PGGM’s quest for cultural change

The world is changing so rapidly, traditional five-year investment plans are increasingly difficult to implement. Asset owners, head-down and concentrating on just the next five-years, risk “opening the curtains” to find the world around them has moved on much faster than they realised, said Geraldine Leegwater, CIO, PGGM speaking at FIS in Maastricht.

Leegwater, who took the helm in 2020, cited new European ESG legislation as an example of the fast-changing investment landscape. Elsewhere, NGOs are putting more pressure on investors and pension fund participants are demanding action. “You cannot work with a five-year plan because the world is changing. There needs to be a better solution,” she said.

Leegwater urged delegates to come up with a vision that extends into the future. “Let’s go to 2030 and look at what the world will be like and what this means for pension funds and goals in the investment portfolio,” she said, adding that five-year plans accentuate the gap between the financial world and the real world.

PGGM’s current five-year plan dates from 2019. It is focused on sustainability and ESG integration, including an allocation to SDG compliant investments. Strategy at PPGM, founded in 2007 as the asset manager for the healthcare scheme PFZW, is shaped around a large allocation to long dated fixed income. Risk assets comprise real estate and listed and non-listed equities in a long-term strategy that avoids tactical allocations and is increasingly focused on providing inflation protection, she said.

Knowing what you own

Sustainable investment involves many active decisions – even if investors are tracking a benchmark ESG integration involves taking out pieces of that investment universe.  Given the scale of the transition ahead and the implications for risk premiums, investors will increasingly move from traditional benchmarks to “knowing what they own.” This more active approach around portfolio construction will also be driven by the need to invest for impact, she said.

Insight and knowledge of the assets held in a portfolio requires data, also key to measuring impact. It is challenging building portfolios with return targets and impact targets, demanding correlation analysis, a strategic asset allocation and a robust framework amongst other things, she said.

Sponsored Content

Mapping and measuring a portfolio for impact is also easier in some asset classes. For example, investment in infrastructure is easier to measure. While in real estate, it’s possible to measure net zero improvements in properties but these are often only a small part of the portfolio. Measuring impact in listed, passively managed mandates is more challenging. “We have thousands of holdings and measuring what you have in there and all the types of SDG indicators is very difficult.”

She said investing for impact still comes with more questions than answers – and not everything can be measured. Digging into SDG themes is complicated: a euro invested in emerging markets has more of an impact that the equivalent investment in developed markets. Yet governance unknows complicate emerging market investment. It involves investors questioning themselves when they can’t realise impact goals – and realising “you can’t do everything.” Affordable housing for healthcare workers is a good place to start, she said.

Cultural change

PGGM is characterised by a long stakeholder chain comprising participants, advisors, board members and executive officers amongst others, complicating the ability of the asset manager to integrate real world issues and change allocations. However, shortening the chain is also difficult, especially given PGGM’s responsibilities to its beneficiaries and the importance of beneficiary participation. For example, PGGM’s  seven SDG goals are based on the issues its participants care most about.

PGGM’s strong culture has been shaped by these multiple layers, ensuring issues are thoroughly debated and analysed. Now Leegwater’s priority is to try and foster a culture that also contributes to a bigger goal and avoids silos. She espoused the importance of looking at people’s potential rather than at what they have done in the past, and said PPGM, with one main client, was able to do something different to a typical commercial asset manager.

One way to achieve this kind of change is via incentives aligned to team goals. “It is about finding people around you with the same language and drive,” she said.

Leegwater concluded that it will be difficult to fulfil PGGM’s impact goals and the Netherland’s new pension contract if the asset manager continues to stick to the way it has worked in the past. “Sometimes you need to change the tools to achieve your goals,” she said.

 

 

 

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

Macro risks, opportunities prompt rethink of portfolios

Investment heads at large global funds are cutting down on risk, making higher allocations to equities and shifting focus to absolute returns as they reorganise portfolios to future-proof against global macro risks on the horizon, and to take advantage of potential opportunities, the Fiduciary Investors Symposium has heard.

Nobel laureate advises a different focus on risk to enhance returns

Nobel Prize-winning economist Myron Scholes advises investors to think differently about risk to improve the way it is managed, to help boost returns. He told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium the focus of asset owners should shift from thinking of risk as a constant to considering how risks are changing.

Flawed Fed encouraging excessive risk taking

An increasing willingness of regulators to bail out investors at times of crises is reducing the competitive environment in which banks and financial institutions operate, the Fiduciary investors Symposium at Stanford University has heard. It is also encouraging more risky behaviour, and creating a fragile system in the longer run.

FIS Stanford 2024 Gallery

mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

The trait that will define ‘the California model’, according to CalPERS

Allocation to climate solutions and the ability to generate alpha from that across asset classes are what will define the future “California model”, according to CalPERS managing director of sustainable investment, Peter Cashion.

CFA’s tools for tackling net zero provoke investing infrastructure re-think

Foundational research by CFA Institute aims to prompt the best minds in the asset management and asset owner communities to consider how to better consider climate risk. Institute chief executive Marg Franklin says governance, organisational design and systems thinking will be core elements of how the industry evolves its thinking and

Previous