Posts tagged “bank of america”

Financial Services Industry Pondering Impact of Dodd-Frank Act

August 23rd, 2010

Providers of financial services, such as prime brokers, are now calibrating how to respond to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Under review are the Act’s effects on returns, leverage, risk-taking, innovation, and transparency.  That is because the Act drives higher margin requirements and less leverage.  Providers also worry that the threat of increased SEC scrutiny will inhibit certain proprietary strategies favored by hedge funds and other alternative investments.

Private equity and real estate funds are also feeling the heat. For example, Bank of America Merrill Lynch effectively departed the business when it outsourced management of its Asian real estate fund to Blackstone Group in July, said Steven Coyle, chief investment officer of Cohen & Steers’ fund-of-funds management arm, Global Realty Partners, New York.

Anticipating that financial reform would likely make the businesses obsolete was one reason leading to the decision to sell, Mr. Coyle noted. The other was “realizing that recent hits to real estate made these businesses less attractive on an ongoing basis,” he said.  “If they remain as banks, I don’t think they will stay in business,” Mr. Coyle said. “Most investors invested because the house (bank parent to the investment management firm) had a major investment.”

Large non-bank financial institutions may also suffer as investors start to shy away from large investment firms. While “this is not the death knell of large firms,” he said, on balance, investors will move toward a smaller operating model, Mr. Coyle added.

Financial reforms — both in the U.S. and globally — are expected to have the combined effect of making debt, a key ingredient in real estate and private equity investments, even harder to come by.  “There is a concern that, whereas normalcy would return to the debt capital markets, the de-risking (caused by the financial reform law) will cause debt capital markets for real estate to be slower to recover,” said Robert T. O’Brien, real estate leader for New York-based consulting firm Deloitte. “Lending standards will be tighter with more documents, more diligence and with banks having to have more capital reserves.”

With the financial overhaul signed into law, institutional investors and managers now are waiting for the other shoe to drop: that is, the regulatory specifics.

One little-discussed aspect of the so-called Volcker Rule – which restricts banks from proprietary trading – is that it also prohibits financial institutions owning more than 3% of any alternative investment fund.

“Banks cannot buy 3% of a private equity or hedge fund and banks cannot sponsor or operate a fund and invest more than 3%,” said David Sahr, partner in the financial services, regulation and enforcement division at the New York office of law firm Mayer Brown LLP.

This not only applies to funds being raised, but also to any funds — private equity, real estate and hedge funds — the financial institutions now sponsor, said Lennine Occhino, partner in the Chicago headquarters of Mayer Brown.

More widely discussed has been the aspect of the Volcker Rule that banks’ total private equity and hedge fund exposure must not be more than 3% of Tier One capital — banks’ cushion of core capital intended to absorb losses so they won’t cut into deposits, Mr. Sahr said. What’s more, a bank must have a fiduciary relationship with investors and have an existing asset management relationship with investors to sponsor alternative investment funds at all, Mr. Sahr said.

But the rules do not stop there. Even if a financial institution does not own a bank, if the institution is so important to the U.S. economy that it could cause the economy to break down, it could be subject to supervision by the Federal Reserve, he said.

These could include large insurance companies, large private equity and hedge fund firms, large manufacturers or their investment management subsidiaries like General Electric Co.‘s GE Capital. These firms would not be prohibited from owning and sponsoring alternative investment funds; but they would be subject to overall capital limits that have yet to be set by the Federal Reserve, Mr. Sahr said.

“The legislation gives the Federal Reserve the authority to designate non-banks as systemically important financial institutions,” Mr. Kahn said.

Some private investment firms see this as an opportunity to expand their businesses. Many expect to scoop up talented investment executives from large financial services firms or acquire existing investment management units from players departing the business, he said.

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Fifteen Banks and Brokers Sued By Hedge Fund

July 15th, 2010

Cambridge Place World Headquarters

A US-based fund, Cambridge Place Investment Partners, is suing 15 banks and prime brokers for allegedly using incorrect appraisals and phony loan applications when the banks sold $2.4B in mortgage-backed securities.

