Factor rebalancing superior for managing liquidity

Factor rebalancing a portfolio is a better way to manage liquidity and leverage implications of illiquid assets compared to traditional rebalancing to a static asset allocation, according to new research presented at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Singapore.

A research paper, (Re)Balancing Act: The interplay of private and public assets in dialing the asset allocation, published in the Journal of Portfolio Management in April, proposes a new way to rebalance portfolios that more deliberately considers a more stable risk and leverage profile of a portfolio.

Co-author Redouane Elkamhi (pictured), Professor of Finance at the Rotman School at the University of Toronto, who presented the research in Singapore, said this approach allows investors to rebalance to the same underlying exposures – such as growth, inflation, and real rates – without being forced to rebalance to the fixed allocations.

“Generally, we think if you have come back to the SAA and rebalance, that is an active decision at each point in time that that is the best portfolio you can hold,” he said. “Coming back to that starting point is a big call. We need to be more dynamic in the face of uncertainty and the framework we have worked under for a long time.”

The factor rebalancing approach focuses on addressing a number of problems when it comes to rebalancing illiquid assets. For example, during market downturns, private assets can become significantly overweight due to stale valuations and the depreciation of public assets.

And standard rebalancing strategies can unintentionally introduce leverage due to the illiquid nature and potential stale valuation and lead to a deterioration of the fund’s liquidity position.

Sponsored Content

“You can’t easily rebalance illiquid assets, but the way people deal with that is by leverage, which means an unintended active decision that has implications on value-add,” Elkamhi said.

“This is a plumbing issue – a serious issue in asset management. As the privates get bigger it creates liquidity and leverage problems.”

Liquidity and leverage

The paper demonstrates how liquidity and leverage changes with a traditional rebalancing approach and using factor rebalancing which is designed to help the portfolio achieve more stable profiles in terms of leverage, risk, and liquidity.

This is done by considering public assets as complements to the illiquid private assets and making adjustments to the allocations of public assets to maintain the desired factor allocation for the overall portfolio.

Elkamhi said the approach gives investors a framework that allows a portfolio to be tilted without unintended active decisions.

Elkamhi said the paper was not a view on the optimal allocation to private versus public assets but a tool to rebalance to desired allocations without the unintended impacts on leverage among other things.

“If you have constraints to come back to the fixed allocations this is giving you a degree of freedom to give you a better liquidity coverage ratio and to better deal with privates in the portfolio,” Elkamhi said.

“We are not advocating for more privates but if that is the aim our methodology allows you to have more private without effecting the liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) level the same way traditional rebalancing will do, with a huge magnitude.

Redouane Elkamhi is part of the faculty of the University of Toronto and will speak at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium on campus from May 29-31. For information click here.

Leave a Comment

Silver is the new gold: France’s UMR targets opportunities in ageing economy

Silver is the new gold: France’s UMR targets opportunities in ageing economy

French pension organisation UMR has launched a multi-asset thematic program that will target opportunities in Europe’s ageing economy. It’s part of a broader strategy to increase diversification in private markets where it sees secondary markets as an increasingly important tool.

Sort content by

SDGs remain the roadmap out of crisis

APG's Claudia Kruse reflects that the climate emergency, COVID and conflict has put SDG delivery at risk. But the SDGs remain the best roadmap out of crisis and the investor's Asset Owner Platform has become an important tool supporting its quest to invest with impact.

Asset owners mull correlation and pricing risk

Investors at NEST, PGB and SWIB note the challenges of investing in a high inflationary market, particularly given inflation’s impact on the correlation between bonds and equities and discuss strategies for dealing with different environments including stagflation.

Partnering with best-in-class managers yields stellar results for TIFF

A focus on partnering with specialist, differentiated, active managers with help from “the best board in America” has generated more than 200 basis points a year for TIFF. Amanda White looks at the fund’s approach to manager sourcing and the opportunities for alpha in a tough investing environment.

ESG integration wields best results with good data and effective engagement

Large investors across Europe share the elements of their success when it comes to ESG integration and engagement, including in sovereign bonds.

Recession looms as Europe struggles to anchor inflation

Europe's ability to contain inflation hangs on key variables including the energy crisis, central banks' ability to anchor expectations and the ability to stop it spinning into demand for higher wages, argues Clemens Kool, Professor of Macroeconomics and International Monetary Economics, Maastricht University.

The future of work: Key ingredients for success

The COVID-19 crisis was a defining leadership and transformation moment, where leaders have needed to reset their future of work agendas and lead the way to better and more human-centric workplaces. Marisa Hall from the Thinking Ahead Institute says leaders will need to think deeply about the wider themes.

Previous