FIS Oxford 2024

The Fiduciary Investors Symposium is a quarterly event for the senior investment professionals at large institutional investors around the globe. The audience comprises chief investment officers and other senior investment professionals from pension funds, endowments and sovereign wealth funds from more than 20 countries.

University of Oxford event theme
This event examines the challenges that long-term investors face in an environment of disruption, including ongoing geopolitical risk and shifts in global economic dynamics. By accessing the faculty of England’s oldest and most esteemed university, this thought-provoking event will leave investors empowered to tackle disruption in their portfolios and their working lives.

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This event is for asset owners from all over the globe and is typically attended by chief executives, investment committee members, chief investment officers, heads of investment portfolios and their direct reports.

Reckoning on growth: Why tech offers the solution

Reckoning on growth: Why tech offers the solution

Daniel Susskind, author of "Growth: A Reckoning" argues that leaning into new technology will allow global economic growth without gobbling up the earth's finite resources.

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DELEGATE PROFILE

The Fiduciary Investors Symposium is a quarterly event for the senior investment professionals at large institutional investors around the globe. The audience comprises chief investment officers and other senior investment professionals from pension funds, endowments and sovereign wealth funds from more than 20 countries.

MEDIA PARTNER

www.top1000funds.com is the news and analysis site for the world’s largest institutional investors. It focuses on strategy and implementation and is populated with original news stories, case studies and research that relate directly to the work of investment professionals at pension funds, endowments and sovereign wealth funds. One of its defining characteristics is truly global content that focuses on the strategies, portfolio construction and implementation techniques of institutional investors.

VENUES

Tuesday, November 19 - Thursday, November 21 | Conference proceedings
Conference Suite, Rhodes House
University of Oxford

Tuesday, November 19 | Welcome function
Beit and Reception Room, Rhodes House
University of Oxford

Wednesday, November 20 | Conference dinner
Divinity School
University of Oxford

ACCOMMODATION

Special rates have been negotiated at two local properties:

  1. Rhodes House Guest Accommodation
    Prices vary from 125-145GBP + VAT per night
    To book, email events@conexusfinancial.com.au with your name and dates of stay
  2. The Randolph Hotel
    Price is 294GBP + VAT per night
    A direct booking link is available by emailing events@conexusfinancial.com.auBookings for both properties close on November 1, 2024, pending limited availability.

DRESS CODE

The dress code for all conference proceedings and social functions is business attire.

CONTACTS

For enquiries related to registration and event logistics, please contact the Conexus Financial events team at events@conexusfinancial.com.au

Fund managers wishing to attend must sponsor the event. To discuss sponsorship opportunities, please email sales@conexusfinancial.com.au

CODE OF CONDUCT

Conexus Financial is committed to creating a professional environment that steadfastly supports the free flow and exchange of ideas, as well as the personal safety, wellbeing, respect for, and full self-expression of all our employees, guests and partners.

We have a zero-tolerance policy for behaviour that is detrimental to any of the above, including but not limited to bullying, harassment, and discrimination of any kind.

Please confide any incidents of concern to a member of the Conexus Financial team.

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11:15am - 12:00pm

Registration and light lunch | Rhodes House, Conference Suite

12:00pm - 12:10pm

Welcome

This session with one of Oxford’s leading academics will examine the key drivers of our future, traversing economic, demographic, technological and environmental trends and the risks and opportunities of an increasingly complex and rapidly changing world. As the economy moves from physical to digital, atoms to bits, and manufacturing to services, the session will explore how investors, and society at large, can navigate an increasingly fraught world.

Speaker

Ian Goldin

Professor of Globalisation and Development, Senior Fellow at the Oxford Martin School, Professorial Fellow at the Balliol College, University of Oxford
Speaker

A variety of secular trends are spurring innovation and disruption in the global economy and creating compelling investment opportunities. This session looks at some of these trends, the breadth of the opportunity sets and the related risks. In an environment of accelerating great-power competition and geopolitical instability, it will examine the opportunities emerging from a new focus on strategic security.

