BofA Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey Reveals Cash Balances at 2008 Crisis Levels

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Global investors’ confidence in the world’s economic outlook has fallen significantly due to concerns over China and emerging markets, according to the BofA Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey for September. Asset allocators have adopted a “risk-off” stance in response.

  • Threat of recession in China increases as biggest tail risk; concern over a potential emerging markets debt crisis also rises sharply.
  • Investors’ risk appetite evaporates: equity overweights are down a net 24 percentage points in a month, while commodity shorts are extended.
  • Sentiment towards Global Emerging Markets sours further, with underweights at a record net 34 percent and aggressive UWs are at an all-time high.
  • Cash balances are back up to 2008 crisis level of 5.5 percent.
  • Hedge fund net exposure and perception of market liquidity conditions are both at the lowest level in three years.
  • Investors’ expectation of U.S. Fed rate rise has been postponed to Q4.

“Investors were already positioned for lower growth in China and emerging markets, but their risk-off stance has intensified. Contrarians will be noting the aggressive underweight positioning in emerging markets,” said Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research.

“European equities have been hurt by the risk-off trade, but they remain a favored market,” said James Barty, head of European equity strategy.

Columbia Threadneedle Partners with ITU World Triathlon Grand Final Chicago

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Columbia Threadneedle Investments is the Global Financial Services Partner of the International Triathlon Union (ITU) World Triathlon Series Grand Final Chicago, from September 15-19. The event features four days of competition for more than 8,000 elite and amateur athletes, including 150 of the world’s top Olympic-distance triathletes as they compete for a world championship title less than a year before the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.

ITU World Triathlon Grand Final Chicago will feature Olympic-caliber elite triathletes and paratriathletes as well as amateur athletes across all age-groups racing in the same venue in and around Grant Park. Athletes will compete in events that begin in Lake Michigan and end at iconic Buckingham Fountain. The Grand Final is the culmination of the ITU World Triathlon Series with the leader of the Columbia Threadneedle Rankings being crowned World Champion.

In addition to its role as Global Financial Services Partner, Columbia Threadneedle is sponsoring Dare2tri, a local Chicago paratriathlon club, for the second consecutive year. Columbia Threadneedle will donate 50 race entries to their amateur and elite paratriathletes and proudly have its logo featured on Dare2tri team uniforms.

“We are pleased to partner with ITU World Triathlon Grand Final Chicago,” said Ted Truscott, CEO of Columbia Threadneedle Investments. “Our brand promise is ‘Your Success. Our Priority.’ That’s the same emphasis we place on our partnerships with ITU and Dare2tri to ensure a successful event in Chicago for all participants.”

«We are pleased to welcome Columbia Threadneedle Investments back as the official global partner of the ITU World Triathlon Grand Final Chicago,» said Florian Riepe, President of ITU World Triathlon Grand Final Chicago. «Columbia Threadneedle has a long and proud history of delivering for investors, and the focus they place on their clients aligns with the goals we have for the world championship event this September.”

“Dare2tri is thrilled to partner with Columbia Threadneedle for a second year,” said Keri Serota, Dare2tri Co- Founder and Executive Director. “We are grateful to have a partner that fully believes in our mission to impact positively the lives of athletes with physical and visual impairments by developing their skills in paratriathlon. Columbia Threadneedle has shown a tremendous commitment to the world of paratriathlon and, with their support, the athletes will be going for the gold on the road to Rio.”

Societe Generale Appoints Slawomir Krupa as CEO for Americas

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Societe Generale Group announces the appointment of Slawomir Krupa as Chief Executive Officer for Societe Generale Americas, effective January 1st 2016.

Slawomir Krupa will replace Craig Overlander who, after 33 years in the finance industry and over five years spent with Societe Generale, has decided to give his professional path a different turn for personal reasons. Slawomir Krupa will report to Didier Valet, Head of Societe Generale Global Banking & Investor Solutions, and is a member of the Group’s Management Committee.

“I would like to warmly thank Craig for his outstanding achievements throughout these past years. Craig has been instrumental in the transformation and the sound management of the U.S. platform, especially at a time when Societe Generale has significantly expanded its footprint in the Americas, notably with the recent integration of Newedge,” Didier Valet commented.

