Unit Trust Investment TV

Obsessing over cost


The FSA’s scrutiny of wraps and internal rebates could ultimately be to the detriment of the consumer

By Terry O'Halloran | Published Apr 04, 2012 
Article from FT Adviser


In days of yore it seemed to me that broker bonds were the absolute pinnacle of the financial adviser fund management evolution.

We had moved on from the unit trust portfolios of the 1970s and the days of Julian Gibb and other great ‘brokers’ that looked after people’s money so well.

The metamorphoses following regulation of everything other than term insurance and unit trusts led to the great Lloyds TSB partnership and the mass marketing of savings plans into unitised contracts ‘buy term and invest the rest’. The savings market, in effect, was well taken care of and the investment market suddenly found a new niche in ‘broker bonds’ which started with one advocate of the ‘investment bond’ fund management fraternity starting a trend that eventually, in 1987, brought many companies to their knees and some five or six years later to their graves. The modern manifestation of the broker bond, and unit trust fund manager that pre-dated it, is of course the wrap.

As with the downfall of previous incarnations, the wrap is now under severe scrutiny particularly by the FSA in policy statement 11/09 and has become so embroiled with detail that it is examining the supermarket funds’ internal rebates from fund managers because they “lack transparency”. The FSA concludes that it feels that rebates are undesirable. Why? The consumer cannot see the cost. But is it a cost? Well, even the FSA does not know. PS11/09 does not tell us. Indeed the document leaves us all hanging in mid-air.

The preoccupation and fetish of the FSA to look unswervingly at ‘cost’ ignores almost entirely the end benefit that is available to the consumer. The latter of course is a function of the markets and the former is an accountancy process fact and there, perhaps, is the report’s Achilles heel.

If we go back to the maximum commission agreement I spent three years working as an intermediary, with the companies that provided life assurance products, pensions and investment bonds as well as the investment houses, in order to gain an industry-wide acceptance of a level of commission that would be acceptable. I found at the 11th hour that Lord Borrie, then head of the Office of Fair Trading, declared the agreement “a constraint of trade”and said it was, in fact, “anti-competitive”.

Damage

In the years since the early 1990s I have failed to work out quite where Lord Borrie got his determination of that fact. He created a lot of damage in subsequent years by failing to allow the industry to resolve its own commercial problems without government interference.

Coincidentally, of course, there was a banking crisis (the Bank of Credit and Commerce International went bust) and the withdrawal of the maximum commission agreement allowed building societies and banks to over-egg their particular cakes by taking up to 230 per cent Life Assurance and Unit Trust Regulatory Organisation commissions while consumer-conscious intermediaries such as myself restrained our enthusiasm and stayed with 130 per cent Lautro, the norm under the agreement.

Surely, it is plain to see that the rebates that were paid back to ‘supermarket fund’ providers is merely a bulk discount, an internal mechanism acknowledging the size of the purchase? When a large supermarket such as Tesco approaches Heinz for a bulk order it expects to get a higher margin. In other words, a rebate on cost because of the volume of the product that it is buying.

How can we possibly have Lord Borrie making a decision at one point in time an agreement that offends the retail price maintenance mentality (and legislation) and here we have the FSA endeavouring to, unsuccessfully, prescribe what are basic valid commercial decisions between two commercial entities. It just does not make sense.

Of course someone will see it as unfair.

The fact that Tesco should be able to sell beans cheaper than the corner shop could also be seen as ‘unfair’, but please do not get on at me with puerile letters saying: ‘What is Mr O’Halloran doing comparing tins of beans with financial products?’ I did not make the rules.

The FSA is endeavouring to make the rules and failing at just about every hurdle. PS11/09 does not come to a conclusion, it comes to a ‘non-statement’ that leaves the market in doubt as to which way it should go and what it should do.

All that does, as it has in the past, is promote ‘the industry’ predisposition to dump the products that are under threat and innovate with new products which circumvent the problem. That actually helps nobody particularly as there is £40bn reportedly in supermarket funds that is going to find itself in a regulatory cleft stick that can only have one outcome – detriment to the consumer.

