Tag Archives: calendar

New Funds: October 21

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4dc5971c-374a-11e3-b42e-00144feab7de.html#ixzz2iXVJIIAx ● US fund house Legg Mason Global Asset Management has launched the Legg Mason Western Asset Senior Loans fund to provide exposure to debt securities and non-investment grade loans. ● UK fund company Schroders has launched a new catastrophe bond fund, the Schroder GAIA Cat Bond fund, on its Luxembourg-domiciled Ucits platform, to invest in regions with a high concentration of insured wealth. ● Natixis Asset Management has unveiled the Natixis Global Risk Parity fund, which will invest in a wide range of asset classes, from equities to commodities, real estate and emerging market debt. ● Willstone Management, a UK-based art investment company, has obtained $100m from two New York hedge funds to launch what it claims is the first sizeable dedicated art-lending business for Europe. ● Three seasoned activist investors, Blake Nixon, Max Lesser and Christopher Mills, have joined forces to launch investment vehicle Worsley Investors as part of a new venture, Worsley Asset Management. The fund will take strategic holdings in UK small-cap companies that are trading at deep discounts to their latent value. ● Baring Asset Management is to launch the Baring European Opportunities fund to invest in smaller European companies, which it believes are substantially under-researched compared to larger cap stocks. ● AXA is expanding its €3bn smart beta range with the launch of the AXA WF Global SmartBeta Equity, a Luxembourg-domiciled Sicav. ● BlackRock’s ETF arm, iShares, has created a range of five ultra-short and short-duration bond ETFs designed as alternatives to money market funds. The ETFs, which are the first passive products in this space in Europe, carry total expense ratios between 20 and 45bp. ● FinEx has launched a physically backed gold ETF on the Irish Stock Exchange, which will be cross-listed in Moscow in a bid to drive the development of the Russian ETF industry. Continue reading

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EU Lawmakers Freeze Plan To Cap Food For Fuel

By Barbara Lewis BRUSSELS | Thu Oct 17, 2013 (Reuters) – EU lawmakers deferred on Wednesday plans to curb the use of fuels made from food crops, providing a reprieve for some in the bio-energy industry, but raising the risk of higher grain prices in the future. The decision brakes for now a policy U-turn from the European Commission, the EU executive, which had said certain kinds of biofuels had to be limited after earlier encouraging them. But on Wednesday, the European Parliament’s environment committee failed to give the go-ahead for EU negotiators to begin work on a legal text to implement the cap, making it unlikely anything can be agreed before 2015. The proposal has divided EU member states and industry. Those involved in turning food crops into fuel, known as first-generation biofuels, argued more time and more hard evidence was needed before a policy shift. “Any change to the current legislative framework requires solid and verifiable scientific evidence,” agricultural and biofuel organizations, including the European Biodiesel Board and bioethanol lobby ePURE, said in a letter to lawmakers. Environmentalists and those working on an advanced generation of biodiesel and bioethanol made from algae or waste had urged a quick decision. Delay is now likely to be long because the European Parliament has elections next year and a new set of Commissioners will be appointed creating a legislative hiatus. “This is bad news for industry and investors who need clarity,” Kare Riis Nielsen, director of European affairs at Danish firm Novozymes, said in a statement. “Ongoing regulatory uncertainty is jeopardizing all the parallel EU efforts to attract much needed investments in innovative renewable energy technologies, including in advanced biofuels.” Novozymes makes enzymes used in creating advanced biofuels, which do not pose the problems of the first generation, but have so far failed to attract enough investment. LONG SAGA In 2009, the European Union set a target for a 10 percent share of renewable energy in transport, with almost all of it to come from first generation crop-based fuels. Use of first generation biofuel is already roughly 5 percent and almost enough production capacity has been installed to meet the 10 percent target, so the proposed cap could have forced plant closures. Biofuels, such as ethanol made from sugar or biodiesel from rapeseed, are blended with conventional transport fuels and added to vehicle fuel tanks. They were meant to reduce transport carbon emissions and cut Europe’s dependence on imported oil. But evidence began to emerge that Europe’s thirst for biofuels was inflating global food prices and that some biofuels were even more harmful to the climate than fossil fuels. The problem is that crops such as rapeseed oil, palm oil from Malaysia or soyoil from the Americas, can displace food production into new areas, forcing forest clearance and the draining of peat land, as well as adding to food prices. (Reporting by Barbara Lewis) Continue reading

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Kior To Get $100 Million From Khosla And Gates For Biofuel Plant

By Justin Doom – Oct 21, 2013 Kior Inc. (KIOR), operator of the first U.S. commercial-scale cellulosic biofuel plant, received commitments for $100 million in financing from Khosla Ventures LLC and Gates Ventures LLC to expand production at its Columbus, Mississippi, plant. Kior issued $42.5 million in convertible debt to Khosla Ventures, which also agreed to purchase as much as $42.5 million of shares in the Pasadena, Texas-based biofuel company after it raises enough to build its Columbus II project, according to a statement today. Gates Ventures bought a $7.5 million equity stake and will purchase an additional $7.5 in stock when the plant is fully funded. Kior expects to complete financing for the $225 million Columbus II plant through a debt offering, according to the statement. Vinod Khosla and his Khosla Ventures committed another $50 million to the plant last month. Khosla Ventures is Kior’s largest shareholder, with a 26 percent stake, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Columbus site went into production in October and has annual capacity of as much as 13 million gallons (49 million liters) of transportation fuel from wood waste and non-food crops, the company said. The Columbus II addition is expected to double that to 26 million gallons. Kior said in August that it shipped about 75,000 gallons in the second quarter, compared with a May forecast of as much as 500,000 gallons. To contact the reporter on this story: Justin Doom in New York at jdoom1@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.net Continue reading

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