As Chief Executive for Societe Generale Americas, Slawomir Krupa will continue to drive the growth of Societe Generale’s U.S. platform in its areas of strength, in an evolving U.S. regulatory context.

“Slawomir’s in-depth knowledge of the Group, his understanding of the corporate and investment banking business as well as his strong client experience position him well to lead Societe Generale though the next stage of its transformation in the Americas,” Didier Valet said.

Craig Overlander will work alongside Slawomir Krupa to ensure a smooth transition starting November 1st.

Séverin Cabannes, Deputy CEO of Societe Generale Group, commented:”I would like to thank Craig for his contribution to the development of our U.S. platform over the last years and wish him the best for the future. America is a strategic region for Societe Generale. I am confident that, under the leadership of Slawomir, our teams in the U.S. will continue to strengthen our set-up and to develop our franchise and client satisfaction, building on their recent achievements and leveraging on synergies with all the Group businesses.”

Slawomir Krupa began his career in 1996 as an Inspector within Societe Generale’s Inspection department. He left the Group in 1999 to found and run an internet start-up in the field of e-finance in Eastern Europe. He rejoined the Group in 2002 and continued his work within Societe Generale’s Inspection department. He was appointed to the Management Committee of the department in 2005 and in 2007 he was appointed Chief of Staff for Societe Generale Corporate & Investment Banking. In 2009, he became Head of Strategy & Corporate Development and CEO of Central & Eastern Europe, Middle East & Africa for Societe Generale Corporate & Investment Banking.

Slawomir Krupa was appointed CEO of Central and Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa for Corporate & Investment Banking, Private Banking, Asset Management and Securities Services in 2013. He is also Deputy Head of Global Finance since January 2012. Slawomir Krupa is a graduate of Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris.

Bolivia y Paraguay están bien posicionados para soportar la caída de los precios de las materias primas

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Bolivia y Paraguay están bien posicionados para soportar la caída de los precios de las materias primas
Foto: Dimitri B.. Bolivia y Paraguay están bien posicionados para soportar la caída de los precios de las materias primas

Según Fitch Ratings, Bolivia y Paraguay, dos de los principales exportadores de recursos en la categoría crediticia BB, estarían bien posicionados para soportar la caída de los precios de las materias primas, principalmente por la fortaleza de los balances fiscales y exteriores de ambos países.  

Las mejoras en sus calificaciones crediticias estarían en contraste con las perspectivas negativas de otros exportadores de materias primas comparables. Mientras la calificación emitida por Fitch Ratings para Bolivia y Paraguay mejoró a BB/estable (Bolivia en julio y Paraguay en enero), países como Nigeria y Angola sufrieron una revisión a la baja en sus perspectivas, cambiando de BB/estable a BB-/negativa (Nigeria en marzo y Angola en abril), y en el pasado mes de mayo, se degradó la clasificación de la deuda de Gabón a B+.

Bolivia ha podido contrarrestar parcialmente las bajadas en los precios de las materias primas aumentando su producción de gas natural y manteniendo contratos a largo plazo con sus mercados vecinos. La base de exportación de Paraguay, cada vez más diversificada, y las mejoras en la producción en el sector agrícola ha permitido aumentar la capacidad para gestionar una caída en los precios. Los dos países han mantenido una dinámica de crecimiento récord, y una inflación de una sola cifra, siendo capaces de construir un colchón fiscal y exterior durante el ciclo de expansión en los precios de las materias primas.

En ausencia de reformas estructurales y de ajustes en las políticas, una caída más pronunciada y prolongada en los precios de las materias primas pudiera ejercer presiones en la calificación crediticia. Fitch Ratings espera que el declive en las exportaciones y en los fondos de estímulo de inversión pública cambie los presupuestos y superávit por cuenta corriente a déficit moderados en 2015-2017.

Recientemente, se realizaron recortes en las previsiones de crecimiento de Bolivia y Paraguay para finales de 2015, pronosticando un 4,3% para Bolivia y un 4% para Paraguay, ya que la contracción del ciclo económico y la fuerte depreciación de la moneda de Argentina y Brasil, principales socios comerciales, han hecho mella en la competitividad de los productos exportados por Bolivia y Paraguay. Las dos previsiones permanecen por encima de la mediana del conjunto de la deuda soberana con calificación BB, y otros países comparables en América Latina.

