Have scale, will bedazzle … but beware

Keith Ambachtsheer, director of the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management (Rotman ICPM), believes increased scale expands the capabilities of pension funds, while also enhancing their operations and lowering costs. But their financial strength should not be allowed to compromise their core purpose. He shares his thoughts with Simon Mumme.

In 1992, Keith Ambachtsheer was a co-founder of Toronto-based CEM Benchmarking, a business which has grown to provide investment and administration benchmarking services for more than 500 pension funds – both defined benefit and accumulation plans – around the globe.

The CEM database reaches back to 1982. Over the years, the information compiled has conclusively shown that larger scale brings an array of benefits to pension funds. At the forefront of this list are the cost efficiencies that big funds can generate.

“But larger funds outperform small funds by more than just the cost differential. Scale shows up everywhere,” Ambachtsheer says.

By committing more resources and capital to alternative and emerging investment strategies, such as co-investments and allocations to private markets, bigger scale enables funds to better diversify their portfolios and potentially enhance returns.

Sponsored Content

“Over that time period, large funds have generally done quite well with real estate, infrastructure and private equity, and small funds haven’t been in those asset classes.”

Another scale kick is what Ambachtsheer calls “indirect scale effects”, such as the internal management and administration of assets.

“Right across the spectrum, it’s cheaper to do things inside than outsource,” he says.

Such insourcing of skill is feasible only to big funds, which can afford to pluck talented investment staff from the market.

So, what size does a fund need to achieve before it enjoys these benefits? “It keeps rising over time as I look at the numbers. In 1997 I thought the number was $5 billion. Now it’s more like $25 billion,” Ambachtsheer says.

“The reason for this is that I see a potentially exciting future for funds management to get involved in the economy. Infrastructure is a classic example. There is a huge infrastructure shortage across the world. Pension funds are a natural source of funding for these projects, but to it they need to be large, and have enough experts on the board to assess if infrastructure project A or B makes sense economically. Small funds don’t have this capability.”

Big funds can enter co-investment deals, and those with specialised private markets teams are more likely to be capable of originating deals. But as big funds absorb the skills usually found in funds management businesses, they should remember their core purpose.

Ambachtsheer is wary of pension funds that own asset management businesses. While incubating emerging managers enables pension funds to tap into their strong early returns, owning a mature asset management business brought on the risks of running the operation, diverting resources from the core investment and product delivery purposes of pension funds.

“Those models tend to self-destruct. The strategy works with a few hundred million under management, but when it gets to the billions, the alpha goes away.

“It’s thin ice, slippery slope. You get into incentive issues. And is it really in the interest of [pension fund] beneficiaries? A lot of time and energy is required to go out and market to get other business.”

Ambachtsheer was speaking ahead of the Rotman ICPM forum in Melbourne. The organisation, headquartered in Toronto, aims to bridge academic researchers into management with practitioners, and enables the member pension funds, called ‘research partners’, to share ideas about investment strategy and benefit design.

While the member funds, which include many big plans such as the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan and PGGM, can find themselves competing to secure deals and recruit key staff, they share the common fiduciary goal of running investment vehicles to help members live with dignity in their retirement.

“In this country, as we speak, research partners are meeting and comparing notes,” Ambachtsheer says.

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

CalPERS board set to take back control of discount rate

The CalPERS board is likely to wrestle back control of setting the pension fund’s discount rate, a process that has been done automatically since 2015. Board member David Miller amongst others said this investment rate of return shouldn’t "just happen" as a matter of course, without them stepping in.

Mobilising collective intelligence by leaving traces of good practices

Andrea Caloisi from the Thinking Ahead Institute argues that breaking down the collective action problem into shared leadership building blocks is a powerful tool in the hands of asset owners to tackle global challenges like climate change.

CalPERS next CIO: 55 applications so far and counting

The numbers behind CalPERS hunt for a new CIO: 55 applicants so far; a $300,000 budget to secure a candidate; and a process of candidates submitting to 40-odd checks including credit checks and social media history.

ADIA: Active management, sharper internal processes pay off

Restructuring its internal processes has reshaped ADIA’s investment approach and highlights opportunities in active investment ahead.

Global search begins for CEO of $166b Australian Retirement Trust

Recruitment firm Egon Zehnder has been appointed to do a global search for the next CEO of the Australian Retirement Trust following the resignation of Bernard Reilly two years after the pension fund’s formation by the merger of Sunsuper and QSuper.

HOOPP: A boardroom view of how to approach governance around climate change

Boards face a vital role supporting governance around climate change. The board journey of Canadian fund HOOPP serves as a starting point for other boards feeling equally challenged by the complexity of the issue writes co-chair Gerry Rocchi.

Previous