All IPE articles in September 2003 (Magazine) – Page 4
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Features
Taking more control
2002 was the year asset liability management became the hot topic in Finland in the light of difficult markets and the need to meet tight solvency regulations. While the investment trends that became apparent at the time of the euro introduction – the shift to equities and increased foreign exposure ...
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Features
Lose your constraints
Claire Smith A couple of years ago, currency overlay mandates were fairly few and far between. Most pension funds left overseas currency exposures unhedged and those that did seek to manage them sought, in the main, to expunge the risk and accept the resulting profit or loss as simply part ...
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Features
Domestic concerns predominate
Spain is one of the countries within the European Union that experts believe will be less affected by the introduction of the EU Pensions Directive. Spanish pension fund managers are more worried about the changes that their domestic market is undergoing than the new legal framework for pensions at a ...
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Features
Come on in, the water's lovely
Alternative investment strategies are registering notably high satisfaction rates in terms of performance among European institutional investors – despite the three-year bear market. The percentage of investors whose returns have so far met or exceeded expectations ranges from 66% for private equity, 79% for hedge fund investment and impressive figures ...
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Features
No longer running like clockwork
Like the country itself, the Swiss pension system has in the past been perceived as independent, prosperous and relatively unaffected by the vagaries of the outside world. This impression, however, has been challenged in recent years by the prolonged fall in stock markets and the dramatic effect this has had ...
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Features
Insurers' moves harsh wake-up call for Swiss pensions
For the second year in a row, Swiss pension plan members are being jolted from their easy-chairs by the impact of the bear market of the last three years. Eyebrows had already raised around the Cantons and beyond last year when the Swiss authorities cut the minimum income guarantee for ...
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Features
In the same boat
The stable world of Norwegian pensions is at something of a crossroads. Spurred on in part by comments from the likes of the International Monetary Fund, which said earlier this year that Norway’s current public pension system is “not financially viable”, the country awaits the final presentation – expected in ...