All Features articles – Page 237

  • Features

    Funds in profile

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    DSM Pension Services Ewout Gillissen, senior investment manager The stock market success of speciality chemicals company DSM, the former petrochemical giant, is being mirrored by the financial success of its pension funds. After the divestment of the petrochemical segment to Saudi Arabia’s SABIC, the in-house pension management supplier DSM Pensions ...

  • Features

    Investing with the grain

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Oil is today’s news. Gold is always news. But what about wheat? Wheat is one of the agricultural commodities, the Cinderella sector of commodities. While energy and metals have attracted the attention of investors, agriculture - a so-called ‘soft’ commodity - has often been overlooked. Yet agricultural commodities have their ...

  • Features

    Where the grass is greener?

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    There seem to be two Irelands when it comes to pensions. The first is the dynamic financial centre that is looking to become a pensions hub for Europe once the occupational pension fund directive kicks in. The second by contrast is a country that is wrestling with its very own ...

  • Features

    How secure is your lending?

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    IPE asked three pension funds in three countries – Ireland, Denmark and the Netherlands – the same question: ‘Does securities lending represent free revenue for pension funds or does it carry underestimated risks?’ Here are their answers: Michael Nellemann Perdersen, CIO at PKA, which groups eight pension funds in ...

  • Features

    Inflation on the prowel

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    The financial setbacks of recent years have left many pension funds in a difficult position. With their concentration in equities, portfolios were damaged by the collapse of the technology bubble, while the simultaneous fall in bond yields raised pension liabilities. Additionally, government reviews and legislative changes have all placed pension ...

  • Features

    Pensions in a state of insecurity

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Norbert Blüm, a former Conservative labour minister, once committed one of Germany’s best-known political gaffes by claiming that the state pension was “secure”. While Blüm had good intentions – meaning to say that payment of some pension was guaranteed – he probably should have realised that his remark would be ...

  • Features

    Working for the investor

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Italy's longer-term optimism

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Italy does not have as consistent a private equity culture as other large European economies. Last year, private equity investment as a whole made up just 0.110% of its gross domestic product. This placed Italy twelfth in the European rankings, behind not only the traditional leaders in private equity in ...

  • Features

    When less can be more

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    If interest rates rise what should pension funds do? The answer for the majority of pension funds is likely to be the same - nothing. For the minority - those for whom substantial bond portfolios are actively managed by internal pension fund investment staff - the answer is slightly different: ...

  • Features

    PGGM sees long life in Levensloop

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    PGGM’s new pension fund subsidiary Careon Levensloop has finalised a seven-year outsourcing contract with KAS Bank and Ordina. The agreement - effective from 1 January 2006 - will see Ordina in charge of administrative tasks, while KAS facilitates the associated banking process. “We will offer products to our clients to ...

  • Features

    Sweden's red light zone

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    The Swedish financial regulator Finansinspektionen (FI) has launched a consultation on a proposal to identify possible problems at occupational pension funds and life companies using the so-called traffic-light model. Sweden plans to just use red as a signal. “Using the traffic-light model, FI will be able to identify at an ...

  • Features

    Are you listening?

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Less than half of all EU member states were able to meet the 23 September deadline for telling the Commission that they had been able to fully implement the Institutions for Occupational Provision’s (IORP) directive, but many in the industry say this should not be a cause for concern. Previously, ...

  • Features

    Makeover for the tried and true

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    It has been a bumper year for German investors so far. Global equities up about 16%, European equities a percentage point higher and even doughty European fixed income has returned 5%. But in spite of the markets’ generosity, providers are still banging the drum for innovation. They fear that unless ...

  • Features

    Managers making their mark

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    To get an idea why the US investment bank Goldman Sachs is widely respected, consider what it has achieved in Germany since arriving there 15 years ago. Goldman Sachs, which runs a smallish operation in a skyscraper next to Frankfurt’s trade fair, has for years consistently been at the top ...

  • Features

    Norway starts mandatory pensions

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    The Norwegian government has put into motion the process of setting up a mandatory occupational pensions regime that could affect up to 600,000 people. The proposed new law will come into affect from next year and follows a white paper and consultation period. The parliament, the Storting, decided in May ...

  • Features

    Market's quiet revolution

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    The perils of serving two masters

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Anyone who has attempted to serve two masters knows that the risk of conflicts is enormous. Real success is only possible in two cases: where the two masters have no overlapping interests or when they have completely aligned interests. Dutch pension funds have a long history of serving multiple masters, ...

  • Features

    Maximising your potential

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    The balance between work and family is of crucial importance for the key challenge Europe is facing: how to enhance innovation by creating a competitive internal market with an adaptable work force while at the same time maintaining social cohesion. The reason is that human capital is the key to ...