Asset owners pressing the reset button

The synergy of talented individuals working together is the key to unlocking organisational and portfolio alpha, according to an indepth new study of 26 asset owners including the Future Fund. The study’s author Roger Urwin of the Thinking Ahead Institute discusses the challenges and opportunities of this combinatorial power.

The Thinking Ahead Institute collaborated with the Future Fund and 25 other asset owners in an in-depth exploration of asset owner practices, the TAI Asset Owner Peer Study. These asset owners were carefully chosen for their robust governance, substantial size, and global perspectives. The group included nine from the Americas, eight from Europe, and nine from the Asia Pacific region—a well-balanced representation drawn from major pension funds and sovereign wealth funds. My privilege as the author was to get considerable attention from C-suite executives working through peak busy times.

The soft stuff

Among the peers, a recurring theme emerged: “the soft stuff is the hard stuff.” In conversations with CEOs and CIOs, people-related issues surfaced a remarkable 436 times. The context centred on how asset owners attract, develop, and deploy their professionals to achieve the hard-won “organisational alpha” via a combination of people, processes, and capital. This synthesis occurs through effective governance, organizational culture, talent management, leadership and technology.

The study examined alpha from two perspectives: the portfolio (how it is constructed to add value) and the organisation (how the organisation is able to add value in creating the portfolio). One success factor stood out: the synergy of talented individuals working together.

While managing complexity and workload growth remain the top challenge for 73 per cent of the group, attracting and retaining talent closely follows at 65 per cent. The quality of asset owner teams is definitely improving, but it must continue to do so given growing complexity and shifting risk landscape. An overwhelming 88 per cent of respondents believe that systemic risks – such as climate change and geopolitical tensions – will increase over the next 5-10 years, while all the peers present to discuss the results thought that systemic risks are seriously under-estimated and need urgent attention. In an investment landscape marked by heightened risk and uncertainty, critical thinking is paramount. Relationship capital, supporting innovative ideas, becomes very valuable. The group emphasized the need for risk management to broaden, deepen, and lengthen its scope.

Organisations’ successful evolution hinges on self-awareness, informed by peers and competitors. As we face an uncertain future—one that may differ significantly from the past and won’t be as kind as the past has been —this self-awareness becomes even more critical.

Sponsored Content

Our study highlighted the importance of collaboration and combinatorial benefits in a myriad ways. Teams play the central role in decision-making; insourcing and outsourcing complement each other; investment and tech specialists require a shared language; collaborative stewardship models are on the rise; collective action and systems leadership gain prominence. Being joined-up has developed a golden aura in which the whole truly exceeds the sum of its parts.

But this combinatorial power is a big ask in three respects: first, in requiring integrative thinking – adapting to inevitable trade-offs between opposing points and building creative combinations that work better than siloed answers; second, in applying systems thinking – connecting dots, spotting patterns, and socialising solutions; and, third, in using systems leadership to see problems as shared challenges and approaching them holistically to produce cooperative solutions.

To adapt, CEOs and CIOs need to work on cultivating inward savvy (authenticity, self-awareness, critical thinking, visionary insight, and emotional intelligence), and outward agility (acting as ambassadors, authoritative voices, collaborators, diplomats, and experts).

The hard stuff

These asset owners are very capable organisations. For 73 per cent of them, governance is a strength. For the remainder governance comes with constraints more to do with the organisational settings from the past than the board of the present.

These organisations, by and large, have good boards although the proportion of independent experts should surely be higher – the group average came in at around 49 per cent. If these asset owners are going to do justice to their increasing challenges, they will need boards with greater domain knowledge and cognitive diversity. One hopeful sign is that most boards have increased their female representation to 41 per cent.

Two significant challenges loomed large to all funds: portfolio construction and sustainability integration. Regarding portfolios, the trend leans toward total portfolio approaches (TPA) in which every investment competes for capital based on meeting fund goals rather than the benchmark comparisons that drive strategic asset allocation approaches (SAA). Currently, 35 per cent have adopted TPA, and a further 54 per cent are moving in that direction.

Sustainability-wise, 65 per cent of these funds embrace universal ownership and 3D investing where funds seek to balance risk, return and real-world impacts on the premise that “the returns we need can only come from a well-functioning system, and we, alongside others, can contribute to its success.” A total of 69 per cent have a commitment to net-zero.

The peers all recognise their transformation to a more complex business model pursuing multiple objectives. Achieving this transformation demands vision, process, and above all innovative thinking. Like the use of balanced scorecards to mark progress and support decisions (this had total support in the peer discussions). And like the deepening of investment beliefs to dial in systems thinking.

But here’s the rub: just when change is paramount, asset owners are grappling with peak busy conditions. Business-as-usual grows ever more complex, so the critical initiatives in business-beyond-usual struggle for attention. Asset owners need to work on a simplification response to complexity; and to streamline the investment model using total portfolio thinking and 3D investing; and address risk in both its traditional shape and its systemic form in which climate risk and geopolitical risk have escalated. This will involve assessing risk more broadly, deeply and accurately with long-term considerations ascendant. They will need to think in systems terms to build the resilience for the rocky road ahead.

These asset owners are smart and know the direction of travel required. They know they need a system to manage a system. They are prepared to adapt but they will need agility and grit to be successful with the re-set button.

Roger Urwin is global head of investment content at WTW and co-founder of the Thinking Ahead Institute.

Asset Owner:Future Fund

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Global critique calls for Aussie reform

A global working group of pension experts critiqued the Australian system at the recent ICPM meeting in Sydney. They emphasised a desperate need for the system to move from accumulation to retirement income, reduce complexity, focus on retirees (not 40-year olds) and be holistic. After all, they said, the purpose of a pension system is about paying pensions not investment.

Washington State’s secret sauce

A big contributor to the long-term top decile performance of the Washington State Investment Board has been its high allocation to private markets. But it is not just the high allocation that sets the fund apart from its peers, it’s also the nature of the relationships with its GPs. Amanda White speaks to retiring CIO Gary Bruebaker about the fund's secret sauce.

Denmark’s Sampension favours CLOs

Sampension, the DKK325.6 billion labour-market Danish pension fund has found a rich seam investing in AAA-rated CLOs where it earns a pick-up from traditional fixed income in loans with low default rates. The head of credit Anders Tauber Lassen says the fund feels "quite comfortable taking this type of risk".

Looking less at the scoreboard

Traditional performance monitoring reports do more harm than good, argues Phil Edwards, who suggests a more effective monitoring framework shifts the focus away from performance numbers and towards the fundamental characteristics of the stocks held in the portfolio, perhaps borrowing some elements from private markets.

NZ Super reviews reference portfolio

The NZ$43 billion ($27 billion) New Zealand Super Fund is undergoing its five-yearly review of its reference portfolio, an innovative and unique asset allocation reference point that allows the fund to benchmark the performance of its actual portfolio and any value added through active management.

Bridgewater and UTIMCO talk China

The $41 billion University of Texas Investment Management has been investing in China since 2007 and its CIO, Britt Harris says it “must be taken seriously”. Presenting at the endowment's board meeting, co-CIO of Bridgewater, Bob Prince, agreed, saying “China is too big to avoid”.

Previous