Did they say that? CIO quotes from 2013

Each year conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com interviews CIOs and executive staff of the world’s largest asset owners, gaining insight into their investment strategy, asset allocation and demands from managers. In 2013 funds were focused on costs, increased portfolio look-through, “partnering” with managers and how to position fixed income exposures. This selection of quotes from CIOs of some of the world’s largest investors reflects the mood of 2013.

 

 

 

“If you give managers freedom to make more decisions, they frequently make more poor decisions. Having said that, I think we have also gone too far in giving them boundaries.”

Chris Ailman, chief investment officer of $170-billion Californian Teachers Fund, CalSTRS.

Read the full story here

Sponsored Content

“For us, we see a particular advantage in focusing on the total portfolio while bringing our investment expertise to bear through deep relationships with our external managers. It helps us avoid getting dragged in to implementation issues in a way that can be distracting and take us away from what we believe we really need to think about.”

David Neal, chief investment officer, the $91 billion Australian Future Fund

Read the full story here

 

A lot of fund manager selection can be about who rings the personal assistant of the CIO the most.”

Alex Gracian, chief investment officer of the London Pension Fund Authority

Read the full story here

“Valuation is relatively basic but the majority of investors don’t pay attention to it; they favour glamorous stocks and that’s accepted because of the short-term pressures.”

Ronald Wuijster, chief client officer, APG, which manages €314 billion ($480 billion)

Read the full story here

 

“The secular bull market in bonds, over three decades old now, is over.”

John Skjervem, chief investment officer of Oregon State Treasury’s investment division which runs $80 billion worth of state investments including the $62-billion Oregon Public Employees Retirement Fund

Read the full story here

“We do believe that better governance means better returns.”

Michael Brakebill, chief investment officer of the $36.6-billion Tennessee Consolidated Retirement System

Read the full story here

 

“Within a context of increasing water scarcity and adverse water related events, the fund’s long-term returns may be impacted through company specific risks or increased systematic risks driven by these externalities. Mapping and understanding such risks can be a challenge but is fundamental in supporting investment decisions.”

Jan Thomsen, chief risk officer at 4,714 billion kroner ($810 billion) Norges Bank Investment Management

Read the full story here

 

Our philosophy for active or passive management is based on efficiencies of the market, the ease of replicating the benchmark, cost and the ability of active managers to add value.”

Lee Ann Palladino, chief investment officer at the$26-billion Hartford-based State of Connecticut Retirement Plans and Trust Funds

Read the full story here

“Good investment ideas draw capital, but so do bad ones. When it comes to investing, there is sometimes a first-mover disadvantage.”

Theresa Whitmarsh, executive director of the $92.1-billion Washington State Investment Board

Read the full story here

 

We primarily invest in price/valuation gaps where we are confident that gap truly exists. We are more contrarian in our investing than trend or momentum driven. We were long equities in March 2009 when the natural position was the foetal position.”

Adrian Orr, chief executive, the NZ$24 billion ($19 billion) New Zealand Super

Read the full story here

 

“We have some old-fashioned economics to ground what we’re doing and why sustainability matters,” she says. “It is ground-breaking stuff this investment beliefs work. We want to be engaged owners. This is a transformation, it’s like the oil tanker turning around.”

Anne Simpson, director of corporate governance at $266-billion CalPERS

Read the full story here

“We spend of a lot of time evaluating performance and analysing our costs and fees. It’s prudent and it’s what Project SAVE is all about.”

Michael Trotsky, executive director and chief investment officer of the Massachusetts Pension Reserve Investment Management Board, managers of Massachusetts $53.2-billion Pensions Reserves Investment Trust fund. He refers to a process which has saved PRIM around $29 million in fees this financial year, and should be on course to save approximately $40 million per year once fully in place.

Read the full story here

“We will increase our private equity holdings further, no doubt about it.”

Niels Erik Petersen, Unipension’s chief investment officer, of the DKK 95-billion ($16.4 billion) investor Unipension

Read the full story here

“We want to take more risk when we can…”

Toine van der Stee, director of the €16.5-billion ($21.2-billion), KLM pension fund

Read the full story here

“The hedge fund strategy is an evolving area where we are working with the university.”

Bill Moriarty, the chief executive and president of University of Toronto Asset Management

Read the full story here

“If you believe in an emerging market, we feel this should reflect itself in an appreciation of the currency.”

Sunil Krishnan, head of market strategy at $62-billion British Telecom Pension Scheme Management Limited

Read the full story here

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Brussels ‘cooking up real estate shock’

The European Union is threatening to drive pension funds out of real estate investments, experts warn. That could be one of the undesirable results of plans to put pension funds under new risk regulations akin to the Solvency II requirements for the continent’s insurers. What most concerns John Forbes, a PriceWaterhouseCoopers real estate expert, is

Size and scalability up, fees down

The world’s largest asset managers should be using the advantages of their size and scalability to adjust their fee structures, according to Craig Baker, the global head of manager research at Towers Watson, which just released this year’s Pensions & Investments/Towers Watson World 500. “The advantage of large managers is [that] they could structure their

300 Club roots for stewardship over salesmanship

The 300 Club is a rare group that combines long-term thinking and asset management provision. Taking on an industry that is evolving from client-driven to product-driven, the 300 Club is proposing a fundamental mindset shift from short-term salesmanship to long-term stewardship. In this paper, chief investment officer of Kempen Capital Management in the Netherlands, Lars

Aligning asset owners and managers

Delegation is a fundamental obstacle to the alignment of asset-owner and asset-manager goals. However, Sebastien Pouget, professor of finance at the University of Toulouse, believes a combination of customised performance benchmarks and a dual short and long-term fee incentive can help overcome the problems of the principal/agent relationship. Pouget, who spoke at the recent United

Danish pension is gold

Denmark has blitzed the pension-system competition, being awarded the first Mercer Global Pension Index A grading. In the process, it has relegated the Dutch and Australian systems to second and third places, respectively, after four years. Mercer senior partner and report author, David Knox, says the reasons for awarding Denmark the top grade were clear.

Taking the future into account

At the International Centre for Pension Management’s biannual meeting in London, Jack Gray and Generation’s David Blood had a tête à tête on sustainability. An academic at the Paul Woolley Centre for Capital Market Dysfunctionality at the University of Technology Sydney, Gray has written a paper, Misadventures of an Irresponsible Investor, that at its core

Previous