BlackRock names Co-Head of Private Debt Origination in France 

Global investment giant BlackRock has appointed Camille de Lamotte as Co-Head of Private Debt Origination in France and Head of Origination in Spain, with responsibility for sourcing and executing middle-market direct lending investment opportunities.

Based in Paris, de Lamotte will work alongside Co-Head of France Guillaume Claire.

De Lamotte was most recently Head of Direct Lending for France and Spain at Goldman Sachs. Prior to this, he was Head of Leveraged Finance for GE Capital, for which he was based in Paris, originating and executing transactions across Europe including club transactions, syndicated lead deals and unitranche financings.

Home REIT tenant Noble Tree Foundation enters into administration

Noble Tree is a charity which helps vulnerable people to find housing and receive support, and was a tenant of 143 properties in Home REIT’s portfolio, representing around 7% of its rent payments as of April. Back in November last year, it was revealed that Noble Tree owed Home REIT approximately £1m in rent, but it was withholding the arrears along with fellow tenant Big Help Group after allegations the manager had failed to receive promised funds to refurbish its properties. Home REIT secures surrender of leases on over 600 properties The regulator Charity Commission launched an …

Salesforce and the power of cash

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Partner Insight: The Dividend Signal

Hot on the heels of Meta Platforms, tech giant Alphabet has joined the dividend game. Both companies’ join Microsoft, Apple and Nvidia as ‘big tech’ dividend payers. Beneath the surface more tech dividends are emerging, with Salesforce and Booking.com having their dividend debuts in 2024. This is a significant development for a space with a long-held preference for buybacks.

The big tech payers are expected to pay out $53bn in dividends over the next year. This figure is close to the $60bn expected from the FTSE 100 index in aggregate – a remarkable statistic given the FTSE’s historic reputation for income.

Nevertheless, the dividend figure is dwarfed by the level of buybacks. The group is authorized to repurchase $315bn of stock this year, almost five times the dividend payout. Clearly, the preference for buybacks remains. However, the trend towards dividends still serves as an important signal for investors.

Maturity hypothesis

Classic theory proposes that dividends convey positive news on a company’s future cash flows. The theory is supported by the positive long-run relationship between dividend growth and share price performance.

Similarly, academia supports the “maturity hypothesis”. The premise is that dividends are a signal of a company’s maturing financial profile, evidenced by a decline in the level of risk and increasing free cashflow generation. The perception of lower risk is positive for the firm’s cost of capital, and the stock is typically rewarded with a higher earnings multiple.

With the tech sector, media attention suggests it is more likely the latter. The headlines of Meta’s ‘coming of age moment’ come after a period of streamlined operations, tight expense control and new focus on shareholder-friendly returns. The dividend initiation is a signal that this discipline is here to stay, and that Meta, like others in the tech space, is entering a new stage in its corporate life.

Maturing financial profiles bring scope for equity retiral and the ability to substantially raise payout ratios. In the Aegon Global Equity Income fund, part of our tactical allocation is to look for these stories which we group into “De-equitiser” and “Hoarder” buckets*.

United Rentals

United Rentals is a recent example of this dynamic. The company is the largest equipment rental firm in the US. Its business model is simple: buy construction equipment, rent it out and later sell it on. Drive past any plant hire yard and you will likely be underwhelmed, but these

Global X slashes fees on European crypto ETPs to zero

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US-based exchange traded fund provider Global X ETFs has temporarily cut fees for two physically backed cryptocurrency exchange-traded products to zero.

The $57bn (€52.4bn) asset manager, which is owned by South Korea’s Mirae Asset, says it will not charge any fees for its Global X Bitcoin and Global X Ethereum ETPs until January 3 2025, when the fee will change to 0.29 per cent.

The two products were first listed on Frankfurt’s Xetra and Zurich’s Six Swiss Exchange in March 2022 with a total expense ratio of 0.65 per cent.

Rob Oliver, head of Global X ETFs in Europe, said the fee cut demonstrated Global X’s “continuous commitment to the European market and its investors”.

Both Jersey-domiciled ETPs are still small in size.

According to Global X’s website, the bitcoin vehicle managed about $4.3mn in assets as of May 24, while the ethereum product looked after some $5.7mn.

News of the temporary zero fees for the two ETPs came as WisdomTree and 21Shares launched products on the London Stock Exchange that invest in physically-backed bitcoin and ethereum.

Admission to the exchange’s main market is subject to approval by the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority, although access to the products will be restricted to professional investors.

The FCA announced in March that it would allow the sale of crypto exchange traded notes to professional investors, but that it would keep its ban on retail investment.

The two WisdomTree ETPs have been launched with a management expense ratio of 0.35 per cent, which the firm says represents “one of the lowest fee levels for institutional-grade bitcoin and ethereum ETPs that are 100 per cent backed by the underlying assets”.

*Ignites Europe is a news service published by FT Specialist for professionals working in the asset management industry. Trials and subscriptions are available at igniteseurope.com.

Hedge fund short sellers burnt by flurry of UK takeover bids

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Opec+ is running out of road

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The trend in profitability is the friend of US stocks

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Europe’s steelmakers risk missing climate targets despite billions in subsidies

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Breaking with Behnam: inside the dysfunction at the CFTC

For US Commodity Futures Trading Commission chairman Rostin Behnam, the irony must have been galling – even if he didn’t show it.

As a particularly contentious open meeting of the CFTC on May 10 drew to a close, Democrat commissioner Christy Goldsmith Romero appealed to the press not to focus on partisan divisions within the agency.

Partisan disputes would seem to be the least of Behnam’s problems.

Minutes earlier, Goldsmith Romero had sided with Republicans on the commission to amend a proposed

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