Asset owners fear rising inflation and falling equity valuations

The 2022 annual CIO Sentiment Survey, a collaboration between Top1000funds.com and CaseyQuirk, part of Deloitte Consulting, finds asset owners most concerned about equity valuations and inflation. After three years of fee rises, asset owners are paying less for their investments with external fees coming down, while CIOs in 2022 are also working with a smaller manager roster than previous years.

The survey, which has been running for six years, finds global CIOs notably concerned about elevated equity valuations and inflation. Touted as temporary by most policy makers last year, inflation now looks more engrained and is driving demand for defensive allocations to assets like infrastructure and real estate. For a breakdown of the full results including graphs and analysis click here.

Asset allocation

Investors’ risk perception is informing their planned allocation shifts, most visible in a spike in the number of funds planning “significant increases” to active fixed income in North America and EMEA.

Elsewhere, CIOs continue to de-risk and reduce equity allocations while the majority of respondents said they planned to increase allocations to alternatives, increasingly tilted toward real assets and private debt. Respondents listed the main defensive allocations in their portfolios as core fixed income (61 per cent) and real assets (30 per cent) and said they are venturing into private markets for yield and diversification. For more results click here

Costs

Despite a planned shift towards higher cost strategies like private markets, asset owners reported a reduction in investment costs linked to managers increasingly offering discounts to gain new relationships. 2022 respondents indicate that costs have stabilised after several years of steady increases, indicating total average investment costs relative to assets at 48 basis points in 2022 compared to 50 basis points in 2021. Importantly, cutting investment costs particularly around new products, operations or outsourcing was a key CIO priority in the 2021 survey.

Most respondents (40 per cent) said that their costs had decreased compared to 31 per cent of respondents responding their costs had stayed the same. For more results click here

Sponsored Content

External managers

When it comes to sourcing new managers, most CIOs surveyed use existing relationships with providers and consultants to introduce new relationships. Introduction requests via consultants, or making direct enquiries to a new manager themselves, are the least-used route.

The data also revealed more CIOs in 2022 are working with a smaller manager roster. Just under two thirds of respondents said they currently work with less than 50 managers, in contrast to last year when just over half of respondents said they worked with less than 50 managers.

But asset owners using a smaller manager cohort, doesn’t mean 2022 heralds a further reduction in the number of managers. Over two thirds of survey respondents noted plans to either moderately increase” (31 per cent) or “maintain” (33.3 per cent) their manager numbers. For more results click here

Operations and technology

Technology produced some of the most emphatic 2022 responses, highlighting asset owners driving ambition to increase technology within their organisations. In notable spikes from 2021 levels, around two-thirds of respondents cited the importance of process automation to improve staff efficiencies; 90 per cent are currently channelling technology to improve analytics tools and services; 94 per cent are investing in performance reporting and attribution tech and 97 per cent are deploying technology to manage risk. For more results click here

Risk

2021’s roaring equity markets have boosted the funded status of many pension funds and reduced their need to add incremental risk with three quarters (76 per cent) of survey respondents saying they had no plans to increase risk to achieve their return target. Elsewhere, 63 per cent of 2022 respondents said they are confident of meeting their return target compared to 51 per cent in 2020.

For another year running, the majority of 2022 respondents (68 per cent) said they have a return target of over 5 per cent in contrast to 2019 when only 31 per cent of respondents cited a return target of over 5 per cent.

For a breakdown of the full results including graphs and analysis click here.

 

Leave a Comment

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

As Finland's pension funds prepare to increase their equity allocations to unprecedented levels compared to global peers, they must also navigate a new and unfamiliar risk. Elo's chief investment officer Jonna Ryhänen explains the fund's investment approach going forward and how it will manage stakeholder and media scrutiny as they react to swinging volatility and returns.

Sort content by

Mid-market, asset-backed private credit shines for growing Asian allocators

Asia's growing investors, including university endowments and family offices, are hunting for returns in lower-middle market and asset-backed private credit. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, head of Asian clients at the $92 billion OCIO Cambridge Associates, Prabhat Ojha, talks manager selection and Asian allocators' rising appetite for alternatives.

France’s FRR ups risk in line with longer term investment horizon

Fonds de reserve pour les retraites (FRR), France’s €21 billion ($24 billion) pension reserve fund, has increased its weighting to equity in line with a new strategic asset allocation to reflect the investor's longer return horizon. It is also eyeing more unlisted assets including private equity, private debt and infrastructure.

Asset managers can’t have it both ways on sustainability

Asset managers have recently been trying to show that they could cater to all sides, from asset owners that have spent years integrating sustainability into their investment strategies to anti-ESG elected officials in states like Texas. But Hugues Létourneau writes that they can't have it all.

AP4: Why a dynamic, shorter term allocation is paying off

Volatile markets have provided a rich hunting ground and opportunistic best ideas have come thick and fast for AP4’s new five-pronged global allocation made up of systematic equity, currency and rates, asset allocation, hedge funds/external mandates and analysis. Magdalena Högberg explains the risks and opportunities of the best ideas allocation.

Why investors must engage on the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance

Will antimicrobial resistance derail decades of medical and economic progress, or can coordinated action avert a global crisis? Anastassia Johnson, researcher at the Thinking Ahead Institute, examines the growing threat of drug-resistant infections and the role investors can play in driving sustainable solutions.

University of California: Less is more and simple is better in investing

Jagdeep Singh Bachher, the CIO who oversees the University of California's $198 billion in pension and endowment assets, says that he wants to keep investment simple as the fund removed its hedge fund allocation completely, conceding "it’s not one of the things we are good at doing".

Previous