Carol Geremia on the need for transformational change

The world’s emergence from the pandemic offers an opportunity for the investment industry to embark on transformational, rather than just incremental, change. In an impassioned call for a different type of investment, Carol Geremia, president, MFS Investment Management, urged FIS Maastricht delegates to help create a new investment model.

Today’s post pandemic world is a good junction for the investment industry to self-reflect. Investors are now taking five times more risk to get the same return as they were thirty years ago. It’s one of the reasons why the industry is now so vast – that increase in risk requires additional oversight and care allocating capital and ensuring diversification, she said. “No wonder money management has grown so much.”

The explosion in the number of asset allocators over the last 25 years creates an opportunity for asset managers to use their influence positively to create a new model. “The only way to generate returns going forward is to create a system that works,” said Geremia who joined  MFS in 1984, where she has spent her entire career to date.

Just moving capital around

Now is the time to examine the structural issues that come with taking risk; explore the limitations of passive capital and argue the case of ESG to be embedded in the investment process. “Do we just move capital around, or do we invest it,” she asked delegates.

The world has moved from shareholder primacy to stakeholder capitalism which requires a different way of operating. “We want companies to focus on stakeholder capital, but they won’t do that unless we operate differently. We are now able to ensure the companies we own take stakeholder capital seriously.” She urged investors to align their operations with purpose, embrace three dimensional investment that integrates risk, return and impact and allocate capital responsibly. “Trust matters; it’s what we sell,” she said.

Extended time horizon

A crucial component in building a better system involves extending investment time horizons. Many organizations have embedded short-term incentives within their organizations: although they espouse long-term horizons, in reality an overwhelming focus on three year performance records means they typically hold a single stock on average for just a few years. This means capital is not being committed for long enough to have any impact on the transition. “The only way to manage risk is to extend time horizons,” she said.

Sponsored Content

Investors need to re-think how they measure performance. If investors are going to engage with companies and try and influence the transition, it requires committing capital for longer, rethinking the ideal time to hold equity. If companies don’t change, active investors can withdraw capital. In this way, companies will have to compete for finance based on their sustainability credentials.

Extending investment time horizons requires difficult conversations and inclusive leadership. Leaders need to challenge incentives, get out of their comfort zones and build alliances with new stakeholders. This includes building new relationships with regulators. “I have never spoken to regulators as much as I do today,” she said.

Rather than argue hard with regulators to protect their own business, she urged delegates to explain to regulators how they planned to change their behaviour to better serve the people they represent. Regulators don’t want to hear that it is hard for investors; they want to hear new ideas and how to change the model, she said.  She urged investors to stop “whining” about regulation but welcome it. “The cost of inaction is catastrophic and a challenge to our survival.”

Limitations to passive capital

Geremia also noted the increasing limitation of passive capital to influence net zero targets and push sustainability. Increasingly, investors will need to know what they own and who they are lending to. “Bad” companies or companies that are not on a sustainable trajectory, should  struggle to access capital. “Sustainability applies to every company in the world. Should all companies get money all the time? I’d say ‘no’.”

Geremia concluded that this approach isn’t about putting companies out of business. However, investors should talk to companies about where, and how, they are making money and insist they are not short term when it comes to measuring results. Investors should demand honest conversations and data drawn from a full market cycle, she concluded.

 

 

Leave a Comment

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing has come a long way in the past two decades, going from a niche strategy to a $1.5 trillion industry, but there are still challenges for it to reach institutional scale due to the lack of products and insufficient evidence of outperformance in some parts of the market.

Sort content by

The future of funds management

Given the extreme volatility in markets, the changing global economic risks and policy responses, what is the future of the funds management industry?

Policy responses: investment effects

The crisis has seen unprecedented fiscal and monetary policy responses around the world. So what are the implications for investments?

Global policy responses

How have different governments around the world responded to the health and economic crisis and what are some of the innovative responses that will stimulate the economy and ensure a sustainable recovery?

Global risk outlook

This session examines the rapidly changing risks to the global economy and the need for new ways of behaving, making decisions and even reversing decisions.

FIS 2020: A sustainable recovery?

In our second feature looking ahead to FIS 2020, we highlight how the conference will focus on growing calls for a sustainable recovery and purposeful companies. Nobel prize winner Esther Duflo will talk on solutions to inequality, magnified during the pandemic.

CPP Investment’s COVID journey

In this Fiduciary Investors Series podcast Amanda White talks with Geoffrey Rubin, chief investment strategist at CPP Investments, which manages the investments of Canada’s largest pension fund with about C$410 billion of assets.

Previous