Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Pimco hires Bernanke as senior advisor; says he hopes to help with macro view

Pimco hires Bernanke as senior advisor; says he hopes to help with macro view 

[NEW YORK] Former Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke is joining bond giant Pimco as a senior advisor, as the firm seeks to bolster its star power following the departure of co-founder Bill Gross.
The move may be questioned by some competitors who had criticized the Fed during Bernanke's reign for being too close to Pimco, whose full name is Pacific Investment Management Co. The critics suggested that could have potentially given the Newport Beach, California-based firm an advantage in interpreting monetary policy.
In an interview, Mr Bernanke, who only last week announced he'd signed on to consult for the hedge fund Citadel, said he will restrict his Wall Street advisory roles to just the two firms. He also works at the Brookings Institution.
"I remain full time at Brookings. I am not an employee of either firm. I am an outside senior advisor," Bernanke, 61, told Reuters.
"This is it," he said. "There won't be anymore. They (Pimco and Citadel) prefer not having me consult too many firms and I personally think working with two firms will be plenty."
Both Pimco, which oversees US$1.59 trillion in assets as of March 31, and Mr Bernanke declined to say how much he would be paid but did say he will be attending every Pimco quarterly meeting of top executives. He will not come cheap, though, given he received as much as $250,000 for single speaking engagements last year - more than the $200,000 he received in annual salary as Fed chairman.
Mr Bernanke said he has never met Gross, the legendary bond manager known as the 'Bond King' who suddenly exited Pimco last September for smaller rival Janus Capital Group Inc. For decades, Mr Gross had brushed off the suggestions that Pimco was too close to the Fed under Mr Bernanke, who chaired the Fed between February 2006-February 2014.
"The Fed does not regulate Pimco or its parent or any other firm that is affiliated with it," Mr Bernanke said. The same situation obtains with Citadel, he said. "So there is no contact."
He added: "I am not going to be involved in any kind of lobbying or any kind of influence with the Fed or Congress or anybody else in the government."
Former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, Bernanke's predecessor, also consulted for Pimco, which is owned by Germany's Allianz SE , between 2007 and 2011.
In late 2008, the Fed hired Pimco, along with three other big Wall Street firms, to implement enormous purchases of agency mortgage-backed securities to keep interest rates low and spur the US economy. Pimco also managed the commercial-paper assets for the Fed during that period. "If they were employed to do that kind of thing, that was in their professional capacity," Mr Bernanke said. "I had nothing to do with selecting them or I had no involvement with them myself."
When asked if he has advised Pimco to prepare for an expected interest rate hike this year, Mr Bernanke said: "No, I haven't given them any advice on that. I will be speaking broadly about the economy and markets."
All told, Mr Bernanke said: "From my perspective, they are a firm that the way they operate is by taking a macro view - they try and decide how they see the economy evolving both in the United States and abroad and they base their investment strategies on that macro view. That's something where I believe I can be helpful, thinking about where the economy is going."
Mr Bernanke, who was a guest speaker at a Pimco client event in mid-March and a participant at the firm's year-end investment forum last December, said discussions about joining Pimco began in October.
Mr Bernanke's lawyers, Robert Barnett and Michael O'Connor of Williams & Connolly LLP, were the chief architects of the Pimco arrangement, according to a source familiar with the matter. Barnett and O'Connor are said to also have brokered Greenspan's advisory deal with Pimco, the source added.
Mr Bernanke's appointment comes as investors continue to pull money from some Pimco funds six months after the exit of Mr Gross. Pimco has seen US$123.5 billion of net withdrawals from its open-ended funds since Mr Gross' departure even as performance has improved.
Outflows from the flagship Pimco Total Return Fund, the world's largest bond fund which Mr Gross managed since 1987, have slowed to an average of US$7 billion to US$8 billion a month recently from US$23.5 billion in September.
In the first three months of the year, the Pimco Total Return Fund delivered a net after-fee return of 2.22 per cent, outperforming its benchmark by 61 basis points and generating excess returns of 68 basis points above the Morningstar Intermediate Term Bond Average.
"We are honored to have Dr Bernanke serve as an advisor to Pimco, and look forward to benefiting from his extraordinary knowledge and expertise to help us add value for our clients," Douglas Hodge, Pimco's chief executive officer said in a statement. "His unrivalled experience in navigating the global economy through the financial crisis will provide Pimco's investment professionals with unique insights as we help our clients amidst a challenging and uncertain period for global markets in coming years."
Mr Hodge declined to discuss Bernanke's compensation or whether Mr Bernanke will have an equity stake in Pimco.
REUTERS

