UK trustees should challenge advisors but government needs to lead change

Around £1.2 trillion of UK pension fund assets lies in around 5,000 defined benefit schemes that primarily invest in Gilts and corporate bonds. With a suite of initiatives, the government is attempting to get the country’s fragmented DB (and DC) pension sector to invest more in illiquid assets and help fuel economic growth, as well as exploring how to consolidate these funds into larger pools.

The biggest UK pension funds like Railpen, Nest and LGPS already invest in alternatives and nine of the UK’s largest defined contribution (DC) pension providers have pledged to allocate 5 per cent of assets in their default funds to unlisted equities by 2030 as part of the Mansion House Compact. Discussions on how to consolidate fragmented defined benefit pension funds have begun led by the Pension Protection Fund and Brightwell.

Rory Murphy, trustee chair of the Merchant Navy Officers Pension Fund, MNOPF, believes the transformative benefits and opportunity of the push are clear, but says it will require nothing short of a pensions revolution if the government is to successfully persuade funds to invest in alternatives rather than low-risk, liquid government bonds.

“Why can’t money be released and invested in infrastructure that would support the whole economy and improve society? All the ingredients are there, and it would help pension funds, members, corporates, and society but it requires someone with real flair and imagination to go figure how to do it.”

Murphy links resistance to enduring factors. Pension funds multiple service providers from investment, fiduciary and covenant advisors have a vested interest in the status quo. While a pervasive risk aversion from the UK regulator has steered the country’s defined benefit pension funds onto de-risking paths. Meanwhile rising bond yields have reduced scheme deficits and provided an opportunity for corporate sponsors and trustees to negotiate so-called risk transfer deals, where responsibility for payments is shifted to insurers like Legal & General who promise to pay employees’ retirement payments at a fixed level – and continue to invest in the least risky assets.

“It’s hard to change from the slow lane to the fast lane,” says Murphy, who notes that the low-risk strategy actually failed protect these funds from dangerous exposure to interest rate risk in last year’s LDI crisis.

Sponsored Content

Murphy is well positioned to flag the issues at hand as a trustee of the MNOPF. The pension fund, which represents around 350 employers and currently manages around £2.5 billion, is illustrative of the strategy in action. The MNOPF hasn’t had any alternative exposure for years and is steadily de-risking, handing assets under management over to insurers. “In the next 2-3 years we will wind up,” he says. It abandoned any in-house investment ten years ago when it switched to a delegated fiduciary manager which implements a strategy enshrined in investment principles and a clear de-risking journey plan.

Trustees tend to be risk averse, admits Murphy. “Trustees employ skills and decision making defensively. They don’t want to do anything that puts them at risk. If they take advice and it goes wrong, they are not to blame but if they don’t take advice and it goes wrong, they are.”

He believes trustees should take a more active role by questioning and challenging advisors view of the world. “Why aren’t trustees saying hang on, this could be a great idea. Trustees need to challenge advisors but that requires the government to fundamentally review how pensions work and the role of the regulator.”

Part of the problem is that many trustees’ lack investment expertise. In recognition of this, the government has launched a call for evidence to explore how to support trustees to improve their skills, overcome cultural barriers and realise better outcomes. Elsewhere, larger funds like Railpen spend time educating their trustees on alternatives investment.

But Murphy believes the lack investment expertise shouldn’t impact the important role trustees play in holding advisors to account. Simple questions, he says, are often the most difficult to answer. “It is these people who cut through the jargon that surrounds investment and what advisors are saying, and remind everyone that pensions belong to beneficiaries because they are deferred pay.”

The MNOPF is also proof that trustees can shake up governance, he says. When the fund adopted an outsourced fiduciary management model, trustees pushed to scrap the investment committee in an important adjustment to governance.

Under the old structure, the board would “nod through” investment strategy on the assumption it had already been approved by the investment committee. Now the fiduciary manager reports directly to the whole board and the investment committee no longer filters what information reaches the board. In another pro-active strategy, Murphy is supporting education and wellbeing initiatives for members, including efforts to secure beneficiary payments twice a month.

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

Aware Super mulls return to infra funds; builds AI-driven data edge

Aware Super is considering a return to infrastructure funds after years of favouring direct investments. The infrastructure allocation currently stands at $15 billion and the fund sees benefits to access a “broader set of offerings” and opportunity sets via fund commitments to GPs, its head of infrastructure Mark Hector says.

Treasurer Steiner on Oregon’s private equity future

Top1000funds.com editor Amanda White speaks to Oregon State Treasurer, Elizabeth Steiner, about the future role and expectations of private equity, how a maturing of the asset class puts pressure on returns, and the private/ public asset mix in the fund’s four-yearly asset allocation review which has just begun.

Why asset owners should not outsource innovation

Asset owners have traditionally counted on external asset managers to pursue bold innovations rather than stretching their limited internal resources to do so. But leading Stanford academic Ashby Monk has warned in a new paper that this long-standing model is distilling short-term thinking in pension management.

HOOPP: Light covenants in private credit are a growing source of concern

The boom in private credit has been accompanied by a spike in lighter covenants, reducing protection and guardrails for lenders says Jennifer Shum, senior managing director, structured and private credit at HOOPP, and warns of mounting risks in private credit.

West Yorkshire prepares to up the pressure on Shell and BP

A new approach to holding the major oil companies to account will see the West Yorkshire Pension Fund, together with a cohort of other UK and European pension funds, demand BP and Shell explain their business plans in a world of declining demand for fossil fuels.

NBIM quantifies the portfolio threat of economic fragmentation

An economically fragmented world, where different economic blocs refuse to collaborate, impose tariffs and restrict foreign investments, would have disastrous consequences on the $2.2 trillion portfolio of Norges Bank Investment Management. Its latest stress test offers a rare glimpse into the concrete portfolio impact of deglobalisation.

Previous