US funds lag in risk management

US public sector funds spend less than half the time and resources on risk management than the average of their global peers according to a survey of 58 funds by Canadian-based CEM Benchmarking.

The qualitative Global Investment Risk Management and Practices report looked at the range of practices in risk management across funds in 14 countries including the US, Canada, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Australia and New Zealand with $1.8 trillion in total assets.

The Dutch funds were the most formal in their measurement of risk.

According to Terrie Miller, chief operating officer of CEM Benchmarking, after adjusting for size the average number of people dedicated to risk management for US public funds is just half the global average.

US public funds are also the funds that are least likely to measure surplus risk.

Sponsored Content

The report looked at the investment risks monitored, frequency of monitoring, the beliefs and regulations that affect what is monitored, and governance practices and organisational structure.

Across all of the funds the average number of people dedicated to risk measurement and management is 4.7, with 52 per cent of those set up as a separate risk group.

The survey measured three types of risk and found 88 per cent of funds measured active management risk, volatility or tracking error; 28 per cent of funds measured absolute risk, or the pure volatility of returns; 48 per cent measured surplus risk, and 7 per cent did not measure anything.

Two-thirds of the funds surveyed have a board-level approved risk for total fund and of those there are various levels of risk approval by the board.

About 5 per cent of funds have the board approving risk at the individual portfolio level; 38 per cent have board approval at the asset class level while 45 per cent only approve the total fund level of risk.

Of the funds surveyed, 32 were public funds, 20 were corporates and six had no liabilities.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

France’s FFR halves equities, weights bonds

Equities allocations have been slashed as a result of government changes to the liabilities of the Fonds de Reserve pour les Retraites (FFR) which prompted changes to the fund’s investment policy. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Japan disaster registers shocks on the Macro Scale

The natural disaster in Japan, that has tragically killed more than 3,000 people, caused millions of dollars damage and thrown the Middle East off the front pages, could also mark a pivotal moment in investments, with markets back to being triggered by macro concerns.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Inflation spectre should scare investors back to text books

Inflation is a big risk for most pension funds around the world. The question is: what do you do about it? The interesting point, though, is if inflation is a ‘fat tail’ risk, maybe it’s already been too widely signalled.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Funds count costs of external asset management

Cost is the flagrant motivation in the trend for US pension funds to move assets in-house, but as this article explores, budgets also need to extend to the demands of investment research, travel and staff incentive compensation.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Dutch look ambitiously beyond DB funds

As the social partners in the Netherlands debate the future of the pension system, Amanda White spoke with chief institutional business and deputy CEO at PGGM, Else Bos, about the preferred reform outcome which may be a move towards a “defined ambition” structure, as well as PGGM’s vision of retirement provision which moves beyond just

NZ quake fund skates on very thin reserves

New Zealand’s earthquake disaster relief fund could be completely drained following the fatal 6.3 quake that flattened large swathes of central Christchurch on February 22.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous