Exploring big ideas with Marisa Hall

Pension funds need a generation of investment professionals that are willing to be brave and less conservative than their predecessors if they are to move to the systems level perspectives on investment that is required for better returns and societal outcomes, according to the co-head of the Thinking Ahead Institute, Marisa Hall.

ESG 3.0 will require systems level thinking on investment, and intentionality to work on the system, rather than just ESG portfolio integration, she said in a Conexus Institute Exploring Big Ideas webinar.

The Thinking Ahead Institute encourages both bottom up and top down thinking to solve systemic problems and let “a thousand flowers bloom”. Its aim is to mobilise capital for a sustainable future and it sees merit in seeing the investment industry and its connected parts as a system

“We are working on ESG 3.0 around the need for systems level investing and systems perspectives on investment. As an investor you can work directly on the system which leads into better and stronger investment results,” Hall says. “What we are talking about is instead of having ESG in the portfolio we are calling for greater intentionality to work on the system, and then get additionality and value creation within your portfolio.”

She says to effect change leading pension funds are executing through multiple touch points including capital allocation and strategic tilting, engagement, bottom-up security selection and top-down systems level engagement such as influencing industry groups, looking at mandate design, longer-term time horizons, governance and organisational design.

“Pension funds need a holistic approach and a mindset that focuses on intentionality to change the system,” she says. “They need to do more than just delivering pensions for members. Delivering what’s best for your members and the sole purpose test is linked to doing good for society and the environment and maintaining that social licence to operate. How do you achieve that? You need a generation of investment professionals willing to be brave and less conservative.”

Sponsored Content

Hall says another “big idea” the Thinking Ahead Institute is exploring is the concept of value creation, and translating the measurement of ESG to what it really means to create value for different stakeholders.

“We have been working on this concept of value creation. What is value and who are you creating value for? One of key concepts is that by creating value for a particular group of stakeholders you may be destroying it for another group. Profit for shareholders and externalities an example of that,” she says. “This is what we talk about the concept of 3D investing – risk, return and impact. Every investment decision we make has an impact on society it’s just in the past we haven’t put a weighting on that. We are not just talking about impact investing but the impact of investing, of our everyday decisions.”

She says when asset owners, managers and corporates talk about creating value for clients there needs to be a fuller description of what that means, and that starts with defining the time horizon.

“For example, if you are looking at a benchmark over a year then some of that value has a risk of being reversed. We need to be more transparent about this.”

She called on investors to look at ways to translate granular ESG measurements into value creation for stakeholders, and is an advocate of integrated reporting.

“It’s the concept of double materiality, firms needing to look at how they report on financial metrics and how they create long term enterprise value creation for investors, and balancing that with the impact on people and planet. Beliefs are really important in that.”

She encouraged pension funds to think about their time horizon and the fact that sustainability and long-term value creation potentially requires tradeoffs between current and future members.

“Your role as an asset owner is to understand those tradeoffs and balance intergenerational risks and needs, and that is tied into your role as a fiduciary and also your own career risks.”

Leave a Comment

Pension funds confront the question of who owns AI

Pension funds confront the question of who owns AI

As the use of AI within asset owners evolves, organisations are grappling with the governance question of where the strategy and accountability sit. Darcy Song looks at the treatment of AI organisationally within a number of high-profile funds, including OTPP, AustralianSuper, CPP and Norges Bank.

Sort content by

CalPERS’ chair leaves legacy of responsibility

Henry Jones, who will resign as president of the CalPERS board on January 21, leaves behind a new mindset at the fund of tackling big systemic issues including sustainability and racism.

Border to Coast: Securing access to the best managers

The United Kingdom's Border to Coast pension pool has just mandated to a new private markets managers. Mark Lyon explains how the manager accessed the brightest and the best. The private markets allocation is on track to deliver promised fee reductions, despite mandating to expensive, sought-after external managers.

Pension funds should prioritise technology before growth

Pension funds positioning for growth should prioritise building technological capacity according to chair of Alberta Investment Management Company Mark Wiseman who led CPPIB through a significant growth period.

Insourcing an indicator for better outcomes

Based on empirical evidence alone, funds that insource or internalise end up with better outcomes, both on a net and gross value-added basis, according to CEM Benchmarking data which draws from the evidence of some 300 funds in 17 major pension markets around the world representing $11 trillion of assets.

Innovation needed on fund disclosure of corporate strategy

A minority of pension funds reviewed for the GPTB publicly disclosure their organizational strategy in a way that goes beyond disclosures of economic and market conditions and the impact on the performance of their investments. Michael Reid argues there is room for improvement in communicating key corporate activities to stakeholders.

The transformative technologies set to shake up financial services

Technologies that have decimated and transformed the retail and manufacturing sectors are finally ‘knocking at the doors’ of the services sector, and institutional investors need to build a higher level of technology education among in-house sector specialists to stay ahead of the curve, argues Taimur Hyat, chief operating officer at PGIM, the investment management business of Prudential based in New Jersey.

Previous