jumped to EUR 77 billion, up from EUR 20 billion in the previous quarter. Net sales of multi-asset funds also posted a strong rise in net inflows during the quarter to EUR 101 billion, up from EUR 19 billion in the fourth quarter. Equity funds registered a turnaround in net sales to post net inflows of EUR 39 billion, against net outflows of EUR 5 billion registered in the previous quarter.

Money market funds posted net inflows of EUR 45 billion in the first quarter, against net outflows of EUR 5 billion recorded in the previous quarter.

AIF net sales amounted to EUR 17 billion in the first quarter, down from EUR 62 billion in the fourth quarter.This reduction in net sales was due to reduced net sales of multi-asset funds (EUR 21 billion compared to EUR 39 billion in the fourth quarter) and net outflows from equity funds during the quarter EUR 14 billion, compared to net inflows of EUR 2 billion in the fourth quarter. Institutional net sales increased to EUR 54 billion, up from EUR 44 billion in the previous quarter.

European investment fund assets posted growth of 12.6 percent during the first quarter of 2015 to stand at EUR 12,663 billion at end March 2015. Net assets of UCITS increased by 15.4  percent to stand at EUR 8,277 billion at end March 2015, whilst total net assets of AIFs increased by 7.8 percent in the first quarter to stand at EUR 4,387 billion at quarter end.

If we look at Net Sales by Country of Domiciliation, twenty-two countries registered net inflows in the first quarter of 2015, with six countries recording net inflows greater than EUR 10 billion.Luxembourg attracted net sales of EUR 117 billion during the quarter, registering large net inflows across fund categories. France followed with net sales of EUR 66 billion and Ireland posted net inflows of EUR 49 billion. Elsewhere, large inflows were posted during the quarter in Spain (EUR 16 billion), Switzerland (EUR 12 billion) and Italy (EUR 11 billion). Of the other large domiciles, the United Kingdom registered net outflows of EUR 9 billion during the quarter, primarily on account of large net outflows from equity funds (EUR 8 billion). Germany registered net inflows of EUR 8 billion during the quarter.

And regarding Net Assets by Country of Domiciliation, Twenty-five countries recorded growth during the quarter as net assets of UCITS reached EUR 8,277 billion at end March 2015. Of the largest domiciles, both Luxembourg and Ireland posted net asset growth of 14.6 percent during the quarter. The United Kingdom posted growth of 22.4% during the quarter. The appreciation of the pound sterling during the quarter vis-à-vis the euro of 6.6 percent played a role in the large growth of assets in the United Kingdom. France registered net asset growth of 16.8%, followed by Germany (12.3%). Elsewhere, large net asset growth of 17.7 percent was recorded in Switzerland and Spain during the quarter. Belgium also registered strong net asset growth of 17.5 percent. In Southern Europe, Italy posted net asset growth of 10.5 percent, followed by Portugal (9.3%). Greece registered a decrease in net assets of 4.9 percent during the quarter. Net assets of UCITS in Malta posted a decrease of 8.2 percent due to large net outflows from a fund during the quarter. In the Nordic region, net assets in Norway rose 13.4 percent, followed by Finland (12.6%) and Denmark (9.0%).

This report introduces a distinction between UCITS and Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) which is based on the specific regulatory requirements of the UCITS and AIMF Directives.  The new classification of EFAMA took effect from and including Q4 2014.

State Street Global Advisors Names President

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State Street Global Advisors nombra nuevo presidente
. State Street Global Advisors Names President

State Street Global Advisors (SSGA), the asset management arm of State Street Corporation, has announced the appointment of Greg Ehret as president.

Ehret is in charge of SSGA’s client facing, product and marketing, operations and infrastructure teams and will lead the execution of the non-investment aspects of strategy.

Ehret joined SSGA 20 years ago. He has held several executive positions in operations, sales and product development, including co-head of the firm’s exchange traded fund (ETF) business.

Ehret has led SSGA’s business in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) from July 2008 to September 2012 including the purchase of the Bank of Ireland Asset Management and managed State Street’s European ETF franchise.

SSGA has $2.4trn of assets under management as of 31 March 2015.

The Biggest Pension Policy Challenge Faced by Latin America and the Caribbean Is Low Coverage of Formal Pension Systems

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Photo:Tax Credits . The Biggest Pension Policy Challenge Faced by Latin America and the Caribbean Is Low Coverage of Formal Pension Systems

The biggest pension policy challengefaced by most countries in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) today is low coverage of formal pension systems, both in terms of the proportion of workers participating in pension schemes and the proportion of the elderly receiving some kind of pension income. Efforts to close the coverage gap, for example, through non-contributory pensions, are therefore at the heart of the pension policy debate in the region. However, these policies might pose significant fiscal challenges in the next decades as the population ages.

