Better performance and alignment of purpose: The benefits of TPA

Sue Brake

A total portfolio approach aligns investment implementation with the purpose of being a fiduciary, rather than short term or relative performance. Not only that, there is huge upside performance from the approach, the source of which is not what you might think, according to Sue Brake, former CIO of the Future Fund and proponent of the approach.

The return benefits of a total portfolio approach, compared to the historical strategic asset allocation, are not the sum of its parts. It’s much more than that, but the sources of the return are not what you might think, says Sue Brake, former CIO of the Future Fund and an experienced practitioner of TPA.

A recent study by WTW and the Future Fund found that of 26 funds surveyed, those that use a TPA approach added 1.8 per cent pa for 10 years above those using SAA. Brake thinks that’s an underestimation.

“I’ve done some work for a client where I showed them it was 2.4 [per cent per annum],” she says.

Brake, who is now an independent consultant and sits on the high-profile five-member investment and risk advisory panel for the Monetary Authority of Singapore, says TPA allows asset owners to behave long-term, be nimble and innovative in portfolio construction.

The industry is moving away from an SAA mindset where “some ivory tower boffins have decided what the portfolio looks like” and individuals can only make the best of the piece of portfolio they got, she says.

Sponsored Content

“It’s a very elbow-out, hungry, innovative and efficient [kind of culture in SAA], efficient if you’re trying to optimise the value of that small component.

“But what the total portfolio research is telling you is that the sum of all those efficient components is not equalling the whole that you get when you run it as one portfolio that is more coordinated.”

The extra return, she says, does not come from where people usually think namely, taking on more risk.

“A large chunk of it is coming from being nimble,” she says.

The portfolio dynamism benefits of the systems-thinking TPA approach were also identified by WTW’s Roger Urwin in the asset owner study, particularly given increasingly complexity in global markets.

Crucial for asset owners

Brake says TPA is crucial for asset owners, because they fundamentally operate differently from other investment organisations like an asset manager. Managers work well in silos because they are “paid to worry about beating a benchmark”, but asset owners have more considerations in their purpose and TPA is a valuable tool to implement that.

“Great investment organisations, great asset owners, have got such clarity with their stakeholders, because the foundational law that you have, or whatever other regulatory or mandate guidance you have, cannot do justice to the nuance of the risk appetite and aspirations of the actual owner of the money,” she says.

“You are the asset owner in the sense that you’re managing it on behalf of someone, because you’re the investment expert.

“The whole industry just gets so obsessed with relative performance I think they lose sight of what it is that you’re actually trying to do.”

Brake is of the view that short-termism is one of the most prominent investment angsts.

“There are some situations where competition is a marvellous thing, but there are others where it doesn’t help, and the investment industry is one where it doesn’t help because it forces you to become so focused on not being the bottom that you’re short term,” she says.

“If you’re short term, you now have to rely on skill to beat indices, because the long horizon opportunities are not available to you, and skill is incredibly rare, difficult and expensive.

“It’s just not a game that most of us should be playing.”

In some ways the central banks are great examples of organisations with a clear purpose with their sole focus on an inflation target, Brake says, but they still feel the pressure when knock-on effects such as unemployment start to emerge. That’s not dissimilar to what asset owners are experiencing with the politicisation of their investment processes and the need to invest in, for example, nation-building areas, she says.

“For me, purpose needs to be at the centre of what you’re trying to do – a really clear articulation of it, and a clear understanding of the risk appetite,” Brake says.

“If everything is geared towards achieving that [purpose], then you’ve got a better likelihood of achieving it.

“It’s a philosophical thing.”

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

Australian allocators revisit China as AI race heats up

Top Australian allocators have conceded it is time to rethink the underweight positions to China which have characterised their portfolios, as the Asian superpower’s intensifying AI race with the US creates attractive opportunities.

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Falling dollar dents Canadian pension returns; triggers hedging rethink

A weakening US dollar has eaten into the returns of Canada’s largest pension funds as annual reports revealed the currency shock forced a fundamental rethink from some investors around hedging practices. OMERS has pivoted from a policy hedging target to a more flexible approach fulfilling multiple objectives, while OTPP more than halved its US dollar exposure in 2025.

OPTrust: hiking rates because of the oil shock is a mistake

To navigate rates and inflation uncertainty, OPTrust is leaning into dynamic portfolio construction, actively managed options, and a total portfolio approach supporting the belief that inflation resilience is built into how portfolios are constructed not an individual asset or exposure.

What I took away from the world’s ‘festival of private capital’

The on- and off-stage antics at the extravagant Milken Global Conference in Los Angeles tell us a lot about where institutional capital is right on the money – and where it is putting its head in the sand.

NBIM lays out case for real estate turnaround

Norge Bank Investment Management chief executive Nicolai Tangen conceded the $2.1 trillion fund is “not satisfied” with the performance of its real estate portfolio, as weakness in the asset class was a main contributor to three consecutive years of negative relative returns. All eyes are now on whether its overhauled strategy, which includes new structures and sector composition, can turn things around.

Previous