Largest Asset Managers for 2013 Are Watching Rates Closely
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Largest Asset Managers for 2013 Are Watching Rates Closely

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Rising interest rates will force major portfolio changes on almost all the firms that make up Institutional Investor's II 300, our annual ranking of the U.S.'s top money managers.

Asset managers of fixed-income portfolios have profited handsomely from three decades of falling interest rates. But it might be time to pay the piper. When Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke this spring announced that he might take away the honey pot and begin tapering the Fed’s $85 billion-a-month bond buying program as early as September, investors sold off bonds and the yield on the ten-year Treasury note rose to as high as 2.6 percent. As expected, fund shareholders panicked as bond funds declined in value. Bill Gross’s Pimco Total Return Fund, the largest mutual fund, lost a record amount of client money in the spring.


Firms have a lot to lose if clients bolt or even moderate the money they’re socking away in bond funds. Indeed, some of the biggest managers on the II300 — Institutional Investor’s annual ranking of the 300 largest U.S. money managers, which oversee an aggregate $38.14 trillion in assets — are bond behemoths. However, big allocations to fixed income can still make good sense. Robert Smith III, president of Sage Advisory Services, an $11 billion investment firm based in Austin, Texas, says that despite the short-term volatility, fixed-income investments are generally stable because of factors hardly going away, such as demographics. Older investors tend to have big bond holdings, he explains. Corporate defined benefit plans are also big buyers of fixed income, as are insurance companies. “There is a long-term durability to this asset class,” he says.


Read more in the July/August Americas edition of Institutional Investor magazine.


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Switzerland blinked first. In March, the Swiss National Bank kick-started a rate cutting cycle, becoming the first central bank overseeing the world’s 10 most heavily traded currencies to lower rates for the first time since November 2020. It joined counterparts in Latin America and other emerging markets that have been speeding up rate cuts as the threat of inflation has eased. In February, the Bank of China cut its five-year loan prime rate – the largest cut of its kind on record – to come to the aid of real estate developers struggling with debts. But it was the Swiss cut that got analysts excited.
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Bank of America Merrill Lynch holds steady in second place; Wells Fargo Securities leaps into the top five for the first time.
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