The OECD, the World Bank and IDB have published “Pensions at a Glance: Latin America and the Caribbean” and the key findings show active coverage is low, the type of employment is key, older people will have to rely on incomes from other than contributory pensions. The conclusion is that workers should be integrated into the contributory systems to boost pension savings and ensure pension adequacy.

Active coverage, i.e. contribution payments of workers to mandatory pension schemes, is low in LAC countries.On average in the region, only 45 in 100 workers are contributing to or affiliated with a pension scheme, a share that has not changed much in the last decades, despite significant structural pension reforms. However, some countries have expanded the share of individuals aged 65 or older receiving pension benefits, mostly by means of non-contributory pensions and special regimes for the self-employed.

The low level of contributions to pension schemes reflects a series of socioeconomic characteristics, notably education, gender and income. Educational attainment has a significant impact on the likelihood of contributing to pension systems: more educated workers are more likely to contribute than less educated workers. Gender is also important as the average labour force participation rate for women in LAC is 56% compared with 83% for men. The gender gap ranges from 20% in Bolivia, Chile, Jamaica, and Uruguay to 40% in Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico. Finally, income differences between households also have an important impact. Workers in the highest quintile of the income distribution have relatively high rates of contribution, while low-income workers rarely contribute to pension schemes. Only 20 to 40% of the middle-income workers contribute to pension schemes, making them particularly vulnerable to old age poverty risks.

A key determinant of pension coverage in LAC is the type of employment. On average, 64 out of 100 salaried workers contribute to a pension scheme in LAC compared to only 17 out of 100 self-employed workers. The size of the firm also matters. In big firms with over 50 workers, 71% of salaried workers contribute, compared with 51% in medium-sized firms (with 6 to 50 workers) and 24% in small ones (with fewer than six workers). Frequent transitions between formality, informality and inactivity generate very significant contribution gaps in workers’ careers in LAC, which will put the adequacy of future retirement incomes at risk. In almost all systems, incomplete contribution histories result in lower pension entitlements, or even ineligibility, which means that both the size of these contribution gaps and their distribution over time need to be examined.

A large share of older people in LAC will have to rely on other sources of income than contributory pensions, such as work income, assets such as housing, transfers, social pensions and informal family support. Household structure, an important factor for thewell-being of the elderly, shows that poorer older people are more likely to be living with afamily member. Most of the elderly poor in the region live in multi-generationalhouseholds suggesting that their welfare is closely tied to that of their family. Thelong-term trends of increased urbanisation and lower fertility will likely weaken these tiesin the future, which will make access to the formal pension system more important.

The role of social pensions in LAC is expanding and, in some countries, they are already a major element of the pension system. These programs have taken various forms with varying outcomes across countries. In terms of coverage and relative generosity, social pensions are most important in Guyana and Bolivia, followed by Venezuela and Brazil.

In sum, a two-pronged approach will be needed in order to deal with the coverage gap. It is important to increase formal labour market participation, especially for women, so that people can build future pension entitlements in their own right. To the extent possible, workers should be integrated into the contributory systems to boost pension savings and ensure pension adequacy. At the same time, the role for non-contributory (social) pensions is increasing throughout the region and can be a powerful tool for improving the economic well-being of the elderly. These programs should be assessed both from the perspectives of adequacy and financial sustainability as well as how they interact with other elements of the social protection system, including social assistance and contributory pensions.

OECD (2014), “Executive summary”, in OECD/IDB/The World Bank, Pensions at a Glance: Latin America and the Caribbean, OECD Publishing, Paris. Link to summary.

To find the publication, you may follow this link

 

Lombard Odier’s Head of Open Architecture Resigns

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Laurent Auchlin, head of open architecture and executive vice president at Geneva-headquartered private bank Lombard Odier has announced his resignation.

Auchlin lead a 15 person strong team in managing a long-only fund and a fund of hedge funds, managing assets in excess of €7bn for private and institutional clients as well as family offices. His key responsibilities included manager selection, portfolio construction and asset management.

He has been with Lombard Odier for 15 years, starting off in 2000 as deputy head of fund research and multi-management before being appointed to head of open architecture in 2008. Prior to that, he worked as portfolio manager for Credit Suisse.

