All Securities Services articles – Page 19
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Features
Innovation gets results
PME Bedrijfstakpensioenfonds Metalektro (PME), which has assets under management of €18bn, attributes its success to a number of clear-cut principles that underpin the organisation and govern the way in which the pension scheme operates. PME has a strong executive board that is responsible for determining basic policy. The task of ...
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Features
Shift to global markets
The global custody and services agreement between Nordea and Bank of New York, announced in August this year, signifies a wider trend in the Nordic region, away from domestic banks and towards the international global custodians. Under the agreement, which covers around €240bn of assets (about half of Nordea’s total ...
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Features
Keyed into technology
Although pension regimes can differ significantly from country across Europe, pension funds share a belief that technology is critical to successfully meeting the challenges that face them today. A common theme across the region is change – new regulations, new behaviour in markets where assets are invested, new competition, and ...
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Features
Managers: can they predict?
IPE’s Investment Manager’s Expectation Indicator displays predictions on different asset classes of approximately 122 asset managers and is published in every issue of IPE. Russell Investment Group, in the data pages each month, summarises the total figures of how many managers are positive, neutral or negative. This summary gives an ...
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Features
Positive times ahead
After the sharp fall in receipts since the record year 1998, from €66bn then to barely one-third of that in 2003, Spezialfonds suffered a real slump in 2004. The last time that receipts were less than the €3.7bn collected was back in 1985. But the sector was still able to ...
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Features
Structures for all seasons
The pension fund environment has changed tremendously over the past few years, with long-term objectives tending to be replaced by a shorter-term focus. These changes have been predominantly driven by new accounting standards, evolving regulation and particularly adverse financial markets. The new IAS 19 accounting rules have repositioned corporates’ pension ...
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Features
Alpha transport - exploiting inefficient markets
Institutional investment portfolios have typically been constructed around a strategic policy portfolio and where investors believed that they could identify managers with skill, they adopted an active strategy to add value relative to that benchmark. Where active management is adopted there are two sources of return – the return attributable ...
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Features
Return to balanced?
Changing views in the pensions industry on the role of active management within portfolios has led to a rise in new balanced mandates, say consultants. But is it really best to use a single investment house for such a wide variety of different assets? Anthony Ashton, head of global client ...
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Features
Banking on uncertainties
Recently, trying to forecast interest rates has been a pretty tricky task. And there is no reason to expect that things will become easier soon. In a global financial world, interest rates - and this is particularly true of long-term rates - have become dependent on the interplay of so ...
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Features
Beyond 'custody'
Something funny happened to the custody business on the way to the 21st century: ‘custodians’ effectively became ‘financial services providers’. The term ‘custodian’ is still widely used, of course, but custody provision itself is no longer a real differentiator in the market. All of the established providers do custody well, ...
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Features
More coming custodians' way
The new regulatory framework for the Dutch market, Financieel Toetsingskader (nFTK), has provided a rich seam of business for Kas Bank, the Dutch custody, clearing and settlement specialist. In the first half of 2005 to 30 June, the bank recorded a 30% rise in net profit to €9m, while total ...
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Features
More to communication than links
Consensus is growing both within and outside of the pension world that clearness and transparency about complex pension schemes is needed. Yet the quality of communication between funds and participants and pensioners is often criticised. Have pension funds and insurers not yet found the best way to communicate, or is ...
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Features
Complex and difficult scene
Despite its under-developed second and third pillar pensions market, Spain is an attractive and competitive market for global custodians. With the European Commission in February urging the Spanish government to embrace pension reform “more vigorously”, there is plenty of scope for growth. Some attempts at reform have been made. The ...
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Features
Correlations: how will they move?
In the 20th century, we have observed three periods of decoupling between bond prices and equity prices; once during the 1930s, once in the early 1960s and lastly a period that started at the end of the 1990s. Computing these correlations using daily, weekly or annual returns and over different ...
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Features
Innovation drives success
How does one manage an €18bn pension fund with only three staff? Most people would say the three staff have to work very hard. While that is correct, one then asks, how this fund manages to rank amonge the best returns within the industry with a strong funding position? The ...
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Features
Eumedion widens its scope
The Dutch Foundation of Corporate Governance Research for Pension Funds, or SCGOP, has changed its name and plans to widen its membership. The newly named Eumedion will now be open to insurers and asset managers. There will also be a change of management. At a recent annual meeting, it was ...
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Features
Hedge funds under scrutiny
Until recently, hedge funds were considered as a ‘black box’ which aimed to deliver absolute returns and stipulated cash as a benchmark. Current research conducted at the London Business School’s hedge fund research centre focuses on two issues. The first pertains to the systematic risks of hedge fund strategies while ...
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Features
Uni-directional world of funds
In Germany, institutional investors are increasingly turning away from Spezialfonds in favour of mutual funds. Experts say this is largely because of the onerous reporting requirements they have to adhere to when invested in Spezialfonds, but there are other factors at play too. “Three or four years ago, there were ...