La mejora en la calificación de Bolivia refleja el progreso en la sostenibilidad de la producción de gas y la reducción en riesgos de nacionalización e incertidumbre regulatoria. Las proyecciones oficiales indican que las perforaciones profundas y los desarrollos en pozos ya existentes podrían proporcionar suficiente gas como para satisfacer la demanda local y exportar contratos a Argentina y Brasil hasta 2019. Bolivia tiene a su favor una baja deuda pública (30% del PIB), grandes reservas externas (46% del PIB), amplios depósitos en el sector público (23% del PIB) y acceso a financiación multilateral y al mercado de bonos global. Considerando estos factores, la economía de Bolivia podría absorber perturbaciones adversas y adoptar más políticas anti-cíclicas que otros exportadores de materias primas en la categoría BB. 

A diferencia de la mayoría de países dependientes de la producción de petróleo en la categoría BB, los ingresos generados por las exportaciones de Paraguay están producidos por tres industrias que están relativamente no correlacionadas: soja, carne, y energía hidroeléctrica a Argentina y Brasil. La industrialización del cultivo de la soja, mejoras genéticas y sanitarias en la producción de ganado, y una industria manufacturera emergente están amortiguando la caída de los precios internacionales de los alimentos y el apoyo a una transición hacia la producción y venta de productos de mayor valor agregado. El crecimiento de Paraguay fue el más alto entre sus comparables con una media de 7% a cinco años en 2014. Esto incrementó los ingresos per cápita del país a la mediana del grupo BB.

Ambos países se enfrentan a los retos de superar factores estructurales que los mantiene por debajo del grado de inversión, temas gubernamentales y de corrupción, necesidades de desarrollo social y restricciones de capacidad a las entidades del sector público. Fitch Ratings mantiene un indicador “Macro-prundencial” de “3” para los dos países, ya que el potencial por riesgo sistémico financiero es alto, debido a la combinación de rápido crecimiento financiero y apreciación de la divisa en términos reales. Fitch no estima que los datos actuales indiquen burbujas en alguno de los dos países. Sin embargo, la situación actual en ambos mercados pone de relieve la importancia de reformas que deben fortalecer la gestión de políticas macroeconómicas e institucionalizar la prudencia fiscal.  

Memoria traumática e inversiones

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Memoria traumática e inversiones
Foto: Hey Paul Studios. Memoria traumática e inversiones

Los neurocientíficos denominan memoria emocional o memoria traumática a aquella que almacena los recuerdos vinculados a experiencias peligrosas o, como su nombre lo indica, a los hechos traumáticos. Dicen los que estudian la memoria, que este tipo de experiencias vuelven con escenas muy vividas que se recuerdan con mucho detalle, con un agravante: este tipo de experiencias no se diluyen con facilidad en el tiempo, a diferencia de otros recuerdos, los cuales se van perdiendo con el paso de los años.

También han encontrado los estudios que este tipo de experiencias se caracterizan por la indefensión de quien las soporta, con lo cual los hechos sufridos se apartan de la narrativa normal con la cual se graban las experiencias agradables en la memoria. Es decir, lo normal no funciona y aquel proceso lógico racional que enarbola la teoría económica tradicional se rompe.

En términos de momentos volátiles de los mercados financieros, un inversionista promedio que se expuso a grandes desvalorizaciones en algún momento, pierde la confianza en las inversiones en activos como acciones o bonos, y prefiere en el futuro centrarse en cuentas de ahorro. Mientras tanto, los analistas y los asesores nos dedicamos a tratar de convencer a los inversionistas de que los mercados en el largo plazo tienden a subir más allá de lo que representaron las caídas y de que la mejor estrategia es tener paciencia porque las cosas sí mejoran. Esto es completamente cierto, la historia lo ha demostrado; pero enfrentemos dos factores divergentes: el racional, donde lo mejor es esperar —e incluso, mucho mejor si se pone más dinero en el activo desvalorizado, porque la perspectiva de que suba lleva a pensar en muy buenos retornos futuros—; y el inconsciente, en el que entran las imágenes de los momentos malos.