Philippe Baumann, deputy-head of open architecture has taken over his responsibilities on an ad-interim basis. 

Good news for Osborne Ahead of Summer Budget

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El rompecabezas de Osborne: reducir la deuda en Reino Unido y cumplir con las promesas electorales
Photo: Conservatives. Good news for Osborne Ahead of Summer Budget

Improving public finance figures in U.K. today gave Chancellor George Osborne a fair wind ahead of his summer Budget on July 8, said Investec´experts. Public sector net borrowing (PSNB) in May, excluding the cost of bank bailouts, was £10.1 billion, a fall of £2.2 billion compared with May last year.

Lower government investment spending, higher VAT receipts and fines levied on banks all helped to generate the improved fiscal outlook.

Alongside May’s figures, the data showed the PSNB figure, again excluding the cost of bank bailouts, for the financial year from April 2014 to March 2015 had been £89.2 billion, down by £9.3 billion on the previous year.

Room to manoeuvre

July 8 will see Mr Osborne deliver his first “Conservative”, as opposed to Coalition, Budget and these figures widen his room for manoeuvre. The justification for having a second Budget after that of March 19 is to start to implement the policies on which it won the May 7 General Election, point out Investec.

Announcing the summer Budget, the Chancellor said: “I don’t want to wait to deliver on the commitments we have made to working people.

“It [the summer Budget] will continue with the balanced plan we have to deal with our debts, invest in our health service and reform welfare to make work pay.”

Welfare savings

The Conservative Government is pledged to axe £12 billion a year in welfare spending but it is not yet clear how most of this will be achieved, explained the firm in its last analysis.

Announcing this second Budget, Mr Osborne said: “We will always protect the most vulnerable, but we also need a welfare system that’s fair to the people who pay for it.”

The best-known welfare pledge is that of reducing the “benefit cap” per household from £26,000 a year to £23,000. But the independent think tank, the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), has noted: “Because in total fewer than 100,000 families would be affected… the policy reduces spending by only £0.1bn.”

Similarly, the pledge to remove housing benefit from 18-21-year-olds would save, again, just £0.1 billion, said the IFS. Overall, it said, the public is still in the dark as to £10.5 billion of annual welfare cuts.

Campaign commitments

On the other side of the equation – spending – critics suggest the Chancellor needs this second Budget to raise the money to pay for uncosted commitments made on the campaign trail when the polls were running neck and neck.

These included a commuter rail fare freeze, a huge increase in free child-care for working parents, an increase in the tax threshold and subsidies for home purchase.

Focus on productivity

Mr Osborne said: “There will be a laser-like focus on making our economy more productive so we raise living standards across our country.”

Britain’s productivity performance has been dire in recent years and output per hour, on the latest figures, is actually slightly lower than it was in 2007. But some fear that poor productivity is the price to be paid for record levels of employment.

The Chancellor himself, speaking to the business lobby group the CBI on May 20, said: “I would much rather have the productivity challenge than the challenge of mass unemployment.”

Natixis Global Asset Management Launches New Singapore-Based Expertise Dedicated to Emerging Markets

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Emerise, gestora experta en emergentes, nueva filial de Natixis Global Asset Management
Photo: FrancPallares, Flickr, Creative Commons. Natixis Global Asset Management Launches New Singapore-Based Expertise Dedicated to Emerging Markets

Natixis Global Asset Management has launched Emerise, a new stock picker Singapore-based expertise dedicated to emerging markets. The firm manages a range of emerging markets equity funds to offer investment solutions that combine long-term growth and portfolio diversification.

The potential of emerging markets remains underestimated by investors: emerging economies represent more than 50% of global GDP, while their market capitalization only accounts for 10%. Furthermore, positive long-term prospects make these markets particularly attractive, both in terms of growth potential and portfolio diversification.

“To meet investors’ long-term expectations, we believe it’s crucial to focus on the original principles of emerging markets investing: growth and diversification,” said Stéphane Mauppin-Higashino, Managing Director of Emerise.

Identifying emerging small & mid cap companies with high growth potential

Based in Singapore and Paris, Emerise relies on local teams and research. Its offering covers all emerging regions – Europe, Asia and Latin America – as well as all market capitalisations, from large caps to small & mid caps. The firm employs an innovative and original index: the MSCI Emerging Markets Investable Market Index – IMI.

