Benchmark design for an active investment process

Choosing the appropriate benchmark for active managers is a common debate among institutional investors. Norges Bank Investment Management has produced a “discussion note’ on the benchmark design for an active investment process, in which it introduces a flexible modelling framework that aims to incentivise each portfolio manager to utilise their stock-picking skill.

 

The benchmark design problem that NBIM addresses is not to do with the choice of weighting scheme to arrive at a more efficient beta representation of the market – such as fundamental weighting or risk parity.

Rather the active benchmark design problem it addresses is to construct a suitable custom benchmark on the portion to be carved out from the original market cap index to become the yardstick for the active manager to beat.

The discussion note points out that it could be argued that a cap weighted benchmark is not well suited for an active portfolio manager. One of the drawbacks is the lack of diversification in the index, due to the high concentration of weights in a small number of the largest securities. In a long only context, the NBIM paper, argues that this will generally limit the diversification benefits than enable active portfolio managers to express broader active views across names and size spectrum.

It says the practical implication is to build tailored research lists for the active managers according to their specialisations which form the universe of stocks for the design of the custom benchmark.

Sponsored Content

The key decisions in the sector benchmark design problem therefore become a choice of the number of names in the research list (universe) and the choice of the weighting scheme that is suitable for the investors’ active investment process.

In broad terms, it says, an optimally diversified sector benchmark should incentivise each portfolio manager to utilise their stock-picking skills and at the same time be able to enhance the fund’s overall performance in a scalable way.

More specifically the sector benchmark design has two defined objectives.

To maximise the potential for outperformance by limiting the number of benchmark names to allow portfolio managers to express high conviction positions while maintaining sufficient coverage of the sector. And secondly to embed diversification in the choice of weighting scheme. This can be achieved by moving away from market cap and towards equal-weighting to allow managers to take on meaningful active positions across their research lists.

 

To access the full research note, click here

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Governance, Gonski style

Since becoming chair of the $80-billion Future Fund in March, David Gonski has set an agenda to act like a public company chair. An element of that vision is to very clearly delegate to management. “The general manager has been elevated to a managing director and the six-monthly announcements will be his,” he says. Another

Risk parity manages risk regret

The risk parity approach to portfolio construction might not deliver results in a “bull stockmarket,” but remained a “robust and rigorous” methodology which also “managed risk regret over time.” These are the views of Wai Lee, chief investment officer of quantitive investment at New York-based fund manager Neuberger Berman, who was recently named winner of

African countries come to the sovereign wealth fund party

Many of the countries with the largest oil reserves also boast the largest sovereign wealth funds (SWFs). And yet African producers, like newcomer Ghana, Angola, and Nigeria which has been pumping oil since the 1950s, haven’t saved much of their oil revenue. Now, in an effort to replicate the long-term growth of funds like Norway’s

Regulatory risk in Europe a factor for infrastructure investment

The head of infrastructure at Australia’s $80 billion Future Fund has cited regulatory risk in Europe and the United Kingdom as reasons to be wary about infrastructure investment in the region. Raphael Arndt, the Future Fund’s head of infrastructure and timberlands, told a Sydney conference this week that he was particularly concerned with the situation

Europe’s credit rating crunch

It has been a bad month for credit-rating agency executives who thought they were winning the legal and regulatory arguments about how they conduct their business. In Australia, the Federal Court ruled on November 5 in favour of 12 local councils in New South Wales which claimed that Standard and Poor’s had misled them into

Dutch reform to tread lightly on investment mix

When the Netherlands pension reforms were announced in 2011, many experts argued they were likely to substantially increase the risk appetites at the funds guarding the country’s $1-trillion pension assets. Recent developments to the reform proposals make the overall impact far from clear, however, suggesting there will be no bonanza for Dutch investment managers. The

Previous