The three Rs of investing: Risk, return, and resilience

In school, children are first taught to master the basics – what we used to call the “Three Rs” – “reading, writing, and ‘rithmetic”. These areas are widely understood to be the fundamentals of education, and without them a student cannot progress to higher levels of learning or reasoning.

The same can be said of investors. Many of today’s investors have been drilled in the basics of return and risk – or volatility, the traditional definition of “risk.” We know that there is no return without some risk, and we evaluate how much risk is palatable given our objectives. In years past, these two “Rs” were sufficient to succeed. But today’s investors know that isn’t the case anymore, and a third area is necessary to outperform in the future. The third R is resilience.

Resilience isn’t taught as a core principle of investing, but it should be. Investors today, particularly institutional investors that manage others’ money over longer horizons, must meet expectations that go well beyond hitting a target rate of return with a given level of volatility. Meeting these expectations means being able to adapt to unforeseen events or paradigm shifts, and incorporate objectives beyond return. These objectives may be related to targets on climate, progress on diversity and inclusion practices, limitations due to geopolitics, and many other issues.

When investors ignore these other objectives, disruption often occurs – usually enough to cause the investor to make costly changes at the worst time. Building portfolios that are resilient to changing expectations or guideline for how return is earned is critical, especially for investors with very long-term horizons.

Modern Portfolio Theory, as introduced by Harry Markowitz in 1952, taught us about risk and return and the “efficient frontier.”

This was the start of “two dimensional” investing. Prudent investors seek to build efficient portfolios – those that maximize expected return for a given level of expected risk. A portfolio with scope to target a higher return with the same level of risk – or the same return with lower risk – is considered “inefficient” it lies below the efficient frontier. Prudent investors could choose different combinations of risk and return along that line, but never below it.

Sponsored Content

During the second half of the 20th century, before Modern Portfolio Theory was fully incorporated into investment decision-making, there were likely many inefficient portfolios. But as tools improved, fiduciaries recognized that targeting efficient portfolios was both more beneficial and their duty. There are some drawbacks to such an approach, but the goal of building an efficient portfolio along return and risk targets is now universally accepted.

Today, in light of changing expectations and aided by new information, we are now considering how to build efficient portfolios on three dimensions: risk, return and now resilience. Rather than a simple two-dimensional curve, think of a building with a large, curved roof. Points along the axis are efficient combinations of risk, return, and resilience. As in Modern Portfolio Theory, prudent investors could choose different combinations of risk, return and resilience along this line. However, choosing a portfolio inside it – one in which risk, return, or resilience could be improved without affecting any of the others – would be inefficient and imprudent.

A three-pronged optimization of a portfolio isn’t a new idea. Investors have long been aware of a “3-D framework”.

In fact, a 2019 study from AQR Capital Management proposed a theory in which each stock’s ESG score both (1) provides information about firm fundamentals and (2) affects investor preferences. The solution to the investor’s portfolio problem is an “ESG-efficient frontier”, showing the highest attainable Sharpe ratio for each ESG level. Roger Urwin has called 3-D portfolio frameworks that incorporate impact “a game changer”.

For fiduciaries, it may be more intuitive to consider resilience than ESG or impact. If an investor has made a net-zero commitment, for example, then perhaps their measure of resilience is their carbon footprint, as they will be unable to hold investments with high carbon outputs over time. If the investor could meet the same risk/return targets with better resilience, why wouldn’t they do so?

Similarly, an investor may be concerned about being able to hold investments in certain countries over time due to geopolitical implications. If there were similar investments in countries without such risks, it would make sense to adjust their portfolio.

There is a lot of discussion today about whether sustainable, “ESG”, or net-zero portfolios entail trade-offs. The answer is that it depends on where the portfolio starts. Given how new this line of thinking still is, it is likely that the portfolio is inefficient by the standards of our three-dimensional frontier. In that case, there is no trade-off at all, and there may in fact be Markowitz’s “free lunch” of investing – building resilience by moving towards the “resilient frontier”. Of course, if the portfolio is already on the frontier, there will be trade-offs to increase resilience, just like there would be trade-offs to add return or reduce risk.

Given that the role of a fiduciary is to optimize the portfolio for their beneficiaries over time, a prudent investor must try to be on that new frontier to fulfill their fiduciary duty – to maximize return with a given level of risk in a resilient manner. Even under US law, “risk-return ESG” is permissible in contrast to “collateral benefits ESG”.

Some may say that this is simply good investing. But as prior work in this area has shown, there is indeed a method to considering changing environmental, social, or geopolitical factors in the investment process. And it is necessary to build portfolios that are well-positioned to adapt to a changing world and prosper in the long term.

Leave a Comment

TPA: Built on essentials, shaped by levers

TPA: Built on essentials, shaped by levers

As asset owners grapple with the appropriateness of a total portfolio approach for their fund, new ICPM research has outlined building blocks to be considered in the process including some essential “enablers”, like governance structures, and optional “levers”, like incentive architecture. ICPM managing director Adrian Trollor unpacks the framework.

Sort content by

Why AP4 invests with emerging hedge fund managers

In contrast to other investors, AP4 invests the vast majority of its hedge fund allocation with emerging managers in a strategy it believes taps both outperformance and lower fees. We look at how it spots talent and what strategies it focuses on.

CPP Investments: A pathway agnostic approach to net zero

In a fireside chat at Conexus Financial’s Sustainability in Practice forum, CPP Investments' managing director Derek Walker discussed incorporating climate risk into a total portfolio approach, and making a “pathway agnostic” commitment to net zero carbon emissions.

Maryland’s Andrew Palmer on why policy risk is his number one concern

Andrew Palmer, CIO of Maryland State Retirement and Pension System, explains why he puts a policy mistake and the Fed raising interest rates too high at the top of his list of concerns and what it means for how he allocates assets.

ESG data will always be imperfect, despite its critical role

Professor Roberto Rigobon and Mass PRIM's Michael Trotsky explore the complexities of accurate data in ESG investment. Abandoning ESG due to imperfect data would be like abandoning the judicial system for the same reason, argues Rigobon the author of the controversial ‘Aggregate Confusion’ paper.

Investors can help prevent “race to the bottom” on labour conditions

Sick leave and paid parental leave, credible efforts to document pay equity, violations of collective bargaining laws, and employee mobility are some of the metrics asset owners can use to assess the labour practices of companies in which they invest, says labour lawyer Sharon Block.

Serafeim: ESG differentiation is an opportunity for companies to lead

There are four fundamental aspects of driving change inside organisations: measurement, analysis, strategy and communication. Many companies have made the mistake of starting from the fourth step, and reporting is driving strategy, says business author and Harvard Business School professor, George Serafeim.

Previous