FIS Oxford 2025

November 4-6 2025 | Oxford, UK

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.

Why allocators need a ‘continuous exploration’ mindset for AI adoption

Why allocators need a ‘continuous exploration’ mindset for AI adoption

Asset owners are seeing a major shift in data management and analytics as AI enables more efficient investment processes. CPP Investments and OPTrust outline how the technology is being progressively integrated into their funds.

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EVENT THEME

The world is undergoing a profound transformation, driven by powerful geopolitical forces that are reshaping the global economy. The de-coupling of international trade, fuelled by proposed hikes in US trade tariffs, is redefining markets and forcing asset owners to adapt their strategies for building resilient, high-performing portfolios. Meanwhile, macro-trends such as climate change, ESG considerations, and technological disruption are adding further layers of complexity to the investment landscape.  

This year’s Fiduciary Investors Symposium at University of Oxford is the preeminent platform for global investors and academics to come together and tackle these profound issues.
This event looks at the challenges long-term investors face in an environment of disruption including ongoing geopolitical risk and shifts in global economy dynamics. By accessing faculty of England’s most esteemed university, this event will leave investors empowered to tackle disruption in their portfolios and working lives. 

Delegate profile

This event looks at the challenges long-term investors face in an environment of disruption including ongoing geopolitical risk and shifts in global economy dynamics.  

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 PARTNERS

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 4 - Thursday November 6, 2025 | Conference proceedings
Conference Suite, Rhodes House
University of Oxford

Tuesday November 4, 2025 | Welcome function
Beit and Reception Room, Rhodes House
University of Oxford

Wednesday November 5, 2025 | Conference dinner
Divinity School, Old Bodleian Library
University of Oxford

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.

MAJOR SPONSOR
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11:30am - 12:00pm

Registration and light lunch

12:00pm - 12:15pm

Welcome

Europe stands at a pivotal juncture, grappling with a complex confluence of historical legacies, geopolitical shifts, and urgent economic imperatives. This opening session will provide a critical macro overview of Europe's past, present, and projected future, and address the implications for asset owners.

Speaker

Timothy Garton Ash

Isaiah Berlin Professorial Fellow Professor of European Studies, University of Oxford (United Kingdom)
Speaker

Upcoming reforms, structural changes, and anticipated investments are expected to foster economic activity across Europe. The region stands at a defining moment, navigating a new defence paradigm and a fiscal push in Germany aimed at addressing the shortcomings identified in Mario Draghi’s report to enhance productivity and innovation. This session explores whether ongoing changes are enough to create a global euro moment and what the opportunities – and risks – are for investors.

Speaker

Tristram Leach

Head of investments for credit and hybrid, Europe, Apollo Global Management (United States)
Speaker

The tailwinds of the AI theme have benefited the Mag 7 at a time when US exceptionalism rules – but will it persist? This session reframes the debate to one about: finding durable, rare businesses capable of compounding value, seeking business model resilience despite technological change and shifting geopolitical dynamics, and the importance of embracing volatility.

In an increasingly fractured geopolitical environment, Europe faces both a competitiveness challenge and an unprecedented opportunity. Private capital could be at the heart of its revival – financing critical priorities in energy transition, infrastructure renewal, digitisation, and defence.
This will demand not only capital, but the kind of vision and governance that withstands volatility and aligns with long-term structural goals. This session will examine the tenets of good leadership during uncertain times and how investors can work together to capture opportunities, navigate tariff-sensitive sectors, and balance liquidity constraints in private assets to potentially transform Europe from a perceived risk to a renewed engine of returns.

Speaker

John Toomey

Chief executive, HarbourVest Partners (United States)
Speaker
2:50pm - 3:20pm

Afternoon tea

Evolving regulatory, technological and market dynamics have reshaped the investment landscape in the first half of the year. Uncertainty remains elevated, with portfolios likely to be tested amid ongoing volatility. This session will explore the long-term implications for growth, inflation and market liquidity, and how investors can build resilient, flexible portfolios positioned to capture opportunities across public and private markets.

For decades, the US has been the undisputed epicentre of global investing, delivering scale, liquidity, and innovation. But cracks are showing. Geopolitical frictions, shifting policy landscapes, and late-cycle macro risks are prompting asset owners to question such a concentrated exposure to a single market. Meanwhile, Europe is positioning for a renaissance, with potential reforms set to deepen capital markets. This panel will delve into the way asset owners are positioning their portfolios against this backdrop while managing the risks of moving away from the US.

Includes table discussion

In a world of stickier inflation, shifting rates and uneven reform progress, uncertainty is reshaping the decisions of savers. Michael Davis will provide a first look at a new global survey across the US, Canada, Australia, UK, and Japan, and discuss the implications for default plan architecture, advice models, and portfolio design.

5:30pm - 7:00pm

Welcome function | Rhodes House, Beit and Reception Room

9:00am - 9:10am

Welcome

Private equity’s enduring opacity has long frustrated investors who must commit capital based on sparse, delayed, and strategically framed disclosures. This keynote will examine how advances in artificial intelligence are beginning to change this dynamic by helping limited partners improve performance prediction and liquidity forecasting. It will also consider the way technology may reshape the often fraught nature of partnerships between investors and managers, and algorithms and human judgment.

