Study gives evidence of value-add from TPA over SAA

The funds that take a total portfolio approach added 1.8 per cent per annum over 10 years above those that use strategic asset allocation in a recent Thinking Ahead Institute study of 26 asset owners, including the Future Fund. And the systems-thinking TPA approach, with the benefits of dynamism and joined-upness, will help asset owners in an environment of increasing complexity according to the report’s author, Roger Urwin.

Urwin said the institute has research to back up those claims with the results of the TAI’s recent Global Asset Owner Peer Study in conjunction with the Future Fund the latest data in support. The study examined 26 asset owners and found the 36 per cent with a total portfolio approach (TPA) produced superior returns that make Urwin’s estimate of value add look conservative.

“It’s a crude test, but the TPA organisations outperformed the SAA organisations over the last 10 years by 1.8 per cent. And 1.8 per cent per annum is just a very, very substantial margin in our industry,” he said. “Quite honestly I’ve never seen a margin out of one factor as big as that before.”

Urwin emphasised that in part the two portfolio allocation approaches solve different problems.

“SAA basically solved a governance problem, and it did it well. But it didn’t solve the investment problem,” Urwin said. “TPA is a really important design feature by which organisations can probably get better performance.”

The most recent asset owner peer study found that the number of funds doing SAA was half what it was when the same study was conducted seven years ago, and the trend to TPA was continuing, with 20 of the 26 funds stating they were either at their maximum TPA or moving more towards TPA.

Sponsored Content

The benefits of the TPA approach include a more dynamic portfolio and more “joined-upness” which were both useful in a more complex environment, Urwin said.

Managing complexity was the number one concern of the 26 funds, cited by 73 per cent of the CEOs and CIOs who participated in one-on-one interviews.

“When we did this study in 2017 it wasn’t on the list, it wasn’t anywhere,” Urwin said. “But over that time complexity has become one of the most difficult things for organisations to cope with.”

One of the key takeaways from this result, according to Urwin, is that individuals are spending most of their time on business as usual and not enough time thinking about whether their organisations are adapting to the changing world.

The study also showed that 88 per cent of the fund’s investment teams expect systemic risks will grow in number and size. These include geopolitical confrontation and climate change.

Building more resilience including more agile organisational design, better culture and stronger risk frameworks – combined with the systems-thinking TPA approach – will help position asset owners in this environment, he said.

Asset Owner:Future Fund

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

Rediscovering FI at Nebraska

The $27 billion Nebraska Investment Council is conducting a deep dive into its fixed income portfolio, inviting up to 25 current and potential external managers to pitch their best ideas. The process begins by wiping any preconceived notions around the allocation’s role in the overall portfolio and justifying its place as if from scratch. It ends two years later with the issuing of mandates.

Evolving the City of Austin pension fund

Amanda White sat down for an hour-long fireside chat with David Veal, CIO of the $3 billion City of Austin Employees Retirement System. They discussed private equity, managing strategic relationships, internalisation and adopting Norwegian investment beliefs.

Now is the time to professionalise

In this second contribution from the CFA Institute on finance professionals, CEO of CFA Societies Australia, Lisa Carroll, discusses the reform needed in that market.

A guide for trustees for the long term

Last month the book Achieving Investment Excellence, was launched in the auditorium of Dutch pension investor APG. The book is a guide to empowering pension fund trustees to get a good grip on the difficulty of successful long-term investing for pension funds. Top1000funds.com spoke to one of the authors, principal director investment strategy of PGGM, Jaap van Dam.

Professional development key for future

As the investment industry continues to experience accelerating change and disruption, what will the effect be on investment roles and required skills? In the first of a series of articles exploring the CFA Institute's Investment Professional of the Future report which gives roadmaps for investment professionals and organizations.

Investors’ role in disability inclusion

Four US state treasurers are among 11 investors to sign a joint investor statement on corporate disability inclusion, and are urging others to get behind the cause. The investors, worth $1 trillion, believe companies must to do more to include people with disabilities in the workforce and are urging their portfolio companies to adopt best practice.

Previous