Convinced that small & mid cap stocks with strong growth prospects can provide superior returns to other corporate categories, Emerise aims to include such high value-added stocks in all of its portfolios, with the conviction that small & mid cap companies represent the true emerging corporate world.

Offering the upside potential of growth stocks over the long term

As a stock picker, Emerise selects growth stocks combining three key fundamentals: stable earnings growth, solid economic fundamentals and clear competitive edge with high value-added. On-the-ground research and in-depth knowledge of companies’ management teams form the core of its investment philosophy.

Emerise’s fund managers make almost 1,500 company visits every year, analyse approximately 300 companies in depth, and constantly monitor close to 100 of these companies. With an approach combining bottom-up research and a rigorous selection of growth companies, the funds managed by Emerise hold 50 to 70 stocks on average. The portfolios are concentrated to provide investors with the best of the emerging world over the long term. Emerise has four areas of equity expertise: Global emerging, Asia, Emerging Europe, and Latin America.

Emerise’s fund range is distributed via Natixis Global Asset Management’s global distribution platform and is designed for all types of investors, both professional (institutional investors, companies, multimanagers, private banks, IFA5 and banking networks) and non-professional.

Greece: Will It All End in Drachma?

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Thanks to the Greek finance minister’s background as an academic of game theory, everyone is trying to figure out what game the Greek governing party, Syriza, is trying to play. As it looks like Greece is hurtling headlong towards disaster, the most commonly used example is the game of chicken, where two drivers race towards a cliff and the loser is the one who swerves away first (see Economist Insights, 21 May 2012). Unfortunately, the game of chicken all too often ends with both drivers plunging over the cliff to their doom, say Joshua McCallum, Head of Fixed Income Economics, and Gianluca Moretti, Fixed Income Economist, UBS Global Asset Management in an Economist Insigth.

At first this sounds like a great analogy, but there is a big problem with the comparison. While Greece would end up in intensive care if it goes over the cliff, the rest of the Eurozone would probably just come out feeling bruised. The market clearly thinks so: while spreads on Greek government bonds have risen, those on other periphery countries moved only marginally.

If the risks are so unbalanced –say the economists- why is Syriza playing such a risky game? One reason is that Syriza is not only interested in the other driver, but is also paying a lot of attention to the spectators. Syriza had promised Greek voters that they could both keep Greece in the Eurozone and also roll back the austerity and reform measures as well as reduce Greece’s level of debt. Unfortunately for Syriza this dual mandate is turning out to be mutually exclusive. Yet a failure to achieve either of these objectives could lead to a political crisis and even cause the government to fall.

The best survival strategy for Syriza is thus to wait until the last minute to swerve. Swerving too early would be seen as failure, but by swerving only at the last minute they can blame the rest of the Eurozone for being too uncompromising. And there is always the hope that the Eurozone capitulates and swerves first. But most important are the internal politics: even if Prime Minister Tsipras strikes a deal with other Eurozone leaders today, he will need to put it through the Greek parliament. And this means getting it past the far left wing of the Syriza party. This wing of the party has taken a much harder stance against the Eurozone, and would likely have been after Mr Tsipras’ blood if he had struck a compromise deal too early, UBS Global Asset Management experts note.

For Mr Tsipras to strike a deal and still survive politically, he needs to do it at the last minute. In short, he needs to do what he has just successfully done: bring about a ‘take-it-or-leave-it’ ultimatum from the Eurozone. That way he can present the deal as the best that he can get, and effectively he can turn the parliamentary vote on the deal into a referendum on continued membership of the Eurozone. To vote against the deal, the left wing of Syrzia would effectively be voting to leave the single currency. Yet the general public still strongly supports continued membership of the euro, and this way Mr Tsipras can make the electorate, and his party, understand that the dual mandate they presented him with is now mutually exclusive.

The people of Greece are becoming ever more worried about the possibility of ‘Grexit’-they add-. They are withdrawing money from bank accounts in ever greater amounts, to avoid both capital controls and the re-denomination risk of having their euros forcibly converted into a new Greek drachma. Between December and April, more than EUR 25 billion of deposits were withdrawn from Greek banks (see chart), equivalent to more than 15% of the total. And the pace of outflows has increased in the last couple of months.