Speaker

Ludovic Phalippou

Professor of Financial Economics, Saïd Business School, University of Oxford (United Kingdom)
Speaker

A number of seismic shifts in industry dynamics have created a more competitive environment in private assets where collaboration and partnership are key. This session examines the coming of age of the private assets industry and how asset managers need to better meet the needs of their clients.

Includes table discussion

11:10am - 11:40am

Morning tea

The geopolitical landscape has fundamentally shifted as conflict continues to escalate across Europe and as the Trump administration emphasises a renewed focus on national defence and a potentially more assertive foreign policy. NATO leaders are now targeting defence spending of up to 5 per cent of GDP by 2035, setting up a potential super-cycle for the sector. But this new reality presents a stark challenge to institutional investors' traditional ESG frameworks. What was once a straightforward exclusion has become a complex debate about sovereignty, security, and fiduciary duty. Can potentially high-returning investments in defence be justified under a sustainable mandate that revolves around the protection of democratic societies or are these two domains fundamentally irreconcilable?

Includes table discussion

12:30pm - 1:00pm

This session with the head of Europe’s largest pension fund, and one of the biggest investors in the world, will discuss how it manages investments through a focus on aspects such as solidarity between generations, sustainability, values, diversity, the climate, and digitalisation.

1:00pm - 2:00pm

Lunch

The economy is undergoing profound shifts, from the clean energy transition and the rise of AI to geopolitical realignments. At the same time, our economic theory and other tools for understanding these shifts seem woefully inadequate. The collapse of the neoliberal economic consensus after the 2008 crash left a “paradigm vacuum” that in the years since has disoriented and disrupted policy, politics, and markets. Fortunately, the outlines of a new paradigm are beginning to emerge – one that can help explain structural change, manage risks, and identify opportunities for long-term sustainable value creation.

Speaker

Eric Beinhocker

Professor of Public Policy Practice, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford (United Kingdom)
Speaker
3:00pm - 3:30pm

Afternoon tea

Asset owners are facing a complex and dynamic investment landscape characterised by persistent volatility and unprecedented technological shifts. This panel of investors will unpack the macro forces that are redefining the foundations of portfolios.

4:20pm - 5:30pm

This interactive session with the world’s most prestigious debating society, The Oxford Union, showcases the importance of discussing complex topics as an essential element of any free society.

7:00pm - 9:30pm

Conference dinner | Divinity School, Old Bodleian Library

8:50am - 9:00am

Welcome

This keynote will delve into what the global fertility slide and rapid ageing really means for investors and retirement systems. With England and Wales now at 1.44 births per woman, Professor Melinda Mills separates evidence from ideology, including why many pro-natalist incentives underperform, how gender norms and childcare access shift outcomes, and how these demographic pressures are changing basic infrastructure within cities.

Speaker

Melinda Mills

Professor of Demography and Population Health and director, Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science, University of Oxford (United Kingdom)
Speaker
9:40am - 10:30am

As demographic shifts and market volatility challenge traditional retirement frameworks, how are leading pension systems innovating to ensure long-term adequacy and sustainability? This session brings together leaders working under three different global systems to debate the future of retirement security. We explore the evolution towards defined contribution, the role of state-run systems in driving efficiency, and how asset owners are adapting their solutions to meet the needs of an ageing population.

10:30am - 11:00am

Morning tea

The investment industry stands on the brink of a digital inflection point. From tokenised assets and distributed ledger infrastructure to generative AI and autonomous agents, the transformation of the industry is accelerating. This panel will explore how the convergence of blockchain, data analytics, cloud computing, and AI could fundamentally reshape the portfolios that chief investment officers build including an example of how one asset owner has incorporated cryptocurrencies into its portfolio.

Speaker

Robert Crossley

Global head of industry and digital advisory services, Franklin Templeton (United States)
Speaker

Artificial intelligence is changing the way that asset owners are making decisions by removing the computational constraints that once underpinned traditional workflows. But while AI will democratise analytical capabilities, where that value migrates to remains an open question. This panel will look at the ways some of the world’s largest asset owners are building organisational agility for continuous AI redeployment given the rapid pace of model iteration. These case studies will highlight how institutions can thrive in this new world by incorporating the best of AI and human insight into hybrid models across investment operations and portfolio construction.

Includes table discussion

With geopolitical tensions running high, and the world becoming more dependent on technology and AI, the threat of global cyber catastrophe and attacks on critical infrastructure has come more into focus. This discussion with the former founding chief executive of the National Cyber Security Centre, examines the important shifts that are occurring and the outlook and impact of potential cyber threats.

1:15pm - 1:45pm

Conference close and light lunch

Timothy Garton Ash

Isaiah Berlin Professorial Fellow Professor of European Studies, University of Oxford (United Kingdom)

Eric Beinhocker

Professor of Public Policy Practice, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford (United Kingdom)

Robert Crossley

Global head of industry and digital advisory services, Franklin Templeton (United States)

Alex Humphreys

Partner, Apollo Global Management (United States)

Tristram Leach

Head of investments for credit and hybrid, Europe, Apollo Global Management (United States)

Karoliina Lindroos

Head of responsible investments, Ilmarinen Mutual Pension (Finland)

Melinda Mills

Professor of Demography and Population Health and director, Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science, University of Oxford (United Kingdom)

Ludovic Phalippou

Professor of Financial Economics, Saïd Business School, University of Oxford (United Kingdom)

John Toomey

Chief executive, HarbourVest Partners (United States)
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