Fiduciary duty in dysfunctional markets

Investment theme stockmarket and finance business analysis stockmarket with digital tablet

Financial markets play a central role in the capitalist economy, allocating new savings to productive investment, acting as a signalling device to corporate management, and providing liquidity to investors.

The efficient markets paradigm claims that competition among investors keeps asset prices close to fair value, but a new interpretation contends that stock markets have morphed into a contest between two sets of investors: those seeking short-term gain matched against those targeting long-term value. This unending battle corrupts prices, creates macroeconomic instability and costs vast sums in asset management fees.

The new paradigm highlights the role played by principal-agent relationships in leading investors and corporations to focus on short-term share price movements at the expense of long-run cashflows. A cascade of agency issues runs from savers to asset owners, on to asset managers and ultimately into corporate boardrooms. Agency problems at every level in this chain give rise to a pervasive short-termism that reduces long-run returns to savers while imposing substantial costs on wider society.

We focus on the key link in this chain: the actions of asset owners in delegating responsibility to asset managers. When setting the terms of the contract, asset owners often impose tracking error constraints that limit the scope for divergence from benchmark returns in the short term. Even in the absence of such constraints, managers have a strong commercial incentive to avoid a sustained period of underperformance. As a result, the management of career risk often prevails over long-term decision-making.

The focus on short-term performance constitutes the original sin of investing and leads to many of the problems in asset pricing and asset management. Managers respond to underperformance by reducing underweight positions in assets with rising prices which they had previously spurned. These purchases penalise long-term returns and amplify the price rise leading to overvaluation.

A related problem is the propensity for asset owners to hire recently successful managers and fire unsuccessful ones, thereby creating fund flows that further amplify price changes in the short term. These pro-cyclical flows incentivise performance-chasing by asset managers while also creating the opportunities which momentum and trend-following investors exploit.

Sponsored Content

Asset mis-pricing and bubbles damage the real economy, creating macroeconomic convulsions and giving false signals to the corporate sector. If share prices fail to reflect the fundamental value of a company, corporate managers have the dilemma of choosing whether to target the short-term share price or long-term cashflows. The actions relating to each objective are for the most part mutually exclusive.

To target the share price CEOs can reduce capital expenditure and R&D, focus on quick pay-off projects, engage in buybacks at high prices, increase leverage to benefit short-term earnings, and use accounting devices to flatter current profits. They may also pursue strategies designed to keep pace with their competitors without paying due regard to the risks – “dancing while the music is still playing” to paraphrase Chuck Prince – the corporate equivalent of a momentum strategy.

One of the great beneficiaries of the present state of financial markets has been the asset management industry whose annual fees amount to around $300 billion. The industry meets many of the criteria of a highly competitive industry: vast numbers of producers, low barriers to entry and low start-up costs. However, the dynamics we describe give rise to excessive turnover, an inflated asset base on which to charge fees and supernormal profits across the industry.

Fiduciary duty requires asset owners to act in the best interests of the ultimate beneficiaries. It can be viewed as mitigating some of the problems that arise in the process of delegation. However, many asset owners are either explicitly authorising or tacitly accepting the use of short-term tracking to market cap benchmarks. Since this activity is likely to reduce long-term returns, there is an a priori case that these asset owners are in breach of their fiduciary duty.

The body of theory developed over the last 14 years at LSE’s Paul Woolley Centre for the study of Capital Market Dysfunctionality and elsewhere suggests that the remedies depend predominantly on the way that large pools of capital are administered: how the assets are allocated, the terms under which trustees and other fiduciaries delegate to external asset managers, the strategies they endorse, and the way they monitor the results.

A more effective application of fiduciary duty to curb performance-chasing offers the potential for greater long-term returns with the added benefit of more stable and efficient markets. By verifying the implicit time horizon of the strategies adopted by the asset managers they employ, asset owners could incentivise a shift towards longer horizons within financial markets with both private and social benefits.

A more detailed report on which this article was based can be found here.

Philip Edwards and Paul Woolley are co-founders of Ricardo Research

Leave a Comment

Dutch pension funds face tech reckoning, warns central bank

Dutch pension funds face tech reckoning, warns central bank

The Netherlands' Central Bank has warned the country's pension funds that their €150 billion ($177 billion) investments in tech companies, representing almost 43 per cent of their listed equities portfolios and 8 per cent of their total balance sheet, is at risk from a potential AI bubble.

Sort content by

Past volatility making way for future steady yields

The role of emerging markets debt is evolving from a return-enhancer to providing some buffer against volatile markets. Emerging markets debt has been one of the best performing asset classes in the last decade but experts say those spectacular returns may be a thing of the past. There are signs emerging markets debt is becoming

Wyoming takes
the passive route

Investors are taking an increasingly sophisticated view of their passive equity allocations, aiming to capture the benefits of a range of risk premiums, while also lowering the volatility and improving the risk/adjusted returns – all at a considerably lower cost than active management. Wyoming Retirement System (WRS) turned to risk-premium mandates as part of a

Ethics not returns drive AP7’s ESG policy

Returns are a secondary consideration to the ethical values of members when framing the socially responsible investment policy of Swedish fund AP7. AP7’s head of communications, Johan Floren, says that the fund is less concerned with socially responsible investment (SRI) as a driver of returns rather than as a reflection of the values and ethics

Japanese fund pours assets into equities market

The world’s largest fund, the Government Pension Investment Fund, Japan, has substantially increased its allocation to international equities in the past year, moving more than $31.8 billion of assets into offshore equities in the year to June.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

MSCI improves factor risk modelling for equities

The most recent Barra US Equity Model, USE4, contains some important innovations in factor risk modelling, including the introduction of country risk factors, volatility regime adjustments, and eigenfactor risk adjustments. Amanda White spoke to executive director and head of equity factor model research at MSCI, Jose Menchero, about what that means.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2

CalSTRS positions for global volatility with allocation changes

The volatility in global markets has prompted the $154 billion CalSTRS to an underweight global equities position, moving assets into cash, its chief investment officer, Chris Ailman, said.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous