How an iterative strategy shapes success at Baylor university endowment

The investment team at the $2.2 billion endowment for Baylor University in Waco, Texas disagreed with the mid-2022 investment consensus that a US recession was looming into view. Instead, they took the endowment’s 5 per cent target allocation to fixed income to zero and bought as much equity exposure as possible.

Coming into 2024, Baylor accurately predicted the Federal Reserve would cut rates by 50bps, and the team now forecast another 100bps cut over the next six to nine months. With this in mind, they believe the rewards will be most keenly felt in small cap equities and that financials will also benefit from a steeper yield curve.

Other opportunistic strategies and tilts that don’t trip Baylor’s strategic ranges include staying long energy (particularly natural gas) due to the Middle East conflict, low global storage levels, and an expectation of continued economic growth going forward. Drilling down to a more granular level, Baylor is also invested in helium.

“We’ve been involved with helium for a while and are quite involved in developing powered data centers,” chief investment officer David Morehead tells Top1000Funds.com.

Morehead sums up the guiding ethos shaping investment strategy at the endowment which distributed $91 million to the university last year to support students, professors, and academic programs in one word: iterative. The team is happy to try out new managers (it has around 80 global managers on the roster, including a growing cohort of emerging managers) strategies, approaches and asset classes and push into them when they work.

But will also withdraw from areas where it is not successful.

Sponsored Content

“If we discover we are not good at something, we will simply stop doing it but if we are seeing positive contributions from an approach, we’ll continuously tweak it to increase our returns from this segment of the portfolio.”

He adds that one of the most challenging elements of this approach is ensuring the team maintain the intellectual honesty to recognise when something isn’t working and the time is right to pull back.

Morehead made co-CIO in 2020 and chief investment officer in 2021 when his predecessor Brian Webb retired. The endowment’s five-year annualised return is 12.2 per cent versus a strategic benchmark of 9 per cent and a typical stock bond portfolio of 8.1 per cent.

But all iteration is capped by the endowment’s robust topdown investment strategy that he believes ensures the most effective risk management. It checks emotion at the door; keeps managing risk front of mind and stops any tendency to follow the crowd.

A top-down approach whereby the team determine in advance how to array chips on the board avoids group think, opens unique opportunities and leads to a more cohesive portfolio, he continues.

Still, and like many other endowments, it didn’t protect Baylor from being over allocated to private markets going into the GFC. Morehead joined Baylor in its aftermath in 2011, and spent his early years buried deep in developing fresh foundational underpinnings to the now 45 per cent allocation to illiquid investments. He says that side of the portfolio didn’t get back onto the front foot until 2015 and it has taken even longer for the effort to finally pay off in strong, consistent returns finally visible in 2019-2023.

Does that mean mimicking Yale, MIT and Stanford is a bad idea?

“No, one just needs to allocate to private markets in a disciplined manner, consistently, over time, and it takes a long time to build out.”

Funds-of-One

With private markets back on track, he has spent much of the last two years restructuring the 20 per cent allocation to marketable alternatives that comprises long short stocks, hedged credit and distressed debt. Key to the change is four additional funds-of-one which he says are already showing extraordinary promise.

Around half the marketable portfolio has been turned over, not because there was anything particularly wrong with it as it was, but because funds-of-one have offered a new strategic way forward.

In another nod to that top-down ethos, the structure allows Baylor to fashion a particular exposure that best fits its own portfolio needs rather than allocate to a commingled strategy that fits the greatest number of investors.

“The asset management industry is largely predicated on finding a series of large-market-products to offer. Doing so enables assets under management to swell and provide extraordinary profits to the manager. By definition, these products cater to the average of what investors are interested in. That average may or may not meet what Baylor needs at a point in time.”

He has also recently tweaked the endowment’s approach to diversification, deliberately reducing it. The rationale, he explains, is to reduce the risk of diversifying away the positive alpha Baylor’s managers generate. A few years ago Baylor had exposure to over 700 stocks, frequently muting the beneficial impact of any positive earnings results or merger, he says.

“We don’t want to pay for good returns and then not have enough money behind the successful strategies,” he says.

It leads him to conclude that diversification is like most things in life – best in moderation.

“Academic studies demonstrate that one only needs 10-15 stocks to eliminate the systemic risk of the market. Obviously, we and every other endowment in the world is far more diversified than that. So, the real question is, can we be too diversified? The longer I’m in this space, the more I think the answer is ‘yes.’”

He qualifies that Baylor’s approach to diversification is only on the margins. The investor “owns everything under the sun” from sports drinks, to makeup, to publicly listed stocks, to aircraft leases and oil and gas production.

It’s just overall he believes in reducing the degree of diversification in the book, not expanding it.

Leave a Comment

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

In an environment where multiple risks are emerging and their effects are compounding on the portfolio, CPP Investments' chief risk officer Priti Singh says the $572 billion fund is rethinking risk management from the ground up, shifting from reaction to preparation and embedding risk thinking earlier in investment decisions. She speaks to Amanda White about the fund's risk approach.

Sort content by

Best practice de-cumulatisation: a hybrid approach

Given annuitisation of retirement income is no longer compulsory in UK defined contribution funds, NEST has set out to uncover what best practice retirement income distribution looks like. The solution is a hybrid of flexibility and insurance – at low cost. Amanda White spoke to NEST chief investment officer, Mark Fawcett. One of the newest

AustralianSuper’s insourcing journey

By 2018 AustralianSuper will be managing about A$50 billion ($38 billion) of assets in-house. Chief investment officer of the A$84 billion($64 billion)  fund explains the logic behind the move to David Rowley. AustralianSuper is rapidly redefining the limits of what a large Australian institutional fund can be.  Projected to double its A$84 billion ($64 billion)

Asset owners take charge of the tender process

A candid feedback loop from asset owners to managers following a tender process will help raise the standard of transparency and appropriate offerings in the industry. Chief financial officer of Denmark’s Lønmodtagernes Dyrtidsfond (LD), Lars Wallberg, who has just overseen a full manager overhaul after a rigorous and deliberate tender process has advice to both

All aboard the change express as Railpen leaves the station

At the end of a corporate review process that lasted eight months, involved 23 meetings of a steering committee and produced 60 working papers, the UK railways pension fund Railpen was left with 422 action items. “We’ve done 224 of them,” Chris Hitchen, Railpen chief executive, told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium (FIS) at Harvard University.

Good for Harvard, good for the world: Why HMC embraced ESG with a passion

Harvard Management Corporation (HMC) signed up to the UN-supported Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) less than a year ago, but the company that manages the $36 billion Harvard University endowment is already moving rapidly to build environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors into every investment decision it makes. Jane Mendillo, president and chief executive of

Behind the long-horizon equities mandate at The Pensions Trust

How to implement long-term ideology is one of the enduring questions for investors. Unilever UK Pension Fund, The Pensions Trust and the Environment Agency Pension Fund have collectively allocated $750 million to the start-up, Ownership Capital, for its long-horizon engagement-focused strategy. For The Pensions Trust chief investment officer, the decision to allocate to a specialist

Previous