Latest from IPE Magazine – Page 736

  • Features

    Norway's giant insurer planned

    November 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Transition costs snare

    November 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Europe dominates fund of funds

    November 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Legislation on cards over Myners

    November 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Bolkestein warns about directive

    November 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Swiss hopeful on tax

    November 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Hefty blow to fragile market

    November 2001 (Magazine)

    Hurtling towards its fourth recession in 10 years, the Japanese economy is once again in a vulnerable state. And the terrorist attacks on the US on 11 September have dealt the fragile Japanese equities markets a hefty blow, say equity strategists. Export levels have contracted, and this vital source of ...

  • Features

    Hunting for the bargains out there

    November 2001 (Magazine)

    Magnifying an existing trend appears to be the consensus view emerging among fixed income fund managers as to the main economic effects of the terrorist attacks and subsequent retaliations. For Matthieu Louanges and his colleagues at Allianz-PIMCO, the markets have moved rapidly – over the space of a few days ...

  • Features

    High-yield at low ebb

    November 2001 (Magazine)

    The Merrill Lynch High Yield Master Index in September suffered its biggest monthly fall since its inception. It declined –6.42% during the month, taking its third-quarter fall to –6.07%, which in itself was the biggest such drop since the third quarter of 1990. In addition, the spread versus Treasuries at ...

  • Features

    Climbing the wall of worry

    November 2001 (Magazine)

    There is far too much liquidity in the markets but at long last some positive signs beginning to seep into economic data. This is the view of John Dreyer, head of equities at Fortis Investment Management (FIM) in Paris. “We are very happy right now. Basically, the bullish stance that ...

  • Features

    Markets have embraced 'V' shaped recovery

    November 2001 (Magazine)

    Equity markets, which plunged in the aftermath of the terrible events of 11 September, have more than made up the lost territory in the past few weeks. On the surface, this suggests that nothing material happened on the day of the attacks. Obviously, this is wrong. The world has changed ...

  • Features

    Ready to go pro-cyclical

    November 2001 (Magazine)

    Global equity market return has now been negative for six quarters in a row, except for the first quarter of 2001. This means that the downturn is almost as long as the 1973–74 oil crisis. The effects of the attacks are very difficult to quantify but growth forecasts are reduced ...

  • Features

    Pension portfolio values hit

    October 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Norway fund’s long-term focus

    October 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    PGGM absorbs the shocks

    October 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Reacting to the impossible

    October 2001 (Magazine)

  • Features

    US managers defiant

    October 2001 (Magazine)

    The determination of companies affected by the attacks on the World Trade Centre to get back to business is something to behold. Few following events in America can have missed Cantor Fitzgerald chief executive Howard Lutnick’s emotional interview on ABC news. Over 400 companies were housed in the two towers, ...

  • Features

    Public funds rally round the flag

    October 2001 (Magazine)

    Their efforts didn’t help the US Stock Exchange much, during the first week of resumed trading after the September 11 terrorist attack. But US pension funds did their best to try to stabilise the financial market at such a difficult moment. On September 14, for example, a group of US ...

  • Features

    Risk control to dominate

    October 2001 (Magazine)

    The fall-out from the attacks on New York and elsewhere have opened the debate about asset allocation and whether long term changes need to be made to investment strategies. Gordon Sharp, director of investment consulting at KPMG Pensions in London, says that there hasn’t been any radical change in the ...