The importance of investment beliefs

It’s often said that investment beliefs provide the solid frame on which investment strategy can hang. Some of these Magna Carta’s are beguilingly simple, like ‘Costs Matter’. Others may enshrine beliefs like ‘A Long Term Investors Has Opportunities and Responsibilities.’ So, it was with keen interest that delegates at PRI in Person 2015, the annual conference for the UN-backed international network of investors working to put the Principles for Responsible Investment into practice listened to asset owners’ talk through their first steps in enshrining ESG within their own organisations.

“ESG beliefs now stand equal to our other investment beliefs,” says Anne-Maree O’Connor, head of responsible investment, at the N$29.6 billion New Zealand Superannuation Fund.

New Zealand Super set about articulating its investment beliefs with a long list of loose investment statements that the team subsequently divided into beliefs and facts, explains O’Connor.

It was “a very interesting process” out of which came a concrete commitment to ESG: That ESG represented an important opportunity, would help control risk and would result in a “payback”.

She describes the process, backed by a library of research and a visionary board, as “getting off the tracks and onto the train.”

O’Connor believes that enshrining ESG in the fund in this way gave the team the courage to “maintain its nerve in market crisis and volatility.” It’s also given a firm direction on ESG for employees and investment teams.

Sponsored Content

For some funds, the financial crisis hastened establishing investment beliefs around ESG: Confidence shaken, it was necessary to build a new set of beliefs.

“We started from a conviction that ESG will add value, but after the financial crisis we were asking what our role is? What is our risk? These very fundamental questions popped up and rather than looking in the rear view mirror to solve the puzzle, we realised we needed to look ahead,” says Marcel Jeucken, managing director, responsible investment, at the €186.6 billion ($204 billion) Dutch pension fund PGGM.

Similarly US fund CalPERS, “underfunded and climbing back from the horror of financial losses”, found the financial crisis concreted its ESG investment beliefs, says Anne Simpson, investment director at the fund.

At New Zealand Super, investment beliefs have affected how they choose managers since they are expected to have the same beliefs.

Investment beliefs have also become stronger over time since they evolve and become a framework for all big decisions, notes O’Connor.

“Over time we’ve become much stronger about our ESG mandate and expectations. Managers change and adapt – or not,” she says.

Similarly at CalPERS, Simpson explains that every asset class is now benchmarked against the fund’s investment beliefs.

 

 

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

Tough climate marks value in governance

The link between better governance and stronger returns lies somewhere between faith and fact; however, in a historically tough climate, the argument for best practice seems overwhelming.

Better decision-making from diversity

Gender diversity is only part of the story when it comes to creating a robust and diverse investment culture. Clare Armstrong writes how Mercer keeps its teams on track for the best outcomes.

Constant improvement a core value at AP2

The total investment costs of AP2 are only 17 basis points, yet the portfolio is described by chief executive, Eva Halvarsson as complex and advanced. So how do they do it?

Ditch managers, invest in corporate America

Warren Buffett says although outstanding managers are invaluable, the net result of hiring professional management is a minus. “More money is made in Wall Street through salesmanship than investment ability”.

Oregon’s evolving strategy

Oregon State Treasury has undergone material change to its structure and process evolving its investment strategy and techniques including smart beta, private equity and internal management.

The future of pension management

Keith Ambachtsheer’s fourth book, to launch next month, tackles the persistent problems in pension governance, design and investment, including the sizeable aspiration/implementation gap.

Previous