Friday 19 September 2014

George Papamarkakis honoured at the Sauren Golden Awards 2014


George Papamarkakis was honoured at the Sauren Golden Awards 2014 event, organised by the Sauren Fonds-Research AG, for his achievements as fund manager. More specifically, Mr Papamarkakis received two gold medals for excellent fund management in the category "Absolute Return (Global Macro)", and two gold medals for excellent fund management in the category "Global Macro".

The Sauren gold medals, awarded since 2003, are bestowed annually to the most promising fund managers, among a multitude of fund managers assessed in personal interviews.

Friday 23 May 2014

North Asset Management receives 2014 Hedge Funds Review award

George Papamarkakis (pictured), received the Best macro directional hedge fund over three years award, on behalf of North Asset Management fund. 

George Papamarkakis awarded at the Annual European Single Managers Awards 2014 ceremony


The award took place during the 14th Annual European Single Managers Awards 2014 ceremony, organised on May 22 in London, UK by Hedge Funds Review.


Monday 7 October 2013

Sauren Golden Awards 2013

George Papamarkakis receives 2 golden medals in the annual awards by Sauren Fonds-Research AG for his performance in the Global Macro category.

Since 2003 the SAUREN Fonds-Research AG has been awarding gold medals to the most promising fund managers across a range of categories, and in 2013 a total of 216 fund managers worldwide received an award.

It should be stressed that the ratings do not assess the key quantitative figures of the funds but instead the quality and personal abilities of the fund managers. Sauren holds more than 350 intensive meetings every year with the fund managers responsible for investment decisions – we have built up a detailed hoard of information arising from more than 5,000 meetings over time.


The SAUREN gold medals are widely recognised  as the seal of quality for promising fund managers. Specialist media such as “FONDS professionell”, “n-tv” and “Das Investment”, as well as Internet portals like “attrax” and Switzerland’s “FundInfo”, regularly publish the latest ratings or include the gold medals in their fund comparisons.

Thursday 4 July 2013

End of an era for emerging market credit?


It’s the end of the unsustainable love affair for emerging market (EM) credit, bears contend, after last week's rout exposed a new normal: tighter monetary conditions in the US, which raises the spectre of slower inflows into emerging capital markets.

 For bears, the jury is out about the time-scale of any unwind from pockets of EM credit and how messy the break-up could be, while the optimists point out, though positioning is high by historic standards, emerging markets can withstand the recent volatility thanks to their strong growth prospects. The high degree of volatility is causing concern as funds confront paper losses, value-at-risk challenges, event risks – amid protests from Brazil to Turkey, for endogenous reasons – and febrile market sentiment as investors awaken to the Fed’s tapering of its bond-buying plan by year-end. Most EM currencies have fallen against the US dollar in recent weeks while US Treasury yields have risen, attracting funds back to the US. The South African rand, Mexican peso, Brazilian real and Indian rupee have been hit in particular.

An additional factor aggravating volatility this time around is the current-account deficits many emerging economies are running. This external financing requirement makes them vulnerable to currency shocks and any slowing of the capital inflows that sustain their current-account deficits.

As yet it is unclear whether currency depreciation is a symptom or a cause, but much of the unwinding of positions in debt markets has been from local currency bonds, exerting downward pressure on currencies. Redemptions from EM bond funds topped $2.53 billion in the week ending June 14, the second-largest outflow on record, according to EPFR Global.

Sunday 23 June 2013

The Fed and emerging markets: The end of the affair


THERE are many reasons why a fund manager might want to sell the rand. South Africa’s economy is barely growing. Unemployment, at 25% of the workforce, is on a par with the grimmest parts of the euro zone. The mining industry is beset by labour unrest just as commodity prices are falling. The country’s large trade deficit is a sign that local producers are struggling in vain against foreign competition. The rand has fallen by 16% against the US dollar this year. Only the Syrian pound and Venezuelan bolívar have fared worse.

Yet these local difficulties are not the only reasons for the rand’s slump. South Africa has the financial markets of a rich country: it is easier to buy and sell bonds and stocks there than in most middle-income countries. So the rand is a convenient currency in which speculators can take a position on emerging markets more generally. As the fast-money crowd sense the beginning of the end of loose monetary policy in America, bonds and currencies in emerging markets are the assets they want to sell. The rand is merely the worst-hit in a long list of vulnerable currencies.

In the past month 19 of the 24 emerging-market currencies tracked by Bloomberg have fallen in value against the dollar. The trigger for this sell-off was a remark in May by the chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, that the Fed’s purchases of bonds using central-bank money might soon tail off.