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Showing posts from May, 2014

Get Ready for Life After Benchmarks?

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Melissa Shin of Benefits Canada reports, Get ready for a life after benchmarks : Benchmark-oriented active managers will fall behind. That’s what Yariv Itah, managing partner at Casey Quirk, argued at an Alternative Investment Management Association event in Toronto on Wednesday. A paper he co-wrote, Life After Benchmarks , says clients will soon care more about outcomes, such as specific cash-flow needs, than outperforming a benchmark. But “to get away from the benchmark, you need a lot of courage,” says Jean-Luc Gravel, executive vice-president of global equity markets at Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec. That’s particularly the case in Canada, where we have fewer names to choose from. Even though clients will compare your performance to the benchmark over the long term, it can be dangerous to try beating it over the short term. For instance, when Nortel comprised 35% of the TSE 300 (now the S&P/TSX Composite Index), many managers Gravel spoke to knew it was ov

AIMCo Scores Huge on Timberland?

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Darcy Henton of the Calgary Herald reports, Investment in Australian woodlots pays off for Alberta : An Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund investment into private woodlots in Australia is paying huge dividends since more than 2,500 square kilometres of land was purchased out of bankruptcy following the 2008 global recession, says AIMCo chief executive Leo de Bever. De Bever said the $400-million investment in 2011 paid a nearly $100-million return this year after the bankruptcy issues were resolved and the Great Southern Plantations started to produce forestry products. “This is a perfect example of why it pays to be a long-term investor,” he told an all-party legislature Heritage Fund committee meeting Tuesday. “We were the only investor that could come in and say: ‘Ok, this is a royal mess . . . but we can provide cash now to the receiver and you will be through with this problem, and we’ll work it out over time.’ In this particular year, that strategy came to fruition.”

The Euro Deflation Crisis?

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Peter Polak of Foreign Affairs reports, The Euro Deflation Crisis : A specter is haunting Europe -- the specter of deflation. Countries throughout the European Union have been struggling for the past several years with stagnant or falling prices. In Hungary, inflation has fallen to its lowest level since 1974. In Bulgaria, Cyprus, Greece, Ireland, and Latvia, consumer prices fell on a year-over-year basis in 2013. Over the same period, consumer prices remained static in Portugal and Spain, and they rose by the statistically insignificant rate of 0.5 percent in Denmark, Lithuania, Slovakia, and Sweden. Aggregate inflation in the EU has declined to a five-year low of 0.5 percent, well below the target of two percent set by the European Central Bank (ECB). As long as incomes remain stable, deflation has a positive impact on consumers’ purchasing power; they can buy more goods and services as prices fall. Their savings also increase in value as prices decline, unless banks begin to

Private Equity Returns to Australia and Europe?

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Ross Kelly and Cynthia Koons of the Wall Street Journal report, Private Equity Returns to Australia : When it comes to investing in Australia, private-equity firms are back. After a lull in activity Down Under in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, global firms such as KKR & Co. and TPG Group are on the hunt again, having recently raised large amounts of capital to deploy in the Asia-Pacific region. That has inspired a renaissance of buyout activity in Australia, one of the few markets in the region where private-equity firms can do full takeovers. In the first five months of the year, announced private-equity takeover deals in the country hit US$5.5 billion, according to Dealogic, higher than the amount for any full year since 2006. “Many of the large local and global private-equity firms have recently raised new funds, so they have significant war chests,” said John Knox, Credit Suisse’s co-head of investment banking in Australia. He added that “debt markets are

CPPIB Gains 16.5% Gross in FY 2014

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Janet McFarland of the Globe and Mail reports, CPPIB’s active investment plan scores big with 16.5% rate of return : The Canada Pension Plan fund saw its assets swell by $36-billion over the past fiscal year after recording its highest annual rate of return on investments in the past decade, but warns that good investment deals are harder to come by as more large investors flood into acquisition markets. The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), which manages Canada’s largest pool of pension assets, said total assets hit $219-billion as of March 31, up from $183-billion a year earlier, which is the highest annual gain in dollar terms that the fund has ever earned. “At the end of the day, the reason we’re most pleased about that is that it’s really what pays pensions,” chief executive officer Mark Wiseman told reporters Friday. “Those returns will help pay pensions for the next 75 years and beyond. ... It continues to enhance the overall sustainability of the Canada Pen

Hedge Funds Won't Make You Rich?

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Noah Smith, an assistant professor of finance at Stony Brook University, wrote a comment for Bloomberg View, Hedge Funds Won't Make You Rich : The recent release of Institutional Investor Alpha’s hedge-fund survey has everyone asking how the fund managers continue to make so much money. Academics and journalists alike point out that hedge funds, as a class, haven’t delivered above-market after-fee returns for quite some time. Hedge funds, of course, get paid whether the market goes up or down, so the real question is why hedge funds continue to receive large inflows of capital from pension funds and other investors. The New Yorker magazine’s John Cassidy has a good roundup of the most prominent theories. He includes some good links to research on the question of whether hedge funds deliver superior risk-adjusted returns, or offer significant diversification potential. But the real question is: Why would people expect hedge funds to deliver superior returns in the f