Irish Bank Fills Pension Hole with Balance Sheet Assets

An Irish bank instructed to deleverage has announced a solution to help restore its balance sheet and pension fund back to health.

(August 17, 2012) — One of Ireland’s largest banks has created a solution for both its pension shortfall and balance sheet deleveraging by transferring loans worth €1.1 billion from one to the other, it announced today.

Allied Irish Banks (AIB) has transferred the loan assets to its underfunded pension plan “as part of its continuing strategy to meet non-core deleveraging targets as part of Prudential Liquidity Assessment Review (PLAR) 2011″.

The bank said: “The transaction was completed on an arm’s length basis with both the bank and the pension trustees conducting independent valuations of the assets.”

The move, the bank said, should allow its early retirement programme to continue, which would in turn lower contribution costs to the pension scheme and cut overall expenses.

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Irish banks have been under pressure to offload loans from their balance sheets as part of a mass restructuring programme. AIB took €20 billion from the Irish government at the height of the financial crisis and has been making efforts to slim down and become more efficient.

The loans will be ‘written down’, meaning they will not transfer to the pension fund at initial face value. The discount on the loans has not been disclosed, but a statement from AIB said an independent valuation agency had carried out the exercise.

Mass deleveraging by banks around the world has provided options for pension funds to take up discarded loan assets. The strategy has been lauded by several market experts, with some even calling on the Bank of England to allow bank assets to be sold to investors as an alternative Quantitative Easing programme.

Multi-Asset Leader Loses Key Manager…as Fund-of-Funds Staffs Up

The largest listed UK fund house has lost one of its key multi-asset managers, while the much maligned fund-of-hedge funds industry takes on new staff to cope with demand.

(August 17, 2012) — One of the largest multi-asset players in United Kingdom fund management has lost one of its leading managers, aiCIO has learned, as its assets in the sector top £60 billion.

Mike Spinks, co-manager of Schroders’ diversified growth and diversified completion funds, is to leave the company, a spokesperson confirmed to aiCIO. Schroders is the largest listed UK asset manager with £194.6 billion in client money.

Spinks joined Schroders in 2004 and in 2007 helped launch the diversified growth fund with co-manager Johanna Kyrklund, who also heads up the multi-asset team. Schroders’ multi-asset funds under management have reached over £60 billion, a spokesperson said. Spinks’ immediate plans are unknown.

Multi-asset solutions have grown in popularity over the past five years as fund managers have created options to give investors exposure to a diversified portfolio of alternative asset classes in one step. The Schroders diversified growth fund has invested in a range of assets, including high yield bonds, leveraged loans, and catastrophe risk.

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As a result of the departure, there is to be a reshuffle within the teams, Schroders said, with Remi Ajewole taking on co-manager duties on the diversified growth fund and Martin Blank working on the diversified completion fund.

Schroders said it had eight portfolio managers in the London multi-asset team and the company had been building staff at fund manager and analyst levels over the past couple of years.

Elsewhere, fund of hedge funds manager Permal has appointed Katie Jupp to a newly created role of institutional business manager, the company confirmed to aiCIO.

Jupp will report to Paul Jeffries, head of UK institutional business, who joined Permal in 2011 from railways pension fund Railpen, where he led its alternatives strategy.

Jeffries said: “Over the past year the business has won a number of sizeable institutional mandates and seen accelerated institutional interest in not only Permal’s traditional funds, but in particular more customised alternative offerings, both of which fall within Katie’s UK remit. Investors are today showing greater interest in customised vehicles, both onshore and offshore, and this involves closer interaction with each client.”

Jupp joins the fund manager from Sussex Partners, a hedge fund advisory with offices in the UK, United States, and Switzerland.

This week, the Massachusetts’ public pension system told aiCIO about its decision to divest from funds-of-hedge funds in favour of directly investing with hedge funds.

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