All articles by Joseph Mariathasan. – Page 8

  • Features

    Why evaluated pricing is next

    March 2006 (Magazine)

    Valuing a bond portfolio is often regarded as a straightforward exercise of obtaining the latest market prices from a group of market makers or an exchange, completely analogous to the equity marketplace. The vast majority of bonds do not trade on a day-to-day basis and, traded over-the-counter, there is a ...

  • Features

    A changing marketplace

    March 2006 (Magazine)

    While it may be natural for European institutional investors to see European equities as a core asset class, what is not so clear is what should be included within that definition, and on what basis managers should be selected. The US market has a culture of much more specialisation of ...

  • Features

    An awkward customer

    February 2006 (Magazine)

    In a world of increasing demand for investment solutions based around liability driven benchmarks, how do global bond portfolios fit in? Historically, as Paul Abberley, head of fixed income at ABN AMRO Asset Management points out, “global bonds have always been problematic as an asset class in an optimisation framework. ...

  • Features

    Only place to go to outperform

    January 2006 (Magazine)

    European investors often have a very strong domestic bias in their equity portfolios, allocating investment elsewhere to global mandates. While many global managers see the US market as a whole expensive and are accordingly underweight, this overall view is heavily influenced by the top 250 stocks which account for 70% ...

  • Features

    Are mega funds a mega trend?

    January 2006 (Magazine)

    Are the mega funds that have come to dominate the private equity landscape, dinosaurs? This was the question that Jon Moulton of Alchemy posed provocatively at the recent Super Investor conference in Paris to an audience of 500 representatives of private equity firms, investors, intermediaries and service providers. Moulton amusingly ...

  • Features

    More attractive than ever

    December 2005 (Magazine)

    According to Jerome Booth at London-based specialist asset manager Ashmore: “In emerging markets, debt outperforms equities except in a rally, so the definition of an emerging market is one where the equity risk premium is negative.” While you may believe that his view is prejudiced since Ashmore is a leading ...

  • Features

    Looking for the special effect

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    The development of the Euro-zone has led to the development of investment approaches that take a truly pan-European approach, ignoring country weightings in the search for the best opportunities in each sector. Small companies, however, are still more domestically focused and their behaviour tied more to the local index and ...

  • Features

    Moving into mainstream

    October 2005 (Magazine)

    Emerging market debt (EMD) is an asset class that that encompasses sovereigns and corporates, high yield and investment grade and dollar as well as local currency instruments. Given this complexity, it is no wonder that market attention has only focused on the headline crises that have left deep-rooted prejudices within ...

  • Features

    A far from easy decision

    September 2005 (Magazine)

    Undertaking due diligence in the Asia-Pacific region can have the attraction of combining business with great beaches, the lure of the orient and the opportunity to experience the Australian lifestyle. While some investment professionals are honest enough to admit this has influenced their choice of specialism, does it make sense ...

  • Features

    Too much information

    July 2005 (Magazine)

    There is no doubt that running a global equity portfolio is a macho activity that any red-blooded CIO would like to put their name to. It is also a good fallback in the event that a merger takes place and the loser in the battle for CIO has to be ...

  • Features

    The turning of the screw

    June 2005 (Magazine)

    Would you be willing to lock up investments for your grandchildren to use in 50 years time if the return was going to be fixed at 4.21% annually for the total period? The answer for most people would be obviously no. Yet the French treasury issued e6bn of 50 year ...

  • Features

    A perplexing market

    May 2005 (Magazine)

    In 1853 a small fleet of five black US navy ships led by USS Powhatan and commanded by Commodore Matthew Perry, anchored at Tokyo Bay and opened up Japan to international trade after 250 years of isolation. A combination of diplomatic finesse backed up by gunboats had transformed the attitudes ...

  • Features

    Super returns for whom?

    April 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Cover the full spectrum

    April 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Looking for the sweet spot

    March 2005 (Magazine)

    Sometimes what appears to be a creeping change can turn out to be the forerunner of a seismic shift and that may be the case for what is happening in global bond mandates. Richard Wohanka, CEO of Fortis Investments and with a bond background himself describes the situation: “In the ...

  • Features

    Tying the pieces together

    February 2005 (Magazine)

    Is asset allocation objective? Why are rational, intelligent individuals able to produce two radically different asset allocations both seeking to fulfil a 20-year objective? The answer lies in the conflicts of interest that are embedded in the institutional fund management industry. The fundamental point is that what the risk stakeholders ...

  • Features

    A schizophrenic market

    February 2005 (Magazine)

    Perhaps one of the striking aspects of investing in European equities five years after the introduction of the euro, is the continued ambiguity of what a European mandate should represent. It is rather as if when considering an American mandate, the choice included mandates for the US excluding Texas as ...

  • Features

    Ever tightening spreads

    January 2005 (Magazine)

    Have corporate bond spreads come down too far? A two year rally has seen spreads almost halve in the sector as a whole, with high yield bond spreads down by over 500bp. In Europe spreads are even tighter than the US reflecting a persistent domestic bias that US bond managers ...

  • Features

    EMD grows to maturity

    December 2004 (Magazine)

    Emerging market debt (EMD) has certainly hit the headlines in recent years. Argentina defaulted in 2001; in January 1999 in Brazil the real was devalued by 40%; Russia restructured its debt in 1999, while in 1997 the Asian crisis saw a collapse in investor confidence spread among the region’s countries. ...