Aberdeen Standard offers China onshore bond fund
The Ucits fund will seek to invest in liquid government securities and investment grade corporate bonds in the mainland Chinese bond market issued in renminbi.
The Ucits fund will seek to invest in liquid government securities and investment grade corporate bonds in the mainland Chinese bond market issued in renminbi.
Aberdeen Standard Investments (ASI) has launched a European Residential Property Fund, designed to focus on the low supply and high demand for rented residential property across Europe.
While environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors have become an inherent part of risk management, socially responsible investment (SRI) products are, by comparison, designed to meet the demand of specific investors, according to Aberdeen Standard’s William Scholes.
Global asset manager Aberdeen Standard Investments (ASI) is to establish an investment and distribution business in Ireland to complement its existing Luxembourg operation and shore up its European offering ahead of Brexit.
India combines the G-20’s fastest GDP growth rate with inflation lower than in the UK. Local bonds are perfectly suited to profit from India’s economic awakening, argues Aberdeen AM’s David Lloyd-Nolan.
Edinburgh-headquartered Standard Life is expected to choose Dublin as the centre for its European Union operations after the UK government completes the two years of Brexit negotiations.
After being forced to confirm discussions about a potential £11bn merger, does the consolidation of Standard Life and Aberdeen Asset Management prove a wave of M&A in fund management is underway?
News of Standard Life’s agreement to purchase Aberdeen Asset Management has seen shares in both companies take off, with the former climbing to its highest value in over a year.
Aberdeen Asset Management has firmly denied rumours it is looking for a sale.
A rate rise by the Fed is long overdue, fund selectors in the Netherlands believe. Fund managers attending the Expert Investor Netherlands conference agreed and fiercely criticised the central bank for its alleged ‘backward guidance’.
Close to half of the audience of fund selectors assembled in Lisbon believed financial markets underestimate the risk of Greece leaving the eurozone (though at the same time only a quarter thought a Grexit would actually happen. “If some complacency has come into the market we are probably guilty of it as well,” admitted Richard…
On the day Mario Draghi announced a historical interest rate cut for the Eurozone, the panellists at Expert Investor Luxembourg trivialised deflationary risks for the currency union.