Examining the limits of modern portfolio theory

The definition of what it means to invest is changing, according to Jon Lukomnik and James P. Hawley, which means examining the limitations of the 75-year old legacy of modern portfolio theory.

It’s difficult to spot a paradigm shift while it happens, but we believe the definition of what it means to invest is changing.  Increasingly, investors are acting to affect the feedback loops between the real society and economy where value is created, and the capital markets, where it is priced.

Evidence is everywhere.

Environmental and social proxy resolutions in the United States are racking up numbers never seen before.  The PRI has pushed its members to look at stewardship in terms of systemic risks. Money is flowing into ESG- and sustainability-themed products. We read of investor-led efforts to mitigate real world risks to the environmental, social, and financial systems virtually daily. Investors are tackling issues as disparate as climate change, fair taxation policies, income inequality, gender and racial discrimination, anti-microbial resistance, deforestation, biodiversity, and the governance of technology as well as traditional governance concerns like executive compensation.

Even regulators around the world are contributing: The chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission in the US has said he anticipates rule-making on climate and human capital management  issues; the European Union has published its disclosure regulations on “green” funds and is working on its dual materiality framework; and the UK stewardship code asks asset managers about systemic risk.    Even the nature of who is a regulator is changing: In the UK the chief markets regulator just hired the most high-profile head of stewardship in the country, Sacha Sadan, to helm its ESG efforts.

All this is a welcome refutation and reversal of the 75-year old legacy of modern portfolio theory (MPT) that suggests investors focus only on trading and portfolio construction.

Sponsored Content

MPT is brilliant in providing the maths to diversify and therefore extract the most efficient risk/return portfolio from the extant market but provides no tool or theory to improve the market’s return.

Yet diversification only works on idiosyncratic risks, whereas overall market movements – non-diversifiable systematic risk – determines 75 – 94 per cent of return, depending on which academic study you want to cite.  This is the MPT paradox: MPT provides a powerful tool to affect that which matters least.

The result has been the development of a self-referential school of investing.  Returns are relative, benchmarked against market indices divorced from real world needs of investors.

If the market is down 10 per cent, and your account is only down 8 per cent, your portfolio manager is a star, despite the fact that you have less money to fund retirement, buy a home, or whatever.

Risk is similarly siloed. To MPT, risk is volatility, and the cause of the volatility (often systemic risk in the real world that becomes non-diversifiable systematic risk in the capital markets) is irrelevant.

Academic theories have facilitated this imaginary, self-contained world: By assuming 1) rational investors, 2) efficient markets, and 3) random walk theory, MPT does away any need to deal with the messy feedback loops to the real world.  Together, they create the perfect myth. They enable the math. They are easy to understand. They are explanatory. They are wrong.

Fortunately, practitioners increasingly reject the paradox.

Think of it this way: If the market itself were a portfolio, investors are trying to improve its Sharpe ratio by mitigating risks to the real world’s financial, social and environmental systems before those risks enter the capital markets.  And, at last, theory is finally catching up to practice.

Three years ago, we wrote a paper that foreshadowed these arguments. It was controversial, to say the least.  But in just the month of April, three important publications have examined various aspects of these issues and progressed the arguments for investors seeking to mitigate real-world risks, rather than just moving electronic dots on a trading terminal.

Bill Burkart and Steve Lydenberg’s 21stCentury Investing shows investors how to think about systems, the Predistribution Inititative’s “ESG 2.0” paper looks at the impact of institutional investors and investment structures on various ESG issues, and our book, “Moving Beyond Modern Portfolio Theory” provides the first coherent finance theory of why investors confront the MPT paradox.

When paradigms shift, they can shift quickly.

Jon Lukomnik and James P. Hawley are co-authors of Moving Beyond Modern Portfolio Theory: Investing That Matters” (Routledge, 2021)

Leave a Comment

Macquarie: Deglobalisation the next inflection point in real assets

Macquarie: Deglobalisation the next inflection point in real assets

Global governments are partnering with private investors to boost their domestic infrastructure and become more self-sufficient in a geopolitically fragmented world, according to Ben Way, global head of Macquarie Asset Management, who said that constrained public balance sheets are increasingly reliant on private capital to meet their infrastructure needs.

Sort content by

REST case to set climate risk precedent

An Australian case brought by a millennial against his pension fund is a world first and will make law on whether trustees breach their fiduciary duties when they ignore climate change.

ESG obligations a recipe for disaster

Hardly a day goes by without some communication on ESG investing. It seems everyone is getting on the bandwagon. But peers that Paul Bevin speaks to have concerns that virtue may come at a price.

G20 investor group wants reform

Convincing policymakers to reform laws around infrastructure, carbon emissions and other aspects of long-term, sustainable economic growth may not be easy but a G20 group has started the dialogue.

New economy needs big public sector

Widgets are on the wane and disruption is the new normal, creating a need for a larger public sector with more market power, according to the former US Treasury Secretary, Larry Summers.

CalSTRS CIO backs long-haul investment

The investment community’s obsession with short-term earnings is detrimental but convincing investors to back the slow, patient money is a tough sell, according to the CIO of one of the largest US pension funds, Chris Ailman, speaking at the annual SASB conference.

Climate disclosure a bumpy road

Implementing the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures is challenging, fortunately some investors are paving the way, a PRI climate conference heard.