The world’s most influential capital

Leadership Concepts

Asset owners are too important to fail in their mission – producing wealth and wellbeing for all of us who can afford to save. Their collective assets are worth about $55 trillion, under a narrow definition, amounting to more than $10,000 for every adult on the planet.

Yet the term asset owner, which first emerged a generation ago, is still misunderstood.

It applies to institutions that are the economic owners of investment portfolios and also have investment management responsibility for those portfolios. This contrasts with asset managers, who are agents executing the mandates given to them by asset owners and are not economic owners.

The most significant categories of asset owners – pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, endowments and foundations – manage assets to meet the needs of savers or investors. There is another category: outsourced CIOs and master trusts that manage funds like asset owners but are, strictly speaking, agents.

The distinctive feature of all these entities is their discretion to put capital into any country and any asset class that suits them. Their decisions regarding asset allocation and stewardship shape capital markets and are a key element in the functioning of the global economy. Through their size and role, they represent the most influential capital on the planet.

Survey of the biggest

Sponsored Content

In a Thinking Ahead Institute study, Asset Owner 100 (AO100), we surveyed the 100 largest asset owners, responsible for $19 trillion between them (at year end 2017). The largest of the AO100 is the Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) – the Japanese public-sector pension fund responsible for managing $1.5 trillion. The AO100 is made up of 67 pension funds, 21 SWFs and 12 outsourced CIOs; 44 are located in North America, 30 are in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, and 26 are in the Asia-Pacific region.

These are complex organisations that are having to adapt to tougher terrain. Many are building their internal teams while looking for deeper collaborations and strategic partnerships with peers and asset managers. This move to streamline intellectual capital is assisted by the increasing use of technology, an area in which asset owners have previously been out-spent by asset managers. The AO100 group’s future success hinges on how well they can marshal technology and data, and also how effectively they can harness their talent by creating the right cultures. ‘Smart, motivated people allied with smart, integrated technology’ is becoming a mantra within these organisations and also in their partner organisations.

The strength of AO100 leadership is increasing markedly as they leverage their scale. It will have to increase further amid greater need to function transparently, better meet their members’ financial expectations, become more sustainable and achieve a social licence to operate.

This social licence to operate is a new part of the asset owner proposition. It is a tacit social contract whereby asset owners gain legitimacy according to their actions and impacts. We, as individuals, may or may not have our money managed by them, but we certainly feel the effects of their investment footprint – for better or worse.
Asset owners cannot award themselves a social licence to operate, it requires external trust and legitimacy, along with the implied consent of those affected. Investment has economic, environmental and social impacts, and stakeholders will grant legitimacy based on their view of these impacts. In other fields, social licence has been lost; the AO100 will have to be vigilant to avoid this fate.

A complex agenda

The AO100 asset owners take their financial and social responsibilities seriously, but they will need an infusion of board talent to cope well with the complex agendas that confront them. And they will need to be more strategic, particularly on sustainability.
The institutions in the AO100 all own a large slice of the markets and the economies underlying them. The returns they need can come only from a financial system that works. They may need to help change the system in some areas, particularly where governance is weak and where portfolio assets may be impaired or stranded by fast-changing circumstances.
GPIF, for one, is leading the way. The Japanese fund sees its main vulnerability as systemic failure so it pursues a sustainability strategy based on managing ESG exposures and being active stewards of long-term holdings. Like a number of the AO100, GPIF is a large, long-term and leadership-minded asset owner – a ‘universal owner’. Such funds are the most influential asset owners because of their systemic positioning.
The opportunities for the AO100 to step up and deliver better outcomes for more people are clear. Public policy should align these asset owners by influencing their governance and transparency where more needs to be done.

This should not be to the detriment of innovation. The investment industry, suitably configured and aligned, is an immense force for promoting the wellbeing and fulfilment of the good society. And in the ranks of the AO100, there is the technical know-how to get big things done well.

All we need now is for strong leadership to have the courage of its convictions.

Roger Urwin is global head of investment content at Willis Towers Watson.

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

Why asset owners need to become ‘technologized investors’

The use of technology has the potential to transform the investment industry bringing down the cost of asset management, exponentially increasing innovation and building more resilient and adaptive portfolios. So investors need to move now to keep pace with the change. Amanda White talks to Herman Bril.

CalSTRS positions for the future with new investment team structure

CalSTRS has restructured the investment team with an eye on its future growth and the best people to achieve its mission. This includes examining the complexity of the portfolio and the skills required to manage it effectively in the future. Amanda White spoke to deputy CIO, Scott Chan.

The challenge of asset owners top-down bottom-up alignment with managers

For pension funds with a large roster of external managers, balancing the integration of top-down strategy with managers’ bottom-up implementation is one of the most challenging tasks says Mark Walker, CIO of Coal Pension. The key is to ensure external managers truly understand the strategic goals for the allocation.

Don’t ignore culture in trying to solve the investment puzzle

Better internal investment integration and co-ordination will underpin long-term returns for two of the world’s largest investors, CPP and CalSTRS, but they’re also closely focused on how cultural issues – including diversity and team-building – affect whole-enterprise performance.

Portfolio managers 3.0: APG’s digital future

APG recently hired its first digital portfolio manager. “Samuel” comes complete with an employee identity number and underlines the firm's ambitions around data-driven money management. Amanda White spoke with APG's CIO Peter Branner about the road ahead.

Postcards from the edge: How CPP Investments will grow to be a $1 trillion

The C$C532 billion ($587) billion CPP Investments has identified four clear “sources of edge” that it will build its organisational transformation on as it prepares for life as a C$1 trillion fund.

Previous