Looking backwards is a poor way to assess Asia’s future

L-R: Andy Wong; Grace Qiu; Top1000funds.com's Amanda White; Kevin Bong (on screen)

The specific drivers of growth for Asian economies means a traditional view of asset allocation is not necessarily the best way to approach investing in the region, the 2024 Top100funds.com Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Singapore has heard.

GIC senior vice president, total portfolio policy and allocation, Grace Qiu told the symposium that the backward-looking nature of benchmarks means that they may not necessarily be the best guides when assessing the potential of developing markets or regions.

Qiu said investors on the ground can often make better decisions.

“Benchmarks may be the best simple and transparent rule-based solution you can come up with in a single asset class. But in a total portfolio context, some of these important decisions can be made by ourselves.”

“As investors, we know the investment objective, the time horizon, and the risk tolerance. So, we should potentially take those decisions in-house, and make the right allocation accordingly.”

Qiu said that in emerging markets “the benchmark may potentially be even worse than…in developed markets”.

Sponsored Content

“Because [the benchmarks] are backward-looking, they’re not really reflective of the true [reason] why we allocate or invest in emerging markets,” she said.

“For us, making more granular decisions on not just the asset class, but also regional allocation, in a consistent manner across the total portfolio is an important task for asset allocation.”

Pictet Asset Management senior investment manager, multi asset Andy Wong agreed that asset allocations based on benchmarks are by definition backward-looking.

“Your variance, covariance matrices [are] mostly backward-looking,” Wong said. “Also, it is quite arbitrarily confined. People say the US economy is doing well, you should buy S&P 500. Actually, half of the revenue is from overseas.”

Wong said he has “a strong view that the semiconductor is the foundation of modern technology”, and being located close to supply chains for major manufacturers provides a useful perspective.

“Understanding some of the bottlenecks, understanding some of where the new technology is going to will help us think about where the world actually globally will be heading next,” Wong said.

Wong said investors shouldn’t use today’s use-case – which might be reflected in current benchmarks – to try to assess the investment potential of technology.

“When Apple was at $200 billion market cap, people were saying that even if every phone in the world is an Apple phone, they were overvalued. At $2.6 trillion today, quite clearly, it’s more than just a phone call machine; it is connectivity, it’s ecosystem, it’s productivity, it’s GPS, iPod, everything in one. All of these things we couldn’t imagine from before.”

Wong said asset allocation needs to be “a little bit more nuanced”.

“You need to look at fundamental drivers,” he said. “If you want to understand risk, you need to understand equities. If you want to understand equities, you need to understand US equities, which is 70 per cent of the market now.

“And then you need to understand Magnificent Seven, you need to understand AI, you need to understand semiconductor. So, from our perspective, themes and ideas are an integral part of asset allocation.”

Senior managing director, chief investment strategist and head of Singapore, AIMCo (Singapore) Kevin Bong said that from a portfolio construction perspective “diversification benefits; differing sector compositions; different stages in the economic and market development cycle; differing political, economic, and policy cycles; they all mean that the investment markets will not be perfectly in sync with what is I think, typically a developed market-heavy portfolio, and most of us have”.

“You could argue that some of it is an unfortunate side effect of slowing or a reversal of globalisation,” Bong said.“But I suppose if the markets give you lemons, you make a lemonade portfolio.”

Bong said that it is “admittedly more aspirational than a reality, but there is always alpha potential in new markets”.

“One could argue that active management opportunities are attractive across the Asia Pacific region, in part because the markets are not as efficient for the most part, but also because there’s meaningful dispersion in the region,” Bong said.

“All of that sums up to a picture where, especially for where we’re starting from Asia is an attractive opportunity.”

Qiu said asset allocation “needs to adapt to the new environment, to the new regime; and under the new environment asset allocation we believe at least, should be more flexible, more deliberate, and more granular.

“What is the next frontier? What is the newest area of innovation in asset allocation that we can think of to actually bring our portfolio to the next step?

“Those activities lie in some of the maybe more traditionally called bottom-up or more granular type of activities that doesn’t necessarily fall into traditional asset allocation mandate or asset allocation job description.”

Leave a Comment

How the Future Fund built a TPA culture that scales

How the Future Fund built a TPA culture that scales

The total portfolio approach has allowed Australia’s sovereign wealth fund to capture the themes that will power markets and economies for decades to come, said director of thought leadership Craig Thorburn – but that doesn’t mean it’s not hard to scale.

Sort content by

AI is a copilot, not a driver, of asset owner organisational change

The use of AI in asset owners’ investment operations continues to proliferate but increasingly they’re setting clear boundaries around what it is and is not permitted to do, while resisting the temptation to allow AI to dictate organisational change.

Great power competition: The unlikeable, but undeniable, mega theme

The fragmentation of global power, and big increases in defence spending, alongside climate change and the rise of AI, have been identified by Wellington Management as major generational changes that will impact markets for decades to come.

Private market investors ponder transition investment

Investors putting capital to work in private market transition assets face unknowns around government policy, but the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Oxford has heard that private credit also fits well with the long term nature of transition investments and brings valuable relationships with investee companies.

Why investing in biodiversity champions pays

Delegates at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Oxford University heard how an allocation to biodiversity champions, without any tech exposure, only slightly trails the MSCI World in a reflection of how it is possible for investors to make money in biodiversity solutions.

Biodiversity: Regeneration set to become big investment theme in future

Regeneration will become a key investment theme in the future according to multiple biodiversity themes, according to Gabriel Micheli, senior investment manager, thematic equities, Pictet Asset Management.

Investors balance net zero with fiduciary duty and climate scepticism

A panel session at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Oxford discusses how the absence of policy is making net zero investment more challenging. Asset owners have to work hard to explain to beneficiaries why net zero targets give a better risk adjusted return.

Previous