On what basis does the FSA come to these decisions, or non-decisions as is the case with PS11/09? What are the qualifications of those who are making the decision or non-decision in the first place? Are they practitioners? Do they have any idea as to how these products are put together? Have they any knowledge of commerce? Margaret Cole, the FSA’s former managing director and board member, was apparently a corporate lawyer and yet she was enabled to pass comment about life assurance products, or more precisely, investment products that involved life assurance products.

If we are going to have a regulator of any genuine credibility in the UK then it has to be populated by researchers who know their subject inside out and can make decisions based upon fact rather than hypotheses and experiment. When one wrap platform provider starts saying: ‘We are not like the rest of the market’, then you can pretty well put money on the fact that, such as unit trusts and broker bonds before them, the writing is on the wall for their demise.

Confidence

That is not good for public confidence nor for the offices that spend millions of pounds developing not only their market products but also the market into which they provide their service.

Before the retail distribution review is even contemplated the rules under which we are all bound should be clear and unequivocal. They should follow normal commercial practice, the best practice of course, and be capable of producing the best outcome for clients, not necessarily at the least cost inherent in the product.

If stakeholder pensions have anything to prove to the world at large, and the regulator in particular, it is that forcing suppliers to wait 25 years to make any profit on a financial product while leaving that product open, through pension transfers, to pillaging by fund management groups when the funds get large enough, is not only bad commerce, it is bad value for those invested.

PS11/09 should be relegated to ‘File 101’ and the wrap/platform market left to commercial pressures which the FSA should monitor, not prescribe. Reading the Better Regulation paper of 2006 would help the FSA understand the current disquiet.

Terry O’Halloran is founder of O’Halloran & Company

Article from FT Adviser

UK fund launches groundbreaking equity sukuk


Article from Reuters
By Bernardo Vizcaino
DUBAI | Mon Apr 2, 2012 11:20am EDT

(Reuters) - London-based Ethical Asset Management has launched what it calls the world's first "investment sukuk", aiming to resolve a major area of controversy in Islamic finance by treating the vehicle as an equity instrument rather than as a bond.

The firm aims to raise 200 million pounds ($318 million) through the sukuk in the next 12 to 18 months, with 50 million pounds required to start buying the assets which will back the instrument.

The initial tranche will buy between two and four assets, Ethical Asset's founder and chief executive Saadat Khan told Reuters. The sukuk is a closed-end private placement fund, structured as a Jersey property unit trust.

Traditional sukuk, often described as "Islamic bonds", have been criticized by a number of Islamic scholars and investors for resembling conventional debt products; payments on them can be seen as akin to interest payments, which are banned under sharia principles.

Instead, Ethical Asset will invest money raised by the sukuk in income-generating student housing in Britain, projecting annual net returns of 4 to 6 percent, and give investors ownership of those assets - which it says will make the instrument closer to an equity product than debt.

Ethical "will provide investors with full ownership, which includes exposure to the risk/reward that is integral in a sharia transaction," Khan said.

The sukuk's maturity is expected to be five to seven years, he said. "We want to provide a commercially viable option...which does not rely on debt and can still deliver secure and stable returns."

RISK

The nature of the equity sukuk means investors will directly face risk in the student housing market, and there is no guarantee that they will receive returns of 4 to 6 percent.

Khan said he expected the British student housing market would remain strong despite weakness in the larger British real estate market.

Annual investment returns on student accommodation in London jumped to 15.1 percent in September 2011 from 8.4 percent in 2010, according to data from real estate consultancy Knight Frank. Other cities in Britain posted a return of 10.5 percent, down from 14.6 percent in the previous period.

Knight Frank said higher tuition fees at British universities taking effect from this autumn were a concern for the market, since they could potentially affect student enrollments.

Since the start of 2011, a total of 12 sukuk have been listed on the London Stock Exchange, bringing the total to 37 with a combined value of $20 billion, according to the UK Islamic Finance Secretariat, part of the financial lobby group TheCityUK.

(This story deletes part of paragraph 7 incorrectly attributed to Khan)

(With additional reporting by Anjuli Davies; Editing by Andrew Torchia)


Article from Reuters

Fund Managers Aren’t Showing Much Faith In Euro-Zone Debt


March 30, 2012, 9:54 AM
Article from The Wall Street Journal

By Min Zeng




In an ominous sign for Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis, big global asset managers are showing little faith in government bonds sold by the euro zone’s debt-strapped nations, even as these markets have posted an impressive rally this quarter.


