Coronavirus, climate change parallels

The lackadaisical response by the United States to the coronavirus crisis is indicative of broader risk management issues and comparable to the country’s anaemic response to climate change according to risk expert, Bob Litterman.

“There are huge problems in risk management that were exposed by the US’s lack of response and delay in response to this crisis,” he said. “Those are paralleled by the lack of response to climate change. These are important parallels and are to do with failures in risk management.”

He said the lack of data about health pandemics meant that financial risk management systems were ill-equipped to model the crisis.

“Financial models use historical data to create a distribution of potential outcomes in the future, so not having historical data is a limitation,” he said in an interview. “But given that understood limitation, the models have performed reasonably well, markets have continued to trade and there have been few bankruptcies. This is a healthcare event not a financial market crisis in a standard sense,” he said.

For a long time economists have been trying to make the distinction between risk and uncertainty. Broadly speaking risk, in the context of models, is backward looking, and uncertainty acknowledges the forward-looking nature of investing.

“You can look back at historical data and measures of volatility- over five days or five years or five decades – and get different information about volatility. This is all backwards looking. When you make the distinction between risk and uncertainty what you are really talking about is managing a portfolio in the future not the past. We use the term uncertainty to make the distinction that the future is not something that comes out of a model it is much more complicated.”

Sponsored Content

Litterman, who was former head of risk at Goldman Sachs where he co-founded the Black-Litterman global asset allocation model, says risk models are focused on relatively narrow criteria and investors need to be prepared for events that are not in the model.

“Some of those things not in the model are known, like climate change. We just don’t know the full dimensions that will imply. Making the distinction between risk and uncertainty, whatever risk says you have to be cautious relative to that.”

Litterman, who is chair of the risk committee and a founding partner at Kepos Capital, uses climate change as an example. If a model says carbon should be priced at $100 a ton but you don’t trust the model then the price needs to be higher to reflect the caution.

“So that distinction between models that look back and the fact we haven’t done this experiment before, means we should price it at the top end, it’s a ‘slam-on-the -brakes’ scenario, it’s an OMG watch out scenario,” he said.

“Countries that reacted to the coronavirus that way – like China, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea – are having a good outcome. The US delayed and said ‘don’t worry about it’ and they didn’t price the risk and act on it,” he said.

“The lesson for the world is clear: we need to price climate risk immediately. We should have done it 20 years ago and we wouldn’t have a problem. Now we have a serious risk management problem for the world – much worse than coronavirus which we will get through. We can’t lose focus on the bigger issues, we need to act now.”

One response to “Coronavirus, climate change parallels”

  1. jahangirnccbl@yahoo.com

    Very Correct and most relevant to the situation.

Leave a Comment

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Sort content by

CIOs’ confidence wanes as agility becomes the focus

The 2023 CIO Sentiment Survey, a collaboration between Top1000funds.com and CaseyQuirk, finds asset owners focusing on agility as they observe dramatic market changes not seen in a generation. Only 36 per cent of CIOs are confident they will reach their return targets in 2023.

CalPERS weathers SVB hit; resilience and transparency pays

Norway's sovereign wealth fund and Sweden’s largest pension fund Alecta are among funds with heavy losses from the SVB collapse. For CalPERS, which only had a small exposure, the tumultuous weekend highlighted the importance of resilience and transparency with the team quick to identify exposures and provide analysis.

Investors can’t afford to ignore China risk: Kotkin

A video interview with geopolitical expert Professor Stephen Kotkin looks at the investor implications of the Russia Ukraine conflict, the recalibration in the US China relationship and where the "real" geopolitical risk lies.

Kotkin talks transition, Ukraine war and western resilience

In a sweeping discussion at FIS Maastricht, Professor Stephen Kotkin argues that Ukraine still has a long fight ahead, China has learnt economic strangulation and diplomatic coercion are a better strategy than invasion in Taiwan - and the west must invest more in its financial systems, military alliances and society.

IMF flashes dangers ahead

The worst is yet to come, warns the IMF in its sobering World Economic Outlook report. Investors will increasingly prioritise safe assets with implications for emerging markets while chaos in the UK gilts markets underscores the risks of a policy mistake.

Why liquidity management will be harder in a post-COVID-19 world

CIOs need more sophisticated tools to manage liquidity in a post-COVID world, experts say, now that the DC retirement landscape has been permanently changed following the precedent of early release schemes.

Previous