Absolute Capital has just won a second Japanese pension mandate of 1 billion yen, or $11 million, for its structured credit product.
It is the group’s second mandate from the same large Japanese pension fund. “They had done a little bit of structured credit themselves but decided it was too hard,” according to Paul Harding-Davis, Absolute Capital’s head of sales. ABN Amro does the initial introduction for the manager in the Japanese market and Deon Joubert, Absolute’s managing director, said the group appreciated the vote of confidence from one of the “;most cautious investing audiences in the world”;. Harding-Davis said the group’s retail business was going extremely well and the firm would be looking to hire a few more people, on both the investment and client service side, over the next year.
confidence, harding, cautious, groups, structured, ;most, pension, japanese, davis, investing, second, extremely
Investments
Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Top1000Funds.com Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

















Leave a Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.