While banks and hedge funds have chased bond prices higher, fueled mainly by liquidity provided by the European Central Bank, Pacific Investment Management Co., or Pimco, the world’s biggest bond-fund manager, has slashed its already-depleted holdings in debt of Spain and Italy in February and has said it expects selling to return in coming months.

Raiffeisen KAG has sold Spanish and French debt in recent weeks, holding less than is designated by benchmark indices. Frankfurt Trust Investment shifted its position on Spain back to underweight last week. BlackRock Inc. (BLK), meanwhile, has done no more than dip its toes in Italy this quarter and Fidelity Investments has refrained from buying altogether.

Such big investors regard the policy response until now, including cheap loans for banks from the European Central Bank, as a short-term fix and they believe the euro zone’s structural problems will take time to resolve. Without such big investors, many peripheral nations will face funding challenges, with several having been shut out of the capital markets. This means that the ECB may need to intervene more to prevent sharp rises in borrowing costs, but getting more financial aid from Germany and other creditor nations’ taxpayers could be a tall order.

“At the very top level, liquidity has provided a nicer buffer against volatility but, if you peel back the cover, you are not going to like what you see in terms of structural issues which remain very weak,” said Bob Brown, president of the bond group at Fidelity Investments, with more than $1 trillion assets under management. Brown manages $331 billion in bonds.

Indeed, signs of stress have popped up again this month, with bond yields, which move inversely to their prices, having climbed from recent lows in Spain and Italy. This month through Wednesday, Spanish government bonds have handed investors a loss of 2.34% in dollar terms, shrinking its year-to-dated gain to 3.45%, according to data from Barclays. Over the same time frame, Italy’s government bonds lost 0.4%, though the gain for the year, at 14%, is still juicy.

This doesn’t impress Scott Mather, head of global bond-portfolio management at Newport Beach, Calif.-based Pimco, who predicts bond prices will drop in both Spain and Italy in the months ahead as both nations are likely to disappoint on their deficit-reduction targets. Pimco is a unit of Allianz SE (ALV.XE).

A key issue, Mather pointed out, is that Europe “has not moved convincingly” toward fiscal union even as Germany earlier this week dropped its opposition to an enlargement of the euro zone’s bailout mechanism.

Underlining his concerns, Mather said he holds most of his European exposure in Germany and the U.K. He has sold out of peripheral Europe and has even moved out of countries that many consider “core,” such as France and Netherlands, which he thinks can suffer, given disappointing debt dynamics and political unwillingness to tackle the issues.

The yield on the Spanish government’s 10-year bond traded at 5.433% Friday, a surge from this year’s low of 4.634% in February. Italy’s 10-year government bond’s yield traded at 5.170% Friday, up from the March low of 4.754%.

Yields are still far off the stress levels near the end of last year when Italy’s 10-year yield moved above 7.4%. But the recent increase signals that the euphoria from the ECB’s liquidity–two operations of cheap three-year loans for banks–is wearing off.

Fund managers cited upcoming elections in Greece and France, the risk that Spain could miss its deficit-reduction target again, and the threat of deeper economic contractions in the euro zone. The latter would make it harder for governments to implement austerity measures in line with the strict rules laid down by the European Union.

Spain is seen as the biggest risk by Werner Fey, a fund manager at Frankfurt Trust Investment GmbH in Frankfurt, which manages about EUR15 billion of assets including stocks and bonds. Fey cited problems with the nation’s saving banks, high unemployment and the fact that the government fell short of its fiscal deficit-reduction target.

Christian Zima, fixed-income fund manager in Vienna at Raiffeisen KAG, which oversees about EUR28 billion of assets, said yields on Italian and Spanish 10-year debt could rise as high as 5.75% but this would prompt policy actions to cap further increases, such as bond purchases by the ECB, he said.

Still, Zima said he is wary of downside surprises from the euro zone as he sees the steep belt-tightening carried out in peripheral nations taking a toll on the economy.

“There are so many risks down the road. Stay defensive,” he said.



