Mercer capitalises on manager research

Mercer’s chief investment officer, Russell Clarke, explains how manager research helps create the 200 building blocks of an investment operation that has grown from $20 million a few years ago to $124 billion today and which covers – uniquely – all elements along the fixed income curve.

 

Starting from scratch in 1996, Melbourne was the first global office of Mercer to set up a master trust and now its operations oversee money – mostly corporate sponsored retirement funds – in North America ($50 billion), Europe ($49 billion) and Australia and New Zealand ($25 billion).

Russell Clarke, Mercer’s global chief investment officer for listed asset sectors, works in Melbourne, in a posting that was broken by a recent two-year spell in London.

Clarke tells of how the first clients to outsource, due to concern over a lack of sufficient scale and governance, were of the order of $20 million. But for institutional investors, what constitutes lack of scale has grown exponentially.

“You know as much as night follows day that the larger clients will do it,” Clarke says.

Sponsored Content

Mercer outsources all funds management to about 100 external providers, offers a mixture of tailored and pooled solutions, and has 200 funds which are the building blocks of portfolios.

“We offer customised manager line-ups and governance structures,” Clarke says.

“We take on fiduciary responsibility.”

Mercer does have some large clients, with assets around $25 billion, where it does customised asset allocation. But most clients are smaller than that, and view the running of a pension fund as outside their core business, and in some cases even as a distraction.

“They outsource to someone with scale, making it meaningfully cheaper than doing it in-house,” Clarke says.

Many larger clients outsource the operational aspect of investing, maintaining involvement at the strategy level, but give Mercer full discretion for manager selection and monitoring.

Clarke says a lot of its large defined benefit fund clients, in Europe particularly, are de-risking, and Mercer has a dynamic de-risking solution to match the defined benefit liabilities.

“This requires all parts of the fixed-income curve to be mapped,” he says.

“We have funds as building blocks and can quickly build a tailored solution. This is a unique feature for us.”

The fixed income funds vary from swap-based funds to 50-year duration, demonstrating the degree of granularity in the fixed income suite.

The fixed income funds are mostly passive, and Mercer usually has just one provider. In the US it uses State Street Global Advisors, but there are different providers in different regions.

Despite the passive view for fixed income, however, Mercer does believe in active management, with Clarke adding that the view is not systematically all active versus passive.

“We generally say you can add value and it is possible to pick managers to do that but we look at it on a market by market basis,” he says.

He says Mercer’s clients “buy us because they like our research, and that having 120 people that conduct fund manager research globally is a competitive advantage.

“They all follow a consistent framework in the research and this adds a lot of rigour and richness to our discussion around managers,” he says.

The research covers over 26,800 investment strategies and of these, more than 9100 are rated by Mercer, with about 2600 getting an “A” rating. These latter strategies are the starting point for Mercer when considering what to use for its master trust clients.

Clarke says that the fund manager research program has added value, claiming that at March 31, 2014, the value added since inception has been positive for 93 per cent (62 out of 67) of the product categories covered in its research.

The rolling average value added figures for one, three, five and 10 years are 2.3 per cent, 1.6 per cent, 1.6 per cent and 1.0 per cent per annum, respectively, ahead of the benchmark. Since inception it is 1.4 per cent per annum ahead of benchmark.

In the US the portfolio team is centred in Boston with most of the manager research team in Chicago and St. Louis. European research is based in London, where Bill Muysken, global CIO for alternatives, is based; and European portfolio management based in Dublin. The Pacific region portfolio management is based in Melbourne.

While there are separate pools of money for the three continents, much of the research and manager line-ups are deliberately the same.

“Over the last five to seven years we have become a truly international business in the way we interact from an investment standpoint,” Clarke says.

“We have always talked to each other, but it has become much more integrated and holistic.”

Another theoretical advantage from this scope is local knowledge in several markets. The economist sitting in an office in America or Europe who makes pronouncements on the relative health of the Chinese economy is a staple of the investment news output, but some prognosis can get lost without nuanced local knowledge. Clarke recognises this issue.