Not only have Greek banks had to cope with deposit withdrawals, but their lines of credit with other banks in the Eurozone are also being withdrawn. That leaves the Greek banks almost entirely reliant on the European Central Bank (ECB) to provide them with Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA). Under this programme, the Bank of Greece is authorized by the ECB to provide cash to Greek banks as long as they post collateral. But this still means that the Bank of Greece (and indirectly the ECB) is taking on a lot of risk. If no deal is reached, and Greece cannot make its payments due later this month, then the ECB may be forced to withdraw emergency liquidity. That would probably force the Greek banks to shut down for as long as the situation drags on.

If Greece is forced to impose capital controls, it will probably be because the ECB has suspended ELA assistance to the Greek banks. So the banks might not even have enough cash available to meet the limited withdrawals allowed. The banks would run out of money very quickly and would likely have to shut, leaving the population without access to their deposits. The immediate consequences for the economy would be catastrophic.

A new currency might quickly improve Greek competitiveness as it would depreciate rapidly, but it is not clear that it would solve all of Greece’s problems. Even if Greece decides that it wants to default on its debt, this is not for Greece to decide on its own. Most of Greece’s debt is in the form of bilateral loans, not bonds, and there is no default without the agreement of the creditor. The IMF, for one, will not forgive the debt: Greece will simply be seen to be in arrears, and will accrue interest. The rest of the Eurozone may demand payment as well, limiting Greece’s ability to engage in trade or interaction with the rest of the world for fear of having its assets seized. And if Greece is now earning in a foreign currency, it will be even harder to pay off its debts.

The ECB could be facing the greatest losses. The ECB holds EUR 27 billion of Greek debt, and it is further exposed through the bank funding (around EUR 120 billion).

Although recently it is the Bank of Greece that loaned money to the Greek banks through the ELA, the Bank of Greece still owes money to the ECB.

The authors of the document ask themselves: How can the Eurozone stop the contagion from Greece to other Eurozone countries? If Greece goes, will the market simply target Portugal, Spain or even Italy? That was the fear in 2011, which is why Greece got so much support. But this time there are numerous programmes in place: the Outright Monetary Transactions that allow the ECB to buy bonds that are under ‘unwarranted’ market stress, as well as the ECB’s quantitative easing programme. There has long been a rule in the market: ‘don’t fight the Fed’. That rule applies here as well: ‘don’t fight the ECB’. If the ECB decides that Portugal, Spain or Italy needs to remain in the Eurozone, then it is a foolhardy investor who will take the other side of that trade.

However, even if sovereign bonds are relatively insulated, there is the risk that the market could become worried about periphery banks. This could lead to much higher borrowing costs, if not episodes where banks are completely cut off from market funding.

The rest of the Eurozone would not escape unscathed, but they would survive. If anything, a Greek exit will likely push the rest of the Eurozone closer together.The rest would renew their commitment to the remaining periphery countries. The game of chicken for both Greece and the rest of the Eurozone will probably conclude this week as both racers approach the cliff edge. The market’s hope is that the Greek government will realise the danger and swerve first. If not, it may well end up in the drama of the drachma.

MUFG Investor Services to Acquire UBS Global Asset Management’s Alternative Fund Services Business

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MUFG Investor Services comprará el negocio de servicios de fondos alternativos a UBS Global Asset Management
. MUFG Investor Services to Acquire UBS Global Asset Management's Alternative Fund Services Business

MUFG Investor Services, the global asset servicing group of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, has reached an agreement with UBS Global Asset Management to acquire its Alternative Fund Services (AFS) business. The transaction is expected to close in fourth quarter 2015, subject to regulatory approvals and customary closing conditions.

“This transaction is part of our strategy to build MUFG Investor Services into an industry-leading administrator, both organically and through acquisitions,” said Junichi Okamoto, Group Head of Integrated Trust Assets Business Group, Deputy President, Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking Corporation.

“AFS’ strong client franchise, global footprint, and notably its strong presence in Asia, are an excellent strategic fit,” he continued. “We are confident that our clients will benefit from the depth of combined resources and capabilities and from our commitment to innovation coupled with AFS’ market-leading technology platform. We welcome AFS to our growing business and look forward to continuing to provide our clients with best-in-class service.”

Ulrich Koerner, President of UBS Global Asset Management, said: “We have a sharp focus on executing our strategy, with a clear goal of delivering best-in-class investment management capabilities to our clients. With this in mind, and in light of the increasing drive towards scale in fund administration, we concluded that the future development of AFS in servicing its clients would be best ensured as part of an organization with a strategic focus on asset servicing.”

“MUFG’s commitment to invest in the client franchise and the people, together with their strong focus on ensuring a seamless transition, were important factors in our decision-making,” Koerner added.