UK funds focus on manager diversity

Demography change and demographic changes in population diversity as society becoming diverse in a 3D illustration style.

A group of major UK pension funds have committed to assessing diversity and inclusion as part of manager selection.

The commitment comes in signing the Diversity Charter which has been devised by some of the largest pension funds in the UK, forming a group called the Asset Owner Diversity Working Group, co-chaired by Helen Price who is stewardship manager at Brunel Pension Partnership and David Hickey, portfolio manager at Lothian Pension Fund.

The signatories include Brunel, Nest, RPMI Railpen, West Midlands Pension Fund, Lothian Pension Fund, and London CIV. Together they represent more than £125 billion in assets under management.

Diversity questions will form part of the overall assessment scores for each bidder, meaning fund managers wanting to work with these clients will have to disclose information and demonstrate real devotion on how they are tackling diversity and inclusion within their workforce.

Signatories also commit to including diversity as part of ongoing manager monitoring, a questionnaire will be provided to managers annually for completion.

A key aim of the group was to create standardisation to improve disclosure. The charter questionnaire has been developed to be progressive and equip signatories to hold firms to account for ongoing progress. It goes beyond asking about the strategic approach, to identify how managers look at diversity and inclusion across five key areas: industry perception, recruitment, culture, promotion and leadership.

Sponsored Content

It includes a range of qualitative and quantitative questions ranging from board composition to mentoring, promotion and paternity leave.

“We expect fund managers to manage diversity as a material investment issue, but we question how well they’re doing this if they’re doing little to address it in their own organisations,” Brunel’s Price says. “We want to help raise the bar on diversity disclosure across the investment industry by requesting data that is meaningful to us but also to the managers themselves.  By asking for this information fund managers will have to confront poor performance and begin taking much needed action on diversity.”

Other signatories outside the initial steering group include: Avon Pension Fund, Barnett-Waddingham, Church of England Pension Board, Coal Pension Trustees Investment, Cornwall Pension Fund, Environment Agency Pension Fund, LCP, LGPS Central Limited, Local Pensions Partnership Investments Ltd, Redington and Willis Towers Watson.

Leave a Comment

NY Common joins allocator push on company AI transparency

NY Common joins allocator push on company AI transparency

The $273 billion New York State Common has upped the pressure on portfolio companies to report on how artificial intelligence usage is contributing to layoffs, as AI governance becomes a growing focus in the proxy voting and engagement activities of asset owners.

Sort content by

AIMCo enhances top down strategy function

In October 2020 AIMCo, the C$118 billion Canadian fund appointed its first chief investment strategy officer splitting the investment function between the top down strategy and bottom up implementation responsibilities. Amanda White talks to Amit Prakash about how the new function will add valuable investment insights to clients.

CalPERS CIO comp under review

The CalPERS board will make a decision next week on whether to include a long-term incentive compensation element as part of an incoming CIO’s remuneration package, something that the fund's chief executive, Marcie Frost, said is a contributing factor to the fund putting its search for a new investment head on hold.

GPTB highlights transparency gaps

The Global Pension Transparency Benchmark has revealed the need for serious improvement in pension transparency across the globe.

Benchmark will help build trust

Transparency is an important link in improving pension delivery, and the Global Pension Transparency Benchmark will help lift transparency standards and ultimately trust in pension institutions, according to its advisory board.

CalPERS: Lessons from CIO departure

The CalPERS board is considering whether to require a new CIO to transfer all of their personal stock holdings into a blind trust while they are a CalPERS' employee. The move follows the resignation of Ben Meng as CIO last year after an ethics investigation related to some of his personal investments.

Trustee standards set by Rest case

Earlier this month the Australian fund, Rest, settled a case with one of its members, Mark McVeigh, who claimed the fund breached its duty by not properly considering the risks posed by climate change. Here, McVeigh's lawyers write exclusively for Top1000funds.com and explain the significance of the case for pension funds around the globe.

Previous