“People write things about the Australian resource sector from overseas, but when you live here you realise how shallow a lot of that analysis is,” he says.

“There might be an element of truth in what they are saying, but they may have missed the other third of the story that is really important.”

The large business clients dotted around the globe provide another less expected source of data.

“From a macro standpoint our clients are a great source of information,” Clarke says.

“They are often in the front line industries where if you want to know if the economy is slowing down, we’ll go and talk to the person in that industry to see if it is.”

In each region clients will have a bias towards their local assets, but their global allocations will look very similar. Across clients, roughly 10 per cent is allocated to alternatives and property, with the rest split approximately equally between equities and fixed income assets.

The Q3 outlook to clients from Clarke’s office says low inflation and low interest rates will support solid growth in equity markets in the developed world where the fund is overweight.

It says conditions for emerging markets are more challenging because of the “build-up of imbalances over the last few years”, but notes that favourable valuations and a modestly improved economic performance will lead investors back into the market.

Mercer’s underweight position on bonds is due to very low yield levels, which suggest returns over the medium term are likely to be lower than normal.

All of these positions are subject to rapid change.

“Most of our clients are fully discretionary and allow us to move the asset allocation of the portfolio… we put a lot of time into the dynamic asset allocation,” Clarke says.

Since April, Mercer has been positive on growth versus defensive assets, with global developed market equities and emerging market equities in particular looking attractive to it.

It views global government nominal bonds and inflation-linked bonds as unattractive, and has a similar view on US-dollar cash.

As much as Clarke is willing to talk up the strengths of the operation, he also readily concedes the relative lack of status of his role in an organisation that runs based on existing, in-depth research.

Much of his role involves organisation and talking to the teams around the world, rather than being an inspirational, investment guru.

“It is not reliant on one or two key individuals”, he says.

Although anyone who looks at his job and thinks it easy should think again.

“You can find real visionary people, but often they are not very good at making things happen,” he says.

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

Methodist morality delivers mainstream returns

When John Wesley, the 18th century Anglican cleric, preached that business practices should not harm one’s neighbour, he never imagined that his principles would guide the global investment strategy of an $18.4-billion pension fund. Today, the General Board of Pension and Health Benefits of the United Methodist Church, based in Chicago, ranks as one of

UMR: growth from government bonds?

“We have to move faster than our competitors,” says the chief executive of French retirement fund Union Mutualiste Retraite, Charles Vaquier. It is a phrase that you can hear uttered by business leaders at all sectors and levels, but one that institutional investors rarely emphasise. In chatting about its investment strategy, it soon becomes apparent

South Africa’s GEPF to invest globally

In the South African city of Pretoria, 50km outside Johannesburg, the sense of history is pervasive. The city was the capital of the apartheid regime and the site of Nelson Mandela’s presidential inauguration. It’s also home to Africa’s biggest asset manager the R1.17 trillion ($0.12 trillion) Public Investment Corporation, a state-owned body founded in 1911

The Pension Protection Fund: lifeboat in a storm

Crisis in the global economy may be knocking the value of most UK pension funds off course, but it is actually helping swell assets at the £12-billion ($19-billion) Pension Protection Fund (PPF). Established in 2005 along similar lines to America’s giant Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, the PPF absorbs the assets of defined-benefit private sector schemes

Illiquid medicine brings rude health to the Wellcome Trust

Sir Henry Wellcome, the early twentieth century pharmaceuticals magnate (pictured below), would be pleased with how well the London-based charitable foundation that bears his name has weathered the global downturn. The Wellcome Trust (WT), which supports medical research in Britain and around the world, reported a total return of 12 per cent for the year

Sustainability sets solid base at Germany’s MetallRente

Germany’s MetallRente has made quick progress since its foundation by trade unions in 2001. It has grown into Germany’s biggest multi-employer pension provider, boasting €3 billion ($3.87 billion) in assets, and counts a mammoth 21,000 companies as customers, from within the metal industry it was set up to serve and beyond. In the past two

Previous