Hay un pequeño problema cuando los dos factores se enfrenta, y es que lo racional y lo traumático se encapsulan en dos partes diferentes del cerebro, por lo cual al tratar de cambiar la percepción negativa de una persona sobre una experiencia traumática en inversiones no se debe recurrir plenamente a los gráficos y argumentos racionales; sino que se deben explorar más las técnicas tradicionalmente utilizadas en psiquiatría para el tratamiento de enfermedades como el trastorno por estrés postraumático. Tradicionalmente este tratamiento se centra en permitirle al paciente narrar las emociones y relatar los momentos vividos anteriormente. Entre más detalle se puedan expresar, mucho mejor funciona el tratamiento.

Para los asesores financieros esto significa que, al enfrentarse con un cliente que no quiere saber nada de bonos, nada de acciones, nada de nada; la estrategia no es tratar de convencerlo por medio de argumentos lógicos, la estrategia es dejar que el cliente se ‘desahogue’, cuente su experiencia y, después, sí construir el argumento para que se vuelva a crear la confianza en el mercado financiero. Entiendo que es difícil en algunos momentos —especialmente cuando los mercados caen en simultánea y muchos clientes se afectan—escuchar a todos los inversionistas que quieren expresar sus problemas-. Pero se hace necesario desarrollar herramientas para que el proceso realmente funcione y contrarrestar los efectos que crea la memoria traumática en los inversionistas que alguna vez se afectaron por los mercados.      

Las opiniones aquí expresadas son responsabilidad del autor, y no representan necesariamente la posición de Old Mutual sobre los temas tratados. 

Opinión de Manuel García Ospina, gerente de la Escuela de Planeación financiera y comercial de Old Mutual. 

White Noise, Central Banks and Tipping Points

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It is now fair to say we are living through a period even experienced investors find difficult to navigate and comprehend. Negative nominal yields on many long maturity bonds in Europe and elsewhere pose a challenge to almost everything we thought we knew about investment. Governments are being paid by investors for the dubious privilege of owning their debt.

The debate around current valuations is reminiscent of the clash of ideas that surrounded the emergence of quantum mechanics in physics in the early part of the twentieth century. Quantum physics posed a serious challenge to the Newtonian world order. Even those who contributed to quantum theory found this new science hard to embrace because what physicists believed about causality had been thrown in the air. Albert Einstein said, “I cannot believe that God plays dice with the universe.” Niels Bohr, the Danish Nobel prize winner, replied by saying Einstein “should stop telling God what to do.”

Market participants also find themselves in a strange and disturbing new world. Negative bond yields at long maturities should not exist, even for government bonds. Corporates, which are subject to completely unknowable changes in technology and consumer demand, should not be able to borrow at negative yields. But Nestlé did in March and the bonds of other companies including BMW have also traded at negative rates. Investors were paying them to take their money, which hardly sounds rational. But in this strange new world, prospective Danish homeowners are able to get mortgages with negative yields.

Topsy-Turvy

The investment world has been turned upside down. Switzerland could borrow over 10-years on negative yields. At five years maturity it was joined by Germany, Denmark and France. More than $4 trillion of debt in the world today traded with negative yields and 52% of global bond markets traded at a yield of less than 1%. Finding long-term data on interest rates is difficult but this is a significant historical anomaly. The Bank of England has been in existence since 1694 and policy rates have been held at all-time lows for the past six years.

Interest rates are driving investor behaviour. A good example is
the corporate bond market. In 2010 individuals in the US owned
 12% of the corporate bond market; they now own 28% because 
they are desperate for yield. Equity markets are going up because investors want dividends. Earning revisions are falling at a time when prices are rising. This correlation between earnings revisions and pricing is not completely stable, but it does tend to persist over
time. Something else has been acting on equities and the most likely culprit is interest rates and how they have altered investor behaviour.

If investors are buying equities because they want dividend income then you would expect high dividend companies to outperform low dividend companies. You would expect high cash flow companies to outperform low cash flow companies. That is exactly what has been happening since the beginning of the rally in equities, both in the US and in Europe. If interest rates are the foundation upon which the whole edifice of financial markets is built, then we need to carefully consider what their likely future course is and how markets are reflecting this.