Speaker

Simon Henry

Managing director, portfolio manager, Wellington Management
Speaker

Are we living in a state of heightened geopolitical risk or in a state of geopolitical panic? Leading global affairs scholar Stephen Kotkin will take us on a history lesson to presence us to what geopolitical risk actually is and what it means for investors.

Speaker

Stephen Kotkin

Senior Fellow at Stanford's Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, and the Kleinheinz Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution (United States)
Speaker
3:00pm - 3:30pm

Afternoon tea

This session examines how investors are juggling increasingly complex organisational pressures, including managing a successful team; resourcing technology systems and upskilling investment professionals; asset and organisational growth; culture; and finding space to think strategically.

This session takes a deep dive into the operational challenges and evolution of one of the world’s largest asset owners as it moves towards becoming a $1 trillion entity.

In a wide-ranging discussion this session will examine the themes of the conference and challenge the industry on the need for evolution.

5:30pm - 7:00pm

Welcome Reception | Rhodes House, Beit and Reception Room

8:30am - 8:50am

Registration and coffee | Rhodes House, Conference Suite

8:50am - 9:00am

Welcome

The benefits of economic growth over the past two centuries, including freeing billions from poverty and making many lives healthier and longer, has put it front and centre as the key economic indicator for many countries. This session explores the drivers of growth, examines the idea that growth must be redirected to better reflect what we truly value, and offers original ideas for combatting our economic slowdown.

Speaker

Daniel Susskind

Senior research associate, Institute for Ethics in AI; associate member, Economics Department, University of Oxford
Speaker

Over the past 20 years large pools of capital have become larger as well as increasingly global and diversified across asset classes. At the same time, the world has become multi-polar and liquidity cycles have become desynchronised. Facing these challenges, this session looks at how investors can best to allocate assets around the world.

10:25am - 10:50am

Morning tea

Based on a paper published in the Financial Analysts Journal and real-world implementation, this session looks at the importance of understanding the macro drivers of stock/bond correlations and how risk models should evolve to capture those top-down considerations.

This session looks at how to better link SAA to investors' true objectives and examines how SAA may evolve in the next five years, what technological advancements asset owners may need to consider when constructing portfolios aligned to their true objectives, and what innovative tools asset owners can implement to reshape investment processes and portfolios.

INCLUDES TABLE DISCUSSION

12:10pm - 1:00pm

Lunch

Human activities have accelerated biodiversity loss at an alarming rate. This decline has important implications, affecting not only the environment but also human societies and economies. While it poses a significant risk, it also presents valuable opportunities. This session will delve into the concept of regeneration and how it can become a compelling investment opportunity for investors.

Speaker

Gabriel Micheli

Senior investment manager, thematic equities, Pictet A
Speaker

Private capital plays a crucial role in tackling the twin crisis of climate change and biodiversity loss. The financial materiality of the degradation of ecosystems and biodiversity loss and the risks it poses to the global economy is clear. The cost of inaction is far greater than that of action, so channelling investment into strategies and corporates that help preserve and restore our ecosystem is essential for addressing these issues. Such strategies can provide investors with a unique opportunity to be exposed to scalable and secular growth themes, have exposure to asymmetric risk return in their portfolio whilst generating real-world impact.

The blue economy is valued at around $1.5 trillion per year, making it the seventh largest economy in the world. This vast natural resource desperately needs funding to support and sustain the existential role it plays in all our lives, but to date, SDG 6 —clean water and sanitation, and SDG 14—life below water, have realised just 5 per cent and 1 per cent of total SDG funding, an alarming shortfall given water’s uniquely fundamental role.  In this session explores how the nascent blue bond market can provide an innovative means of supporting the critically underfunded blue economy.

2:45pm - 3:15pm

Afternoon tea

Research at the Smith School at Oxford University aims to accelerate the transition to net zero and sustainable development. Blending multiple disciplines, including decades of complex systems science, this talk will look at what is working, and what is not, to trigger the changes in technology, mass mobilisation and finance to reach net zero emissions.

