Registration and light lunch
The “Canadian model” has long been a pin up for pension organisations and has been a benchmark for peers around the world looking to emulate their success. This session looks at the evolution of the model and the conditions necessary for its success and looks at the personal stories of some of its pioneers.
This session explores and debates the tenets of the successful Canadian model including governance and delegated investment authority; large allocations to illiquid assets; insourcing investment management; the use of leverage and cash. It looks to the future of the model and what is fit for purpose.
INCLUDES ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
Afternoon tea
This session looks at the evolution and success of corporate governance and engagement tools for institutional investors, and looks at why investors must hold companies to account on their understanding of AI, or risk extinction.
What does it really mean to implement a net zero strategy? As more investors make pledges for net zero they are tasked with setting a strategy to achieve these goals. This session looks at the challenges of implementation including embracing emerging markets, fixed income and transition assets.
INCLUDES ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
This session will look at the evolution of OMERS’ investment model, moving from separate operating entities to a unified portfolio view.
Welcome reception | Rooftop, Park Hyatt
Registration & arrival tea/coffee
After decades of persistent disinflation, steadily falling interest rates and (more recently) abundant liquidity that were tailwinds to traditional portfolios, we’re entering a new era of increased uncertainty that looks very different from the recent past. In this new era, inflation is no longer a non-factor, interest rates are back in play, and policymakers, facing real trade-offs, will likely be slower to ease, providing less of a tailwind for traditional portfolios. Investors also face new risks including public sector indebtedness, geopolitical tensions, climate change and AI. The dynamics of this new era put a premium on building portfolios that are resilient to the uncertainty ahead – portfolios with more predictable performance, and less susceptibility to tail-risk scenarios and sustained periods of underperformance. In this new era, how should investors think about evaluating their portfolio and their options when it comes to improving resiliency?
INCLUDES ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
For investors with a long time horizon, fixed income valuations look attractive, but where should they invest and how?
Morning tea
The immediate post-covid era of higher rates and inflation coupled with bank balance sheet tightening, has been a boon to private credit markets. As central banks reconsider their hawkish stance, has the music stopped or are there strategy niches that still offer investors diversification, resilience and attractive risk-return propositions? In this session we will explore some of the cracks and opportunities emerging in the private credit markets.
This session will explore how traditional asset class budgets might not be the right structure for making the most of the opportunities presented by the net zero challenge. It will explore the need for flexibility, the role of private assets and the need to look between the cracks for investment opportunities.
INCLUDES ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
Lunch
Artificial Intelligence, at its core a prediction technology, has the power to disrupt industries and companies with opportunities and threats in equal measure. This session examines the disruptive economics of AI and how investors can identify the winners and losers.
There is a lot of hype around AI and its potential to revolutionise businesses, but how can asset owners invest in AI? This session looks at how the various waves of AI will flow through businesses, who is benefiting and over what time frame.
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.
Afternoon tea
In today’s increasingly complex world, investors are taking on more and more risk to achieve the same returns in a system prioritizing shorter time horizons. This session will explore the misalignment in the industry and how actors at each level of the investment chain must play a bigger game to regain investor trust and realign toward long-term value creation.
Conference dinner | Art Gallery of Ontario, Galleria Italia
Registration & arrival tea/coffee
This session examines the evolution and revolution of risk management including the use and impact of machine learning.
This session examines the evolution and revolution of risk management including how leading investors are incorporating geopolitical and climate risk in their portfolio construction.
INCLUDES ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
Morning tea
Based on new research this session looks at innovative approaches to asset allocation that consider liquidity, risk, return and flexibility.
A total portfolio approach overcomes the governance, benchmark and inertia drags inherent in strategic asset allocation, and can add returns of 50-100 basis points above strategic asset allocation according to its supporters. This session will look at the evolution in total portfolio management and the benefits and difficulties for funds.
Lunch
This session examines the success drivers of long-term investing and the toolkit available to investors to ensure their decisions, people, and stakeholders are aligned with the long term.
CEM Benchmarking has been measuring the governance, cost and performance of more than 300 pension funds globally for more than 30 years. This session explores the observations of best practice from that data set and invites panellists to discuss the implications for investment team structure, investment access and partnerships, decision making and cost.