Rather like the uncertainty of quantum physics versus the hard rules of the Newtonian paradigm, it may be the conclusion is that prices no longer carry reliable information. They are being so distorted
by central bank intervention and by financial repression that the informational content contained in prices is now null and void.

The other possibility is that there is still some information in prices and the outlook for the global economy is much worse than we currently think and we are heading towards a deflationary bust.

Since the global financial crisis began in 2007, central banks in developed economies have pursued broadly similar policies.
The first thing they did was put in place a Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) and collapse short-term rates. Today, 90% of developed world economies have interest rates set at near zero or below. The next thing policymakers did, given that they quickly got to zero at the short end of curves, which they can effectively control, was to collapse long rates through quantitative easing.

The latest instalment of the saga is what the European Central Bank (ECB) has embarked on. It has cut its deposit rate to -0.20% and simultaneously started aggressive quantitative easing, expanding its balance sheet by €60 billion each month.

As investors we are trying to navigate an investment environment that combines an unprecedented level of policy rates and unprecedented expansion of balance sheets by central banks. That represents a serious manipulation of markets. In Europe, in particular, there is a serious misalignment of supply and demand for risk free assets.

The balance sheet expansion envisaged by the ECB represents more than the current net supply of government bonds. The situation is particularly acute in Germany where the net supply is going to be zero. The ECB is not only buying everything that is being issued.

It will be buying debt from the stock that is currently outstanding. This is not just a European phenomenon. All net sovereign bond issuance across the UK, US, Japan and the eurozone is ending
up on the balance sheets of central banks even though the UK and US have called a halt to QE, for now. The risk-free asset, the foundation of pricing across financial markets, is no longer under the influence of price-sensitive investors.

But markets are reflecting some degree of fear of deflation. Year-on-year inflation in the main economies around the world was negative in the eurozone and the US. Nominal growth is also poor. The US is supposedly the poster child of the economic recovery. But in terms of nominal GDP this recovery has been the most pallid for more than 50 years.

Central Banks Adopt New Playbook

In his famous essay of 1866, Lombard Street, Walter Bagehot wrote that in response to a credit crisis a central bank should lend freely to solvent counterparties at a high rate of interest. Now central banks are lending to everybody at lower rates when there is no crisis. Something fundamental has changed in the behaviour of central banks. It could be that they are now on permanent crisis footing; they have become conditioned to react to any economic weakness by easing policy.

What they do know is that they have exhausted their conventional monetary tools. With ZIRP there is nowhere else to go, so unconventional policy becomes the new normal. If you add to that mix the spectre of deflation you can see how policy might be dictated by fear. The other side effect of QE, deliberate or not, is that it weakens currencies. Currency devaluation is an effective policy tool in economies that have become uncompetitive,
 though it is ultimately a zero-sum game as you need something to devalue against. The appreciation of the US dollar has been a safety valve for the global economy, but the US economy cannot take that strain forever. These are all plausible explanations for the evolution of policy and doubtless have played some role. But the biggest issue of all is the one that triggered the crisis in the first place: debt. It is likely that central banks are very worried about the debt burden across society and are doing everything to make it sustainable. In 2008, in the aftermath of the crisis, it would have seemed inconceivable that there would not be deleveraging. It became a buzzword. The banking system has delevered to a degree, particularly in the US, at the behest of regulators. But if you add up government, corporate and household debt there has been no deleveraging. The title of a recent report by the McKinsey Global Institute sums it up well, Debt and (Not Much) Deleveraging.

Since the crisis $60 trillion of debt has been created and $15 trillion of GDP. That is a ratio that is clearly concerning for central bankers though they rarely address it head on. There is no economy that has delevered in any area other than financial debt. The one country that comes closest is fiscally prudent Germany, but even with its budget surplus the overall debt to GDP ratio has increased by 8%. China has doubled its debt to GDP ratio over the past five years and if you strip out the denominator (growth) it has quadrupled. The speed of this debt build up is unprecedented.

No significant economy has managed to delever in spite of all of the rhetoric around austerity and prudence. This is a deeply ingrained societal problem to which there are no easy solutions. Leaving aside the enormous amount of credit that is now available to individuals and the maxed out credit cards, pay-day loans culture, the biggest issue is a structural one. The great era of social and welfare reforms was in the 1950s and 1960s. In the US, for example, Lyndon Johnson introduced the Social Security Act and Medicare as a part of his Great Society program in 1966. Growth then was between 4% and 5% in the big developed economies. At those levels of growth these welfare initiatives could be supported.