Article from The Wall Street Journal

Energy Leaders Income Fund Files Preliminary Prospectus


March 29, 2012, 1:28 p.m. EDT
Article from Market Watch

TORONTO, ONTARIO, Mar 29, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- Harvest Portfolios Group Inc. (the "Manager") is pleased to announce that a preliminary prospectus for Energy Leaders Income Fund (the "Fund") has been filed with, and a receipt therefor issued by, the securities regulatory authorities in each of the provinces and territories of Canada.

The Fund proposes to issue units (the "Units") of the Fund at a price of $12.00 per Unit (the "Offering"). Each Unit consists of one transferable trust unit ("Trust Unit") and one Trust Unit purchase warrant ("Warrant"). The Units will separate into Trust Units and Warrants upon the earlier of the closing of the over-allotment option and the 30th day following the closing of the Offering. Each Warrant entitles the holder to purchase one Trust Unit at the subscription price of $12.00 per Trust Unit at 5:00 p.m. (Toronto time) on and only on June 14, 2013.

The Fund will invest in a portfolio (the "Portfolio") of equity securities of 15 Energy Issuers listed on a North American stock exchange that have the following characteristics: a market capitalization of at least $10 billion determined at the time of investment; are currently paying a dividend/distribution; are eligible to have options written on their equity securities; and operations and/or offices in at least two countries.

The Portfolio will be initially acquired and thereafter rebalanced quarterly on an equally weighted basis by Highstreet Asset Management Inc. (the "Investment Manager" or "Highstreet").

The investment objectives of the Fund are to provide Unitholders with (i) monthly cash distributions; (ii) the opportunity for capital appreciation; and (iii) lower overall volatility of the Portfolio returns than would otherwise be experienced by owning the equity securities held by the Fund directly; by investing in the Portfolio and writing covered call options on up to 33% of the equity securities of each Energy Issuer held in the Portfolio.

The indicative distribution amount is initially targeted to be $0.07 per Trust Unit per month ($0.84 per annum) representing an annual cash distribution of 7% based on the 12.00 per Unit issue price.

Highstreet will be responsible for the execution of the Fund's overall investment strategy, including managing the composition of the Portfolio.

The syndicate of agents is being led by CIBC and co-led by RBC Capital Markets, and includes Scotiabank, National Bank Financial Inc., TD Securities Inc., Canaccord Genuity Corp., Desjardins Securities Inc., GMP Securities L.P., Macquarie Private Wealth Inc., Raymond James Ltd., Burgeonvest Bick Securities Limited, Dundee Securities Ltd. and Industrial Alliance Securities Inc. (collectively, the "Agents").

Certain statements included in this news release constitute forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, those identified by the expressions "expect", "intend", "will" and similar expressions to the extent they relate to the Fund, the Manager and/or the Investment Manager. The forward-looking statements are not historical facts but reflect the Fund's, the Manager's and/or Investment Manager's current expectations regarding future results or events. These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or events to differ materially from current expectations. Although the Fund, the Manager and/or the Investment Manager believes that the assumptions inherent in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and, accordingly, readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such statements due to the inherent uncertainty therein. The Fund, the Manager and/or the Investment Manager undertakes no obligation to update publicly or otherwise revise any forward-looking statement or information whether as a result of new information, future events or other such factors which affect this information, except as required by law.

A preliminary prospectus dated March 28, 2012 (the "Prospectus") containing important information relating to these securities has been filed with securities commissions or similar authorities in each of the provinces and territories of Canada. The Prospectus is still subject to completion or amendment. Copies of the Prospectus may be obtained from any of the Agents. There will not be any sale or any acceptance of an offer to buy the securities until a receipt for the final prospectus has been issued.

All capitalized terms noted herein but not defined are as defined in the Prospectus.

For additional information or a copy of the Prospectus, please contact your registered financial advisor.

       
        Contacts:
        Harvest Portfolios Group Inc.
        Michael Kovacs
        1-866-998-8298
        mkovacs@harvestportfolios.com
        

SOURCE: Energy Leaders Income Fund and Harvest Portfolios Group Inc.

        mailto:mkovacs@harvestportfolios.com


Article from Market Watch