Annex
5
│
Major financial institutions
180
A5.6
Hedge funds
Table 45: 50 largest hedge funds by by assets at the end of 2010
Total assets
(US$bn)
Brevan Howard
31.54
Man Investment
24.3
BlackRock
21.66
BlueCrest Capital Management
20.5
Lansdowne Partners
14.3
Winton Capital Management
13.65
GAM
13.18
GLG Partners
12.1
Brummer & Partners
8.64
Transtrend
7.6
Sloane Robinson
7.4
Gartmore Investment Management
6.87
Dexia Asset Management
6.68
The Children's Investment Fund Management
6
Spinnaker Capital
5.64
COMAC Capital
5.5
HSBC Global Asset Management
5.4
Polygon Investment Group
5.25
Jabre Capital Partners
5.2
Capula Global
5.19
Cheyne Capital
5
Marshall Wace
4.95
CQS Management
4.7
Aspect Capital
3.69
Cevian Capital
3.54
Arrowgrass
3.52
Prosperity Capital Management
3.48
Pharo Management
3.2
Capital Fund Management
3.14
Henderson
Global Investors
3
Egerton Capital
2.84
SEB Asset Management
2.67
James Caird Asset Management
2.5
BlueBay Asset Management
2.5
Aquila Capital Concepts
2.4
Millenium Global Investments
2.3
Thames River Capital
2.22
M&G Investments
2.2
Annex
6
│
Financial Stability Board global systemically important institutions list
182
Annex 6
Financial Stability Board global systemically
important institutions list
Table 46: List of G-SIFIs, November 2011
Bank of
America
Bank of China
Bank of New York Mellon
Banque Populaire CdE
Barclays
BNP Paribas
Citigroup
Commerzbank
Credit Suisse
Deutsche Bank
Dexia
Goldman Sachs
Group Crédit Agricole
HSBC
ING Bank
JP Morgan Chase
Lloyds Banking Group
Mitsubishi UFJ FG
Mizuho FG
Morgan Stanley
Nordea
Royal Bank
of Scotland
Santander
Société Générale
State Street
Sumitomo Mitsui FG
UBS
Unicredit Group
Wells Fargo
Note: This initial list is based on the methodology set out in the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) document Global
systemically important banks: Assessment methodology and the additional loss absorbency requirement, using data as of end-2009.
The list of G-SIFIs will be updated annually and published in November every year. Therefore, the list will not be fixed – there can be
new entries and exits every year and the number of G-SIFIs may change. The BCBS methodology will be reviewed every three years to
capture changes in the banking system and progress in measuring systemic importance. The present list contains global systemically
important banking groups; future lists may also contain G-SIFIs that are not banking groups. As from November 2012, the published list
of global systemically important banking groups will show the allocations to buckets corresponding to the level of additional loss
absorbency they would be required to meet had the requirements been in effect. The additional loss absorbency
requirements will
begin to apply from 2016, initially to those banks identified in November 2014 as globally systemically important using the allocation to
buckets at that date.
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