Since then growth has slowed as productivity has fallen. But those programs have stayed in place. They are a third-rail issue, no politician dare touch them. As a result, even before the crisis,
fiscal deficits were chronic in many countries. The other issue is demographics. The old and the young rely disproportionately on the state and the age dependency ratio – the ratio of dependents versus the productive, working population – is increasing everywhere as people live longer and choose to have less children. Japan’s enormous debt burden has as much to do with demographics as economic mismanagement.

The trend growth rate in the developed world is no longer between 4% and 5%. The new reality is perhaps between 1.5% and 2%. That makes the whole dynamic of debt management extremely difficult. We are at saturation point. It is clear that governments cannot continue to issue record amounts of debt and central banks cannot continue to fund them by inflating their balance sheets.

It is this debt dynamic that has driven a shift in monetary policy away from a focus on inflation. The new goal is to maximise the gap between nominal growth and the current rate of interest. That has explained the behaviour of central banks and that is unlikely to change over the next few years.

Keep Right on to The End of The Road?

It is an over-used cliché, but all policymakers are doing is kicking the can down the road. There is no political will to address the fundamental issue of too much debt. The question we should be asking is whether there will be a dead end? Is there a limit to how far interest rates can fall and how far central banks can expand their balance sheets?

The answer to the first question is unequivocally “yes”. There is an asset called cash which is highly liquid and will never have a negative yield. There is a cost of carry and an issue of inconvenience, but there is also a tipping point at which people will take their money out of the financial system and put it under their mattresses if they see its value eroding. Where that level lies is hard to judge but it is unlikely to be as far away.

The authorities could ban cash, which is not as farfetched as it may seem. There is a Danish proposal to refuse cash payments in shops. But we are not quite there yet.

The issue of whether there is a limit on how far a central bank can expand its balance sheet is slightly more complex. Does the net worth of a central bank matter? It is not a question that they want to answer. But when you look at the leverage ratio of central banks, their assets versus capital, we are in the territory of Lehman Brothers prior to its implosion in 2008.

The Federal Reserve is 78 times levered and the Bank of Japan
 79 times. The ECB is at 30 times. If you ask anyone if this matters you will get a shrug. Of course, central banks cannot go bust in a traditional commercial sense, but that is not the real issue.
The problem is whether a financially weak central bank is able to conduct monetary policy in the way it wants to? A weak central bank has to deal with that problem and also the issue of credibility and trust.

It is possible to recapitalise a central bank. You can issue more currency and earn the exorbitant privilege of seigniorage. It is also possible to ask the government for more money, though that then calls into question central bank independence. Central banks with weak balance sheets tend to have more inflationary policies.

Neither further balance sheet expansion nor negative interest rates are particularly palatable. What that will probably mean is yet more unconventional policy. This may include pushing inflation targets upward. The Federal Reserve could start targeting 4% rather than 2%. There could also be direct price targeting or currency intervention. The end game is some form of inflation, because financial repression and inflating away debt is probably viewed as the least bad policy option. In a fiat currency system
a government or central bank can always create inflation.

In the meantime, financial bubbles will grow larger as investors search for yield. The current stable equilibrium of low inflation and high asset prices will persist for a while yet. There is still a lot of oversupply relative to demand in many sectors of the global economy. The sharp correction in commodity prices this year is one obvious example. Expectations, money supply, wages, and capacity utilisation all point to a relatively benign inflation picture for the time being.

Complex Systems and Tipping Points

Spotting the moment of transition to a higher inflation environment is very difficult. With interest rates so low and central bank policy possibly becoming even more unconventional, it is highly likely that we see current trends continue. But credit and equity markets are the assets that will perform horribly once we cross into a new regime of accelerating inflation.

The economy and financial markets are complex systems.
These systems have two main characteristics. The first is resilience. They are able to absorb a lot of shocks without changing their equilibrium state. That holds until they reach a critical threshold or tipping point. Suddenly the state changes. In academic circles it is called a catastrophic failure. That is probably how inflation will manifest itself.

