Thinking Ahead Institute co-founder exits amid deeper integration with WTW

Tim Hodgson

Tim Hodgson, co-founder of WTW’s Thinking Ahead Institute, has left the prolific research network as it seeks closer integration with the broader consultancy.  

He departed after almost three decades of spearheading the research effort at TAI, which was first an internal initiative and then turned into an official offshoot in 2014. It was set up by Hodgson and Roger Urwin as an organisation jointly supported by WTW (then Towers Watson) and paying members. Urwin is also the global head of investment content at WTW and has been with the business for over 30 years. 

A source told Top1000funds.com that future research efforts at TAI will be spread across more of its colleagues at the Nasdaq and NYSE-listed WTW, instead of being conducted by the organisation at arm’s length in the current set-up.  

Head of the TAI and senior director at WTW Marisa Hall rejected the suggestion of any fundamental restructuring and said the move is a result of TAI undertaking more localised projects with asset owners, particularly in the Middle East and North America, which requires it to draw on resources from the broader WTW business. It is understood that there won’t be further departures in the TAI team apart from Hodgson. 

“Effectively, it’s a bit of a hub-and-spoke model where you still have the core Thinking Ahead team, but due to the sheer number of requests that we’re getting… you’ll find that Thinking Ahead is probably just increasing its integration with [WTW] colleagues,” she said.  

“Tim, who we love dearly and still are in contact with, through agreement with the broader business has left WTW as a whole… I think that’s probably a very natural evolution of a relationship with a longtime colleague.” 

Sponsored Content

Hodgson declined to comment when contacted.  

TAI is one of the earliest proponents of the total portfolio approach (TPA) and has produced application frameworks and TPA case studies among allocators, which helped theorise and promote the complex portfolio construction method. It established TPA as a spectrum and acknowledges that asset owners can have varying degrees of commitment to its philosophy.  

The TPA studies bolster WTW’s investment advisory offering of which the transition from a strategic asset allocation (SAA) method to TPA is a critical part. A 2024 study from TAI found that organisations which adopted TPA added 1.8 per cent alpha per annum over their SAA peers across a 10-year period. 

Hall said TPA has become a “firehose conversation” due to the wide interest from asset owners looking to understand and adopt the approach. She said this is another reason why TAI needs help from its WTW colleagues to fulfil member requests. 

“It’s moved from the work that we’ve done in the total portfolio approach starting 20 years ago… to now we would say that we’re having triple the number of conversations on TPA. Because of that, we’re doing a lot more specialist projects,” she said. 

TAI is a not-for-profit organisation and is more than half funded by WTW, with the rest of its budget coming from membership fees. Hall rejected suggestions of any cost-cutting motives behind TAI’s integration and that members shouldn’t expect any changes in the way they interact with the organisation.  

Members of TAI include 38 asset owners, such as the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, Australia’s Future Fund, the UK’s Nest and Sweden’s AP7, and 15 asset managers, according to its 2024 integrated report. 

“We’re trying to make more use of the broader resources we have at our disposal based on what clients and members are asking us for,” she said.  

TAI’s other areas of research include sustainability, wealth and governance, as well as asset and organisation-centric papers such as the annual global pension asset study focusing on the biggest pension funds and the global DC peer study outlining different organisation designs.  

TAI currently has a team of nine led by Hall.  

Leave a Comment

Temasek likely to miss 2030 climate target dragged by aviation, energy investments

Temasek likely to miss 2030 climate target dragged by aviation, energy investments

Temasek chief executive Dilhan Pillay says the sovereign investor is likely to miss its 2030 interim climate target, as exposures to the aviation and power generation sectors are crimping the investor’s ability to reduce portfolio target emissions. But the $339 billion fund is sticking to its net zero by 2050 goal, stressing the slower decarbonisation pace "reflects the realities of the broader global economy."

Sort content by

US sovereign wealth fund could be a game-changer – if it’s well governed

The proposed US sovereign wealth fund remains shrouded in uncertainty as the deadline to release a plan for it quietly passed without announcements from the White House. Debates about the need for it continue, but Stanford academic Ashby Monk argues clear purpose and sound governance are what truly matter.

Behind China’s ‘nation team’: The sovereign investors holding up the market

As aggressive US “Liberation Day” tariffs weighed on China’s stock market, Beijing rallied its most reliable financial market troops to stop its domestic equities from nosediving. This is the “national team”, a term loosely used to refer to government-affiliated funds including SWFs and state investment arms.

Investors brace for volatility as tariffs spark global reckoning

The investors which will do well in times of market volatility will have the ability to do extensive, forward-looking scenario analysis, move assets tactically and dynamically and have liquidity. Top1000funds.com looks at investor reactions to tariff-induced market volatility.

CalPERS: Why investments in oil and gas groups are also climate solutions

CalPERS explains why some of its climate solution investments include allocations to oil and gas groups.

CDPQ balances equity gains with real estate woes

Equity and infrastructure drove gains at C$473 billion ($329 billion) Caisse de Depot et Placement du Quebec, but “persistent headwinds” in real estate allocation given the fund’s above benchmark exposure to US offices in poorly performing cities New York and Chicago dragged down performance in 2024.

South Korea’s NPS pivots to sustainability, dials up risks in the portfolio

After smashing the return record again in 2024, South Korea’s state pension fund National Pension Service is gearing up to reduce coal investments to promote sustainability in the portfolio, and target riskier assets to ensure sustainability in funding.

Previous