All Features articles – Page 234

  • Features

    Pension role bid for fund groups

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Taking the next big step

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Developing from a pension fund into a fully-fledged commercial tiger does not happen overnight. Mn Services in Rijswijk knows all about it. Until 2001 Mn Services was an integral part of the Pension Fund for Metalworking and Mechanical Engineering. Four years ago Mn Services ‘broke loose’ from its parent and ...

  • Features

    New kid on the block

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Build a better mousetrap, the saying goes, and the world will beat a path to your door. Build a better market index, and perhaps investors will do the same. Until recently, there has been a consensus in the investment community that the traditional broad market indices like the S&P 500 ...

  • Features

    KLM's blue sky thinking

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Long bond dangers

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Surely I can not be the only person concerned at the recent headline in the UK’s Financial Times, ‘UK finds success in a 50-year linker’. The UK government marked a milestone in bond market history in September by raising £1.25bn (e1.8bn) with the sale of the world’s first 50-year inflation-linked ...

  • Features

    Breaking the stranglehold

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    One of the myths about Germany is that it is becoming less attractive to foreigners wanting to do business. Spreaders of the myth – typically neo-liberal-minded industrialists, economists and politicians – say that unless Germany lowers its labour costs, cuts its taxes and streamlines its bureaucracy, it will attract fewer ...

  • Features

    Pensionsfonds bright future

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Aleading German pensions adviser, Richard Herrmann of consulting firm Heubeck, sees a strong future for German Pensionsfonds. The funds - Germany’s answer to the equity-oriented Anglo-Saxon pension fund - should double their assets every two years now that the government has boosted their competitiveness, he says. In implementing the EU ...

  • Features

    The bull in the china shop

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    It is a new dawn over Eindhoven for the investment team for the Philips Pension Fund. This autumn it joined the thundering herd of Merrill Lynch Investment Managers (MLIM), one of the largest asset managers in the world with $478bn (e396bn)under management. The deal, completed in September, is a boon ...

  • Features

    Three things for a great business

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Historically the New York-based asset manager BlackRock International has never set out to be a big hitter. It has preferred to build up its score steadily. Ralph Schlosstein, the co-founder and president of BlackRock agrees that, for the fixed income business for which his firm is best known, this an ...

  • Features

    Capital Economics forecast

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Capital flows into US southlands

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    The case for keeping it simple

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Pension funds are doing well in solving disputes with their members, and they are even improving. This is the view of Dutch Pensions Ombudsman Piet Keizer. “There is a clear trend towards better information and dealing with members’ complaints. A growing number of funds have their own complaints’ schemes, which ...

  • Features

    Cautious tack keeps pensions flowing

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    It is the proud boast of the Sparinstitutens Pensionkassa (SPK), the pension fund for Sweden’s savings banks, that it has never been underfunded since it was created in 1944. The fund, a defined benefit scheme, has ridden out the recent storms in the equity markets, principally because of its conservative ...

  • Features

    CEIOPS revises criticised protocol

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    The fixed income game changes

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    As well as making sure the actively managed portions of their equity portfolios are working as hard as possible, institutional investors have also become more focused on how their fixed-income portfolios are managed. “In terms of targeting outperformance, I’ve noticed a real shift in the last few years,” says Paul ...

  • Features

    FMA rejects delay claims

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Pensions claims market needed

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Specialist managers come into their own

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    The rationale for core-satellite investing is becoming more widely accepted - at least in theory - say asset managers, and the approach gives specialist active management a high profile role. Pension funds are increasingly adopting a core-satellite approach to their investment, says John Cleary, chief investment officer at Standard Asset ...