Tipping points cannot be predicted because the system remains the same up to the tipping point. It is not within the system that the change happens. There is typically some external dynamic or exogenous shock that occurs. In the stable zone the system may oscillate left and right but essentially stay unchanged. In the unstable zone it can lurch suddenly in either direction.

For investors, the complexity of both the economic and financial systems presents a dilemma. Of course, you may be lucky and find an active manager that is so skilled he or she gets you out of markets at precisely the right time. A more rational thing to do is buy protection. But if you are five years away from the tipping point, that will be prohibitively expensive.

The best strategy is to find assets that will perform reasonably well in either scenario. Inflation sensitivity, income, and cash flow are the most desirable combination of characteristics. These are unlikely to be the best performing assets at any point in time, but you are buying a degree of certainty in what is a very uncertain investment environment. No one can know the future. There are a wide range of potential outcomes for economies and markets.
The best response is to build portfolios from the bottom up with strong foundations. Resilience, the ability to withstand shocks and cope with an ever-changing investment climate will be the central tenets of future performance.

Abdallah Nauphal, CEO at  Insight Investment (part of BNY Mellon)

Banco Popular se echa atrás y no comprará el negocio de banca de consumo de Citi en Centroamérica

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Banco Popular se echa atrás y no comprará el negocio de banca de consumo de Citi en Centroamérica
Foto: JRAlvaroGonzalez, Flickr, Creative Commons. Banco Popular se echa atrás y no comprará el negocio de banca de consumo de Citi en Centroamérica

Banco Popular cerró en junio la compra del negocio de consumo de Citi en España, por unos 325 millones de euros teniendo en cuenta las provisiones necesarias. Tras la operación, se daba por segura la adquisición del negocio del Citi en Centroamérica, que se ofrecía en un paquete que incluía cinco países: Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua y Panamá.

Sin embargo, según publica el diario El País, el banco se ha echado atrás. “Popular sopesó desde principios de año la compra del negocio de banca de consumo de Citigroup en cinco países de Centroamérica pero, tras analizar la operación en el consejo, desistió de pagar los 500 millones de dólares (432 millones de euros) que se pedían por la baja rentabilidad de la operación y por los recelos del BCE”, asegura el diario. Además, en caso de aceptar debería reponer el capital gastado en la compra.

Fuentes del banco comentan al diario que, tras un profundo estudio, la operación en bloque no ofrecía la rentabilidad deseada, pese a que algunos países eran atractivos.

El BCE también ha sido un obstáculo, según el diario, porque la adquisición quedaba fuera de su zona de supervisión.“El BCE ha dejado claro a los bancos que no quiere que entren en algunos países donde considera que los supervisores no son muy exigentes”, comentan.

Popular ya está en Latinoamérica a través de su inversión en el grupo financiero mexicano BX+. Recientemente, el presidente de Banco Popular, Ángel Ron, avanzó que sus planes de crecimiento internacional pasa por extender su negocio por Estados Unidos –donde ya cuentan con Total Bank- y México mediante adquisiciones.

«El gestor de carteras costarricense necesita conocer más sobre las ventajas de invertir fuera del país»

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"El gestor de carteras costarricense necesita conocer más sobre las ventajas de invertir fuera del país"
Víctor Chacón, director ejecutivo de la Cámara de Fondos de Inversión de Costa Rica (CAFI). "El gestor de carteras costarricense necesita conocer más sobre las ventajas de invertir fuera del país"

Costa Rica tiene el mercado de fondos de inversión más desarrollado de la región centroamericana, con 4.500 millones de dólares en activos manejados, unos 79.000 clientes, 13 administradoras y 97 fondos registrados.

También su normativa es más avanzada que la de otros países vecinos. De hecho, los fondos pueden invertir el 100% de sus activos en instrumentos internacionales, sin embargo, solo un 6% de los activos en fondos están invertidos fuera.

“El ahorrador en Costa Rica todavía es muy conservador, y considera la inversión en instrumentos internacionales como algo demasiado sofisticado”, explica Víctor Chacón, director ejecutivo de la Cámara de Fondos de Inversión de Costa Rica (CAFI). Chacón es también presidente de la Asociación Centroamericana y del Caribe de Fondos de Inversión (ACFI), y es en el marco de la 3ª Conferencia de ACFI, celebrada en República Dominicana a finales del pasado mes de julio donde conversa con Funds Society sobre la actualidad de la industria en Costa Rica.