This session explores the urgency, significance, and playing fields of the transformative journey in transition investing. Selling heavy emitting companies and buying lower emitters to align with a Paris-aligned decarbonization target does not guarantee a direct decline in real-world emissions. This session looks at transition investing, which sectors and regions will play a pivotal role, and how to generate alpha from it.

This session will specifically examine the role of private capital in the transition and how institutional investors can achieve financial and impact objectives while positioning their portfolios against climate risk. Among other things it will look at the processes needed to identify forward-looking corporate borrowers well-positioned to capitalise on global decarbonisation trends and how technology is opening up new investment opportunities.

Speaker

Monique Mathys-Graaff

Senior director, head of sustainability solutions, Willis Towers Watson (United Kingdom)
Speaker
7:00pm - 10:30pm

Conference Dinner | Divinity School, Bodleian Library

8:30am - 9:00am

Registration and coffee

9:00am - 9:45am

This session, led by Oxford University’s world-leading physics department, will explore the transformative impact of artificial intelligence on science, including health, energy, space and meteorology, leading to real world progress and improved livelihoods.

Speaker

Shivaji Sondhi

Wykeham Professor of Physics and Tencent Chair in Theoretical Physics, University of Oxford
Speaker
Chair

Stephen Kotkin

Senior Fellow at Stanford's Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, and the Kleinheinz Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution (United States)
Chair

AI may be the greatest challenge and opportunity facing the current generation of institutional asset owners. This session takes a deep dive into the world of machine learning and how and why asset owners are embracing AI in their assessment of investments and their own internal efficiencies.

INCLUDES TABLE DISCUSSION

10:35am - 11:05am

Morning tea

11:05am - 11:45am

Transparency builds trust and a platform to be more impactful in generating change. This session discusses the importance of transparency for leading funds.

Fee innovation - focusing on the shape of fees, and fee discovery and transparency – is good for everyone in the industry: managers are rewarded with positive flows, and asset owners gain better alignment and value.

Chair

Sarah Rundell

European editor, Top1000funds.com
Chair
12:20pm - 1:00pm

Investors share how they are looking at global macro risks and opportunities and what actions they are considering to future-proof their portfolios. They will explore the need to align decisions with stakeholder perspectives in the face of an increasing number of external challenges.

1:00pm - 1:30pm

Light lunch and conference close

Ian Goldin

Professor of Globalisation and Development, Senior Fellow at the Oxford Martin School, Professorial Fellow at the Balliol College, University of Oxford

Simon Henry

Managing director, portfolio manager, Wellington Management

Stephen Kotkin

Senior Fellow at Stanford's Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, and the Kleinheinz Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution (United States)

Matt Lawton

Portfolio manager, fixed income, T. Rowe Price

Monique Mathys-Graaff

Senior director, head of sustainability solutions, Willis Towers Watson (United Kingdom)

Gabriel Micheli

Senior investment manager, thematic equities, Pictet A

Sarah Rundell

European editor, Top1000funds.com

Shivaji Sondhi

Wykeham Professor of Physics and Tencent Chair in Theoretical Physics, University of Oxford

Daniel Susskind

Senior research associate, Institute for Ethics in AI; associate member, Economics Department, University of Oxford

Weili Zhou

Deputy CIO, head of quant investing and research team, Robeco
Upcoming events
24 - 25 March, 2026Raffles Hotel, Singapore,

Fiduciary Investors Symposium

The global economy is increasingly bifurcated between the US, Europe and Asia and how the growth projections and geopolitical risks between these regions plays out is of increasing interest to asset owners. This event looks at the return and impact opportunities in the region, and the importance of Asia in the global economy.

1 - 3 June, 2026Harvard University, USA,

Fiduciary Investors Symposium

This event looks at the challenges long-term investors face in an environment of disruption including ongoing geopolitical risk and shifts in global economic dynamics. By accessing faculty of Harvard’s esteemed university, this event will leave investors empowered to tackle disruption in their portfolios and working lives.