SimCorp research focuses on pension fund best practice

SimCorp Strategy Lab, a private research institution, designed to challenge industry best-practice on issues relating to mitigating risk, reducing cost and enabling growth in the investment management industry, has set up four new sector-specific research groups including a separate group focused on pension funds.     

With the groups set up so academics and practitioners can collaborate and debate, each group will produce research-based white papers in the next year, seeking to convey the current state of knowledge within the four sectors and point the way forward from a management-strategy and public-policy perspective.

The white papers will be debating key industry issues for the immediate and medium-term future, as well as present options and recommendations.

The four sectors, and their leaders are:

Investment funds: Professor Martin Gruber, Stern School of Business, New York University

Asset management: Professor Stephen Brown, Stern School of Business, New York University

Sponsored Content

Pension funds: Professor Massimo Massa, INSEAD

Insurance funds: Executive-in-residence and Adjunct Professor John Biggs, Stern School of Business, New York University

The research teams will meet for the first time at the SinCorp Dimension international user community meeting in Berlin this week.

At that meeting SimCorp Strategy Lab is also seeking applicants for the SimCorp Strategy Excellence Awards, which will award outstanding and innovative leaders in the ability to mitigate risk, reduce cost and enable growth.

The SimCorp Strategy Lab is headed by Ingo Walter, Seymour Milstein Professor of Finance, Corporate Governance and Ethics at Stern School of Business, New York University.

An example of past research is available here. Global+Investment+Management+Growth+Survey+2010

One response to “SimCorp research focuses on pension fund best practice”

Leave a Comment

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

Singapore’s two largest asset owners, GIC and Temasek, see attractive opportunities in climate adaptation solutions – a relatively underfunded area compared to decarbonisation. The former has already made selective adaptation investments and said the opportunity set across public and private debt and equity could increase to $9 trillion by 2050.

Sort content by

Re-intermediating investment management

In this paper, Ashby Monk and Rajiv Sharma from the Global Projects Center at Stanford University, examine the balance of power among the various parties in the private assets investment food chain. They argue that fund managers have too much power, as do the consultants that act as gatekeepers to those managers. While the authors

The contest: factor-based or industry-based allocations?

Factor-investing has not yet won the right to be the endurable and dominating asset allocation method, according to new research.

Indexing pressure improves active management

A new study of active and indexed-based mutual funds shows the impact of different countries’ regulatory and financial market environments. The study finds that the average alpha generated by active management is higher in countries with more explicit indexing and lower in countries with more closet indexing. The evidence suggests that explicit indexing improves competition in the mutual fund

Designing an investment organisation for the long-term

With so many asset owners looking towards long-term investing, it is considered for funds managers to ask how their business models are aligned with those client aims, or not. In this research paper, Geoff Warren, research director for the Centre for International Finance and Regulation looks at how investment management organisations might be built to

Beyond divestment

While divestment is a useful tool to communicate concerns of climate risk to stakeholders, it is not an optimal investment strategy, in part because it ignores short-term benchmark risk. A research paper by MSCI provides a framework for evaluating ways to reduce two dimensions of carbon exposure – current carbon emissions and potential future emissions

Why consultants can’t pick winners

A research paper that concludes that the funds recommended to institutional investors by investment consultant do not add value, has won the Commonfund Prize, awarded for original research relevant to endowment and foundation asset management. The paper, by academics at Saïd Business School, Oxford University and University of Connecticut School of Business, found that there

Previous