Para Chacón, el propio gestor de carteras costarricense necesita conocer más sobre las ventajas de invertir fuera del país.

Por tipo de activos, el 57% del dinero en fondos está invertido en mercado de dinero (renta fija local), el sector inmobiliario representa un 31%, y el resto sería inversión directa en otros instrumentos, locales e internacionales. En cuanto al tipo de cliente, un 70% son personas naturales y un 30% personas jurídicas, aunque por patrimonio se reparten aproximadamente en partes iguales entre personas físicas y jurídicas.

Complementing the Human Touch

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MiFID II y los bancos: “La mano que mece la cuna”
Foto: historias visuales, Flickr, Creative Commons. MiFID II y los bancos: “La mano que mece la cuna”

New research from global analytics firm Cerulli Associates finds that using technology to uncover what U.S. investors want is helpful, but personal interaction is needed to close the sale.

«There has been an explosive increase in the attention devoted to the evolving role of technology within the realm of retail investor relationships,» states Scott Smith, director at Cerulli. «Virtually all stakeholders, from advisory practices to asset managers to custodians and other service providers, feel the threat of disruption through disintermediation.»

Many assume that ongoing advances in technology will empower investors to handle their financial affairs without the assistance of traditional financial advisors. Cerulli believes that while technology innovations will transform how services are delivered, there will be an ongoing, and potentially increasing, demand for personalized advice delivered by humans.

«Since 2010, there has been a continuous stream of developments in the technology available for investors to monitor and manage their portfolios. However, during this period the self-directed investor segment declined from 45% to 33% across all households,» Smith explains. «At the same time, those households Cerulli terms ‘Advisor-Reliant’, who regularly consult with a financial advisor, increased from 34% to 43%.»

«We believe that unique elements of financial advice relationships will prove resistant to being cast aside in favor of purely self-service electronic relationships,» Smith continues.

«Data can help marketers understand what investors think and want relative to their finances, but wealth managers need to complement this insight with human interaction, predictive analytics, and communication,» Smith adds.

Sharp Fall of UCITS Net Sales During the Second Quarter of 2015 while AIF Net Sales Rise

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The European Fund and Asset Management Association (EFAMA) has published its latest quarterly statistical release which describes the trends in the European investment fund industry during the second quarter of 2015. UCITS net sales fell to EUR 114 billion, down from EUR 283 billion in the first quarter.

Long-term UCITS, i.e. UCITS excluding money market funds, attracted net inflows of EUR 144 billion, down from EUR 236 billion in the first quarter.  The three main types of long-term UCITS recorded lower net sales during the quarter. 

Equity funds recorded net sales of EUR 22 billion, down from EUR 43 billion.  Bond funds recorded net sales of EUR 32 billion, down from EUR 79 billion.  Multi-asset funds recorded net sales of EUR 72 billion, down from EUR 101 billion. 

UCITS net sales totaled EUR 397 billion during the first half of 2015, up from the EUR 274 billion in January-June 2014. Long-term UCITS have also increased during the first half of this year to EUR 380 billion from the EUR 282 billion during this period last year. 

Money market funds registered a turnaround in net sales to post net outflows of EUR 30 billion in the second quarter, against net inflows of EUR 47 billion recorded in the first quarter.

AIF net sales increased to EUR 48 billion in the second quarter, up from EUR 18 billion in the first quarter. This increase in net sales was mainly due to a turnaround in net sales of equity funds to net inflows of EUR 4 billion compared to net outflows of EUR 13 billion in the first quarter. Net sales of multi-assets also increased to EUR 32 billion, up from EUR 22 billion in the first quarter. 

Institutional net sales declined to EUR 38 billion, down from EUR 54 billion in the first quarter.

European investment fund assets decreased 0.8 percent during the second quarter of 2015 to stand at EUR 12,632 billion at end June 2015.  Net assets of UCITS declined by 0.9 percent to stand at EUR 8,167 billion at end June 2015, whilst total net assets of AIFs declined by 0.8 percent to stand at EUR 4,455 billion at quarter end.