Why active investment is a zero sum game

Asset owners are increasingly under pressure to find alpha via active management because of declines in beta, but active investment may not offer a holy grail.  Speaking at FIS Maastricht, Rob Bauer, Professor of Finance, Institutional Investors chair; director of the European Centre for Sustainable Finance; Maastricht University highlighted challenges in active management around returns and fees.

Drawing on key points from research published earlier this year of which he was co-author, that looked at the active management strategies of the largest sovereign wealth fund in the world, Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global, Bauer argued that NBIM’s 200-odd active strategies weren’t making sufficient returns. Despite NBIM’s low active risk profile, many people work across the active programme in a complex process, but returns at the fund mostly derived from market beta.

NBIM’s active strategies also introduced a conflict of interest, he continued. For example, the sovereign wealth fund was seeking to beat the benchmark but also engage with companies to decrease carbon emissions. This typically leads to underweighting a company and therefore lower returns compared to the benchmark. “It is a trade-off – where do you use your resources?”

Arguing that academic evidence suggests it is very difficult to beat the benchmark in fixed income or equity allocations, Bauer warned investors active management is a “zero-sum game, minus costs.” Still, he noted that incentives for asset owners to adopt active strategies abound. Asset managers busily market active management, but there is little feed back via public statements on what these strategies have actually achieved.

Asset owners tend to mandate to active managers that have done well in the past but where performance subsequently declines. “After a period [managers] reverse to the mean,” he said. Typically, asset owners then take their money out and reinvest with better performing funds. “You end up with one flower in a field of flowers that don’t look so well,” he said.

The conversation also turned to the importance of asset managers measuring alpha against a fixed time horizon.  Manager selection is often based on three years, yet active strategies should match the time horizon of the strategy. Moreover, outsourcing active investment can amount to passing the buck – investors still need to understand the mechanics behind their active strategy.

Sponsored Content

Beliefs and testing

Fellow panellist Peter Kolthof, chief investment officer, PGB, countered that even small returns in active management can make a difference and are relevant. He noted that active investment involves consistency and should start with beliefs; it involves regularly testing assumptions in an approach that should be implemented throughout the portfolio, consistently monitored and results published. “It’s easy to generate outperformance if you don’t have a relevant benchmark,” he said.

Asset owners in the Netherlands are renowned for developing low cost, passive strategies. They are similarly renowned for developing numerous benchmarks, driven by ambitions to integrate ESG and reflect the wishes of participants, said Kolthof. The process raises questions about whether these strategies are still passive – after all ESG integration is an active decision to make the portfolio more sustainable. “These benchmarks make it subjective, and you get to a point where each fund has its own benchmark,” he said. “If you put more choices into the benchmark, what is left for active?” He noted that benchmarks can be implemented by third parties in cost effective strategies and bought off the shelf.

Still, he reasoned that the most important element is for asset owners to create a benchmark that incorporates all elements of their decision-making process. “To me, it doesn’t matter if it is active or not.” This approach allows investors to monitor and evaluate the investment process and consistently implement. Delegates concluded that labelling these strategies active or passive lies in the eye of the beholder.

Private markets

Investors are increasingly switching to private markets to access alpha, adding segments to their allocations that are outside the benchmark. Investing in private markets requires skill – and investing in fund of funds means investors risk losing the extra return in fees. Bauer also warned delegates to be careful interpreting private equity numbers; ask GPs how they calculate their return and if the IRR makes sense. Delegates also discussed the importance of valuing private market allocations correctly. Private markets lag public markets values and are likely to fall in line with lower public market valuations.

PGB is currently building out its private equity allocation in the hunt for niches and corners of the market it is difficult to access via the listed market. “We won’t seek exposure to segments that are available in listed markets,” said Kolthof.

Elsewhere, delegates questioned the extent to which UK pension funds will continue to move into private markets. The rise in bond yields has improved the funded status of many pension funds, meaning that they may reassess their private market allocations – high solvency levels could focus minds on getting rid of private market exposure.

Leave a Comment

Why NYC pensions CIO hasn’t drunk the ‘TPA Kool-Aid’

Why NYC pensions CIO hasn’t drunk the ‘TPA Kool-Aid’

Three decades of investing have given Monte Tarbox sharp eyes for recognising risk and opportunities, and he’s putting it to use as the new permanent chief investment officer of the $306 billion NYC Bureau of Asset Management. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, Tarbox outlines his vision for the fund, why he’s bullish on infrastructure but “nervous” on PE, and why he hasn’t drunk the TPA “Kool-Aid”.

Sort content by

Risk takers vs scalers: Investors split on where to access innovation

Investors are still split on whether it’s better to hunt for innovative companies in the public or private markets. But the biggest consideration for investing in new technologies might have more to do with liquidity.

NZ Super co-CIOs chart TPA vision; hunt for new alpha sources

As NZ Super nuts out growing pains in processes and technology, it has made some recent decisions to change its governance route including appointing two co-CIOs, Brad Dunstan and Will Goodwin, last year. In an interview, they discuss the co-delegation model, the evolution of TPA, and new alpha sources.

HESTA prepares AI investment framework for total fund clarity

The A$98 billion ($64 billion) Australian super fund HESTA is laying the groundwork for a more systematic framework for using AI across its total portfolio, solidifying use cases in research, forecasting, risk management and private assets that all centres on the objective of “seeing risks earlier and clearer”.

US Department of Labor slams OECD on ‘Marxist’ ESG policies

The US Department of Labor has publicly condemned the OECD for “pushing members to politicise their pension systems by integrating ESG factors unmoored from returns”, declaring that it will no longer support the OECD's responsible investment principles and the concept of ESG "a Marxist march through corporate culture". 

Future Fund flags expansion of active equity program

Emerging markets, Europe and Japan are all in focus for Australia’s sovereign wealth fund as it looks to ramp up active equities and diversify its exposures, as the fund grows wary of US markets amidst heightened political uncertainty.

Litigation, fees and structures: Why 401(k) plans won’t jump into alts, yet

President Trump has fired the starting gun on encouraging America's 401(k) plans to invest in private assets but corporate plans remain concerned about fees, structures and litigation. Meanwhile many DB funds are voicing their concerns about how it might impact access to investments, alpha, and change the asset class.

Previous