Switzerland to return to Taiwan ex-leader's slush fund

Switzerland to return to Taiwan ex-leader's slush fund

[TAIPEI] Switzerland will return US$6.74 million to Taiwan from a slush fund used by the island's graft-tainted former president Chen Shui-bian to stash bribes from a high-profile financial merger, Taiwanese prosecutors said Wednesday.
Mr Chen and family members have been accused of laundering millions of US dollars by sending political donations and secret diplomatic funds abroad, as well as taking kickbacks on government contracts and bribes from businessmen during his 2000-2008 presidency.
Among the cases, Mr Chen was convicted of taking around US$6.74 million in bribes paid by Yuanta Securities to facilitate its merger with another company in a final ruling in 2012.
Taiwan in 2013 requested Switzerland return the money which had been frozen in Swiss bank accounts in the names of Chen's son and daughter-in-law, although the couple contested the move in Swiss courts, according to Taiwan's supreme prosecutor's office.
"We were notified by Swiss prosecutors that the Swiss Supreme Court has ruled that the fund in connection to the Yuanta financial merger case will be returned to Taiwan soon," said Kuo Wen-dong, a spokesman for the special investigation unit under the office.
Swiss authorities have already returned to Taiwan around US$22 million in deposits held by Chen following his corruption conviction in several other cases, according to the office.
Mr Chen, who had been serving a 20-year jail term on multiple graft and money laundering convictions relating to his time in office, was released on medical parole early January after being diagnosed with severe depression, suspected Parkinson's disease and other conditions.
The 64-year-old was originally sentenced to life in prison in 2009 but the term was reduced to 20 years after appeals.
Mr Chen's wife Wu Shu-chen, who is paralysed from the waist down and confined to a wheelchair, has been spared from serving a 20-year sentence handed down for her role in the corruption offences due to poor health.
Mr Chen insists that the charges against him are part of a politically motivated vendetta by the current Beijing-friendly Kuomintang government, in retaliation for his years in power when he promoted the idea of Taiwan declaring independence from China.
AFP

China simplifying rules for foreign direct investment

China simplifying rules for foreign direct investment


[BEIJING] China is simplifying currency rules for foreign direct investors, the country's currency regulator said on Wednesday, making another move to cut red-tape and spur private investment.
Reducing bureaucracy across the board is one of the changes pursued by Chinese authorities to allow market forces to play a bigger role in the world's second-largest economy.
In future, there will be no requirment to register or verify foreign currency brought into the country to fund direct investment, China's currency regulator, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, said in an online statement on Wednesday.
Registration of foreign direct investors will be simplified also, and Chinese firms will not be required to file papers before moving foreign exchange out of China for overseas investment, the regulator said.


At the same time, oversight of banks will be increased to ensure they comply with existing laws, the regulator said.
The amount of cash that firms and individuals can move across Chinese borders is a sensitive issue for China as the authorities are slowly opening the capital account, and promoting international use of the yuan.
REUTERS

US crude stocks build less than expected as Cushing draws: EIA

US crude stocks build less than expected as Cushing draws: EIA

[NEW YORK] US crude stocks rose less than expected last week as inventories at the oil hub at Cushing, Oklahoma, declined for the first time since November, data from the Energy Information Administration showed on Wednesday.
Crude inventories rose by 1.9 million barrels in the last week, compared with analysts' expectations for an increase of 2.3 million barrels.
Crude stocks at the Cushing, Oklahoma, delivery hub fell by 514,000 barrels, EIA said. The decline at Cushing was the first since Nov 28, according to EIA data.
Refinery crude runs rose by 118,000 barrels per day, EIA data showed. Refinery utilization rates rose by 0.1 percentage points.
Gasoline stocks rose by 1.7 million barrels, compared with analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a 217,000 barrels gain.
Distillate stockpiles, which include diesel and heating oil, fell by 66,000 barrels, versus expectations for a 1.2 million barrels increase, the EIA data showed.
US crude imports fell last week by 283,000 barrels per day.
REUTERS

HSBC plans to cut 260 jobs at its Swiss private banking unit

HSBC plans to cut 260 jobs at its Swiss private banking unit

[GENEVA] HSBC Holdings Plc may cut as many as 260 jobs at its Swiss private bank after investing US$200 million to improve information technology and offices.
About 80 per cent of the reductions will be in back office functions, including IT staff, HSBC said in a memo to employees on Tuesday. While the cuts will occur over two years and may include voluntary departures and retirees, redundancies may begin later in the second quarter of 2015, according to the document seen by Bloomberg.
Michael Spiess, a spokesman for HSBC's private bank in Geneva, declined to confirm details of the memo.
HSBC "is currently consulting with employees about an expected headcount reduction arising from further streamlining," Mr Spiess said in an e-mail. "HSBC remains fully committed to Switzerland."
Swiss newspaper L'Agefi reported the news earlier.
HSBC's private bank in Switzerland, one of the country's largest, has been the subject of reports dubbed Swiss leaks that named tax evaders, drug cartels and arms dealers among its clients.
Mr Spiess said "the expected headcount reduction is not in any way related to the recent media coverage."
Geneva's public prosecutor is probing HSBC for money laundering and it's under investigation by the US Justice Department as part of a tax probe into Swiss banks. HSBC has said it overhauled compliance and risk controls since a data theft in 2008 that led to the recent disclosures. Client assets at the Swiss business dropped 43 per cent to US$68 billion between 2007 and 2014.
BLOOMBERG

728 X 90

336 x 280

300 X 250

320 X 100

300 X600