Building consensus for investment beliefs at CalPERS

An investment-beliefs workshop for the CalPERS board, held in April, revealed five areas, including active management, where the views of the board and staff lacked consensus.

The contentious, or unsettled, topics for discussion were active management, private asset classes, sustainability (environmental, social and governance), investment performance targets and stakeholder considerations.

At the board workshop, Janine Guillot, chief operating investment officer, presented the findings of work the CalPERS investment staff had already completed on distinguishing their own beliefs. This included the summation of 85 detailed questions to the chief investment officer, Joe Dear, his direct reports, the chief actuary, Alan Milligan, and the senior portfolio manager and director for global governance, Anne Simpson.

The process also asked those staff to construct a sample portfolio and how that connected back to the investment beliefs.

Dynamic but doubting ability

The results of the staff questionnaire revealed a support for dynamic asset allocation as a value-added activity, but mixed views on the ability of the staff to carry it out.

With regard to active management, the CalPERS investment staff also had strong consensus to use index strategies where market efficiencies were the greatest, such as public equities, but not fixed income, and there was strong support for alternative indices or alternative beta.

Sponsored Content

There was also scepticism about the staff’s own ability to select managers that could add value, emphasising that what mattered most was the overall portfolio rather than individual manager performance.

As part of the active management discussion, staff had low conviction that hedge funds should be an important part of CalPERS’ strategy, but despite that most of the staff surveyed still allocated to hedge funds in their model portfolio exercise, albeit a smaller allocation, around 1 to 2 per cent.

Following the board member questionnaire and roundtable consultation, feedback from board member Richard Costigan supported the staff’s skill levels, and was at odds with the staff’s view of their own ability.

“The board members commend staff because we think you can achieve alpha, but the staff says it is difficult to get alpha.”

Strategic bases covered

The aim of the workshop was to draw up a preliminary set of beliefs to discuss at the board’s July offsite, with the goal of adopting investment beliefs at the September investment committee meeting.

The idea is that the investment beliefs provide a strategic basis for the management of the portfolio, a framework for assessing new investment strategies and avoid making changes on an ad-hoc basis, and ensure that alignment between board and staff becomes part of the culture.

The project kicked off in January and has been guided by head of investment content at Towers Watson, Roger Urwin.

Urwin says setting investment beliefs is a feature of big asset owners wanting to sort out their investment process.

They are the “softer” issues that provide the foundation on which to build the portfolio.

Guided by Urwin, staff and the board at CalPERS undertook a detailed questionnaire, which revealed the areas of consensus and those that were contentious.

“We need to understand what we are achieving here,” Urwin said to the board. “And I like to quote JFK: ‘Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.’ The investment world has a lot of myths, and we want to talk about them.”

Guillot also emphasised that the investment beliefs don’t exist in isolation.

“We don’t want them to be parked on a shelf and not influence anything,” she says. “We want them to drive the strategic asset allocation to be done in November/December.”

Workers’ models

With regard to the staff’s model portfolios, the strongest consensus was about the role of real estate, with most staff maintaining or increasing the allocation.

“There was an alignment of ideas that the characteristics of real estate deliver something valuable to the fund, cash flows and inflation hedging,” Guillot says, adding there was some concern about the cost of real estate.

Private equity attracted mixed views on whether the returns were sufficient for the illiquidity and complexity of the investments. However, overall the staff would still allocate a significant proportion of assets to private equity, reducing it a little from the current 14 per cent to 7 to 10 per cent due to the concern about deploying that much capital.

There was also concern around infrastructure, Guillot says, and while the staff could see the virtues of the asset class’ characteristics, there was concern about the ability to execute and deliver on infrastructure deals to “move the dial on the fund”.

The staff had strong support for corporate governance and engagement, but there was weaker consensus on environmental and social themes.

Various world views

CalPERS is hosting a sustainability and finance symposium on June 7, with its partner University of California Davis Graduate School of Management, which will be followed by a board workshop on sustainability.

With regard to the investment performance targets, staff say their aim is to deliver a target rate of return and then improve the funding status.

The bigger deliberation was whether there could be alignment of interest between the fund, external managers and staff.

“We tend to measure on relative returns and how that fits in with a total return target, and there were concerns about the time horizon and how to make that work with incentive plans,” Guillot says.

There was also a staff belief that the investment program should be simplified, but there was a difference in how to achieve that.

In addition to the questionnaire put to Dear’s direct reports, the INVO+3 staff was interviewed, which comprises more than 90 people. The issues discussed were the long-term time horizon, active management and alignment of interest.

“The most interesting thing that came out of that,” Guillot says, “is strong feedback that we are saying we are a long-term investor but we don’t act like it, with short-term performance reporting and incentives.”

The most interesting differences in the staff sample portfolios were in the amount of equities or growth risk.

The samples were almost split down the middle, with one camp maintaining or increasing equities and the other would reduce it.

“When asked why they had that approach to equities allocations, both started with the underfunded question but had different world views on how to improve the funded status.”

Nine consensual themes

These investment belief themes had strong consensus among CalPERS board and staff:

  1. Liabilities inform the asset structure.
  2. Strategic asset allocation is the dominant determinant of return and risk.
  3. An expectation of return premium is required to take on risk.
  4. A long-term investment horizon is an advantage.
  5. The market is not perfectly efficient, but inefficiencies are difficult to exploit after costs.
  6. An appropriate premium is required for illiquidity risk.
  7. Cost matters more than most investors think.
  8. Risk is often expressed as volatility or tracking error, but neither measure captures the essence of risk to CalPERS.
  9. CalPERS needs effective teamwork and governance.

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

US instos swing back to equities

The Conference Board’s 2010 Institutional Investment Report: Trends in Asset Allocation and Portfolio Composition measures the asset growth and portfolio composition of institutional investors operating in the US.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Blue-eared pigs challenge China’s leaders

Economists hate price and wages controls. They distort the natural forces of markets and usually result in pent-up demand and/or supply which will be unleashed at a later stage as well as a range of unexpected distortions. Investors, too, should hate them. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Russell Axioma launches factor-based indexes

Institutional investors’ increasing use of factor-based models to understand their portfolio risk exposures is the conduit for Russell Investments’ collaboration with Axioma to launch a series of factor-based indexes to rival MSCI/Barra, according to Rolf Agather, managing director of research and innovation at Russell. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Diversification is not enough for managing risk

Diversification alone is not enough to manage downside risk, rather academic research in dynamic portfolio theory suggests the three complementary techniques of diversification, hedging, and insurance can be used together to design customised investment solutions, that ultimately separate assets into performance seeking portfolios and liability hedging portfolios, according to EDHEC’s Felix Goltz and Stoyan Stoyanov.

CalPERS’ redesign creates CFO role

CalPERS will introduce a new leadership organisation design next year, which includes for the first time a dedicated chief financial officer function coordinating all corporate finance functions including cash flow. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Why politics and pension fund management don’t mix

Thomas P DiNapoli was given a little scare in the recent US mid-term elections but, in the end, was returned fairly comfortably to his position of New York State Comptroller and sole trustee of the New York State pension fund. What happens next, though, may be more interesting. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous