Investment – Page 45

  • Features

    Political decisions for investors

    May 2012 (Magazine)

    Helene Williamson outlines the complex process of assessing political risk in emerging markets and warns investors they ignore this risk their peril

  • Interviews

    Making an impact on SMEs

    May 2012 (Magazine)

    The conviction articulated on its website – ‘We believe that market forces and entrepreneurship can be harnessed to do well by doing good’ – hardly distinguishes the £275m (€333m) London-based sustainable growth investor Bridges Ventures (Bridges) from other investors in the environmental, social or governance (ESG) domain. But its investment strategy certainly does.

  • Interviews

    A new titan in Asian equities

    May 2012 (Magazine)

    The timing could have been better. Just days before the finalisation of the merger of the Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co and Chuo Mitsui Asset Trust & Banking Co, the latter was fined by Japan’s Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission (SESC) for an insider trading breach that took place nearly two years ago.

  • Features

    Low beta, high benefits

    April 2012 (Magazine)

    The significant outperformance of apparently ‘low-risk’ stocks over time is a well-known ‘anomaly’ in investment theory. Martin Steward asks, if it is an anomaly, won’t it eventually be corrected?

  • Features

    A nugget of risk reduction

    April 2012 (Magazine)

    Marcus Grubb summarises a new study of the diversification benefits that gold offers to a euro-based institutional investor

  • In defence of pro-cyclicality
    Features

    In defence of pro-cyclicality

    April 2012 (Magazine)

    Adina Grigoriu asks, is pro-cyclical risk management necessarily a cost – or can it be an unexploited source of performance?

  • Interviews

    Surviving the seven years of famine

    April 2012 (Magazine)

    Rogge Global Partners operates out of one of London’s most spectacular offices, the neo-Gothic Sion Hall, its traders toiling beneath the gaze of stained-glass images of heroes of the English Reformation.

  • Features

    One year later

    March 2012 (Magazine)

    The Tohoku earthquake of March 2011 was one of the most devastating natural disasters of recent times. Martin Steward asks if it has changed the way investors look at their Japanese equity portfolios

  • Features

    Keiretsu culture

    March 2012 (Magazine)

    Japan’s corporate governance culture has been moving, albeit slowly, towards Western models. But Nina Röhrbein finds that the Olympus scandal could lead to some push-back

  • Interviews

    On an ambitious journey

    March 2012 (Magazine)

    The name ‘AXA’ was chosen in the early 1980s, so the story goes, because it can be easily and uniformly pronounced in any language, and, as far as anyone knows, it also doesn’t mean anything rude anywhere around the world. But slick branding can’t make you good at everything, of course.

  • Features

    One step forward, two steps back

    February 2012 (Magazine)

    Given the problems in Europe, distressed debt would appear to be all the rage, writes Joel Kranc. But waiting out events might prove to be even more lucrative

  • Features

    The real safe haven?

    February 2012 (Magazine)

    High yield is priced so keenly it would take a euro-zone break-up to really threaten investors, finds Anthony Harrington

  • Features

    Back to the real economy

    February 2012 (Magazine)

    Government and bank debt is the problem, not the solution, writes Christine Johnson. If you want safety, follow the money – to large corporates

  • Interviews

    Alternatives – with pensions DNA

    February 2012 (Magazine)

    Sometimes a company’s best investments aren’t in businesses or financial markets. When Jack Coates took over management of the pension plan for US forest products firm Weyerhaeuser in 1985, he was returning to full-time work after the company let him pursue a PhD while working part-time in his international treasury position. That investment was to pay off handsomely. His research led him to understand how alternative investments could be relevant to the challenge he saw before the Weyerhaeuser pension plan, which was under-funded and needed to generate higher returns without incurring too much downside volatility.

  • Features

    Going global for inflation

    January 2012 (Magazine)

    In Europe, it seems pricey to buy inflation, whether for liability-hedging or simple wealth preservation. Brendan Maton looks further afield

  • Features

    Sucked in

    January 2012 (Magazine)

    Corporate credit investors are scrambling to get to grips with sovereign exposure as even apparently healthy companies’ bonds succumb to contagion, finds Lynn Strongin Dodds

  • Features

    An historic opportunity

    January 2012 (Magazine)

    Regulatory pressure, changes to the market structure and an ongoing de-leveraging process make the financial sector compelling for bondholders, argue Robert Montague and Satish Pulle

  • Interviews

    Geneva conventions

    January 2012 (Magazine)

    Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch, the 215-year-old Geneva-based banking group, is, of course, a family business. It is just happy coincidence that both the father and brother of Hubert Keller, who co-heads the institutional asset management division, Lombard Odier Investment Managers (LOIM) alongside Thierry Lombard, spent parts of their career with the bank: Keller says he never came across it during his years on the sell-side in London, before joining in 2006.

  • Interviews

    Bringing the New World to the Old

    January 2012 (Magazine)

    The third quarter of 2011 was not much fun for Investec Asset Management (Investec AM). 

  • Features

    Cash in the attic

    December 2011 (Magazine)

    Squeezing a return out of cash can expose funds to unexpected risk. But Charlotte Moore suggests that using it for strategic optionality removes the need to take risk in the search for yield