All IPE articles in December 2012 (Magazine)

View all stories from this issue.

  • Features

    LGPS could boost infrastructure by up to 15%

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    UK local authority funds could soon see investment regulations loosened, allowing a further £20bn (€25bn) in assets to be allocated to infrastructure, according to the department for communities and local government (DCLG).

  • Features

    Pensions Accounting: Some good IAS19 news

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    And the good news is praise for IAS19. As an antidote to the usual depressive outlook of this column, this month we have 800 words about what IAS19 does well.

  • Special Report

    Outlook 2013: Euro Scenarios: Breaking up is hard to do

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Quite apart from the investment risks associated with the euro-zone break-up scenario, it introduces complex legal and operational challenges. Charlotte Moore looks at the situation for both investment and non-financial firms

  • Special Report

    Outlook 2013: Euro Scenarios: The euro-zone’s no-man’s land

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Germany’s bonds are safe-haven, ‘risk-off’ assets. Spain’s are ‘risk-on’ assets. But Maha Khan Phillips asks how investors should think about allocations to markets like France and Belgium

  • Features

    Adapt now or fall by the wayside

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Aymeric Poizot argues that to stay competitive, asset managers must act swiftly to re-shape their activities to deal with new challenges being thrown up by rapidly changing market conditions

  • Interviews

    The rise of tactical asset allocation

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Do you make use of tactical asset allocation?

  • Interviews

    Boutique ambition

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Natixis Asset Management (NAM) might be less well known than other firms in the Natixis Global Asset Management (NGAM) empire, such as Boston’s Loomis Sayles or Chicago’s Harris Associates. But the Paris firm is by far the largest asset manager in its parent’s multi-affiliate structure in asset terms, in part thanks to its historic ties with France’s Caisse d’Epargne and Banque Populaire network, and its strong local roots.

  • Features

    In your own back yard

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Gail Moss looks at how a number of regional pension funds are investing in their own localities

  • Features

    Institutions suited to bridge the lending gap

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Infrastructure as an asset class is at a crossroads. While European banks traditionally provided debt to infrastructure projects pre-2008, the financial crisis and new regulation requiring banks to hold larger amounts of capital have changed the rules.

  • Opinion Pieces

    Letter from Brussels: Deaf ears for EC claims

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Summer 2013 might be some way off but it is when the European Commission intends to publish its proposals for IORP II. And signs from the Commission are that the usual procrastination is no longer intended.

  • Asset Class Reports

    Hedge Funds: Changing models

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    The fund of funds model is having to adapt fast to survive. Joseph Mariathasan finds that the new models also require a different approach to thinking about the hedge fund opportunity set

  • Features

    Diary of an Investor: A tale of two cities

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Last week we visited the offices of two asset managers for finals for a European equities mandate. The experiences were instructive.

  • Features

    Denmark: not one to rest on its laurels

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    The Danish pension system is the envy of many developed countries. Ranked as the world’s best by Melbourne Mercer, the system also won plaudits from the OECD in September for being home to the best-performing pension funds. But far from resting on their laurels, politicians, regulators and the funds are constantly trying to improve.

  • Volatility regimes and risk drivers
    Features

    Volatility regimes and risk drivers

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Using factor model to break down two similar-looking periods of declining implied volatility in Europe and the US, Rachael Smith uncovers surprising differences in the actual sources of risk

  • Features

    Dutch pension system knocked off its perch

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    The Netherlands, after leading the Melbourne Mercer Global Pensions Index for three years in a row, has been dethroned by Denmark – a new entry and the first country to ever claim the top grade.

  • Features

    An equity substitute

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    David Newman argues that equities have a similar credit profile to high-yield bonds but offer less protection, worse returns and higher volatility. Add in low correlation, and there is a strong case for replacing some equity exposure with high yield

  • Special Report

    ESG: Sunny side up

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Investors in solar power are responding to changes in the markets and finding new ways of gaining exposure, says Nina Röhrbein

  • Features

    Falling Irish yields scupper pension relief

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Ahead of Ireland’s successful, if timid, re-entry into the bond market in July, some within the pensions industry expressed concerns that the government was seeking to ‘incentivise’ investment in Irish debt through the new funding regime for defined benefit schemes.

  • Asset Class Reports

    Hedge Funds: Taking the ‘fund’ out of hedge funds

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Martin Steward spoke to PGGM’s Jan Soerensen about how its managed account platform allows it to take control of its hedge funds – and their costs

  • Features

    Generational imbalances

    December 2012 (Magazine)

    Nowadays, it is much harder to define the broad interest groups that are representative of a country as a whole. Previous decades were notable for the division between capital and labour, which persists in the consensual political and decision-making models of continental Europe. But tripartite decision-making between employers, unions and government now seems rather antiquated as membership of organised labour groups has declined over the past 20-30 years and western economies have deindustrialised.