Cambridge Place, which is currently liquidating a trio of funds that invested in the subprime market, accused Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, among others, of selling it $2.4 billion in securities including mortgages from a “small group of now notorious subprime mortgage originators.” The Concord, Mass.-based firm said it lost half of its investment, alleging that the banks employed faulty appraisals and bogus loan applications to assure investors, facilitating an “environment of improper lending practices.”

“The Wall Street banks conducted inadequate due diligence and failed to satisfy their own responsibilities,” the hedge fund said in its lawsuit, filed in Massachusetts state courts on July 9.

Names of other banks mentioned in the lawsuit as defendants include JP Morgan, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Merrill Lynch, UBS, HSBC, Barclays and RBS.

The lawsuit filed in Boston alleged that banks were “complicit in creating an environment of improper lending practices” by having representatives on site at the mortgage lenders and gave them billions of dollars in credit.

The Wall Street bank defendants fostered the environment for, permitted, and profited from the mortgage originators’ rampant violations of sound lending practices. Driven to profit from the lucrative secularization business, the defendants demanded enormous volumes of loans, leading to erosion in lending standards, the suit said.

The complaint accused Barclays of improperly selling $141M of securities between 2005 and 2007, and HSBC of improperly selling $64M of securities between 2005 and 2006.

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Survey Says Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse Are The Best Prime Brokers, Again

June 23rd, 2010

Credit Suisse Group and Deutsche Bank were named the best prime brokerages for the second year in a row, according to Global Custodian’s annual survey. Rated just below the co-winners were Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

The rankings were reported by Global Custodian, a leading magazine covering the international securities services business. The magazine based its rankings on a mix of financing, technology, client services, margining and other categories. Credit Suisse is known for favoring larger clients (over $5B in assets) compared to Deutsche Bank.

The survey polled over 3,200 respondents, about 55% more than last year and 12% more than in 2008. As the magazine sought to interview as many hedge funds as possible, the increase in responses suggests the sector continues to rebound from its 2008 woes.

The two European bank’s stability in capital and personnel through the global financial crisis earned them the trust of many hedge funds.

“Coming out of the crisis, hedge funds seek strong bank providers who will deliver not only a first-in-class service but maintain a steady hand for them into and through the next crisis,” Philip Vasan, Credit Suisse’s global head of prime services, told Dow Jones Newswires.

The Swiss bank has climbed the rankings over the past few years, jumping from 7th in 2008. The survey found that Credit Suisse was favored among bigger funds with assets over $5 billion, while Deutsche Bank fared better among those below $5 billion.

“For funds less than $1 billion, we haven’t deserted them during the down cycle. In fact, we have stepped up investments in the segment and are playing more aggressive to cater to the needs of the start-ups,” Jon Hitchon, a Co-Head of Deutsche Bank’s Global Prime Finance, told Dow Jones Newswires. “Our synthetic platform is also attractive to larger funds which tend to be more balance sheet intensive.”

While funds continue to recover from their recent dark age, liquidity is still hard to come by as investors remain cautious about risk. Deutsche Bank said it looks to satisfy hedge funds’ service needs as well as funding needs.

“We have a flexible balance sheet to finance hedges’ needs. This is more relevant these days as our clients are only leveraged up to a third of their assets on average,” Hitchon added.

Results from the survey, the most closely watched in the hedge-fund industry, are presented in a format similar to the popular Zagat restaurant guides, with direct quotes from participants making up a bulk of the commentary on each company. The survey breaks down prime brokers’ performance based on region and assets under management of the funds they service, along with whether the funds are single- or multi-strategy. It gives prime brokers “best in class” awards for good scores in individual categories.

Global Custodian also sheds light on other statistics, such as what percentage a prime broker is a particular fund’s main or sole broker. But as hedge funds are more worried about counterparty risk highlighted during the financial crisis, more fund managers have switched to using multiple prime brokerages.

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