Endowment model endures despite alternatives pain: Cambridge

As Harvard Management Company (HMC) begins shedding 25 per cent of its workforce after incurring a 22 per cent loss since the beginning of the financial year, its investment consult, US firm Cambridge Associates, says the “endowment model” is not impaired.

HMC and other endowment clients of Cambridge Associates, Yale and Stanford, draw much of their alpha from absolute return strategies that sometimes invest in illiquid assets. But Celia Dallas, head of published research with the consultancy, said alternatives were not the essence of an endowment fund portfolio.

Dallas said the perceived “endowment model” was a “relatively complex approach to investing” that could not be simply regarded as any investment portfolio with a high allocation to alternatives.

Among other attributes, such as resourcing and implementation, she said the endowments portfolios reflected a long-term investment timeframe, high allocation to equities to meet near-term spending requirements, hedges against
“fat tail” macroeconomic risks, and an adherence to value investing principles.

She said “even the most exemplary practitioners of the endowment model” suffered in 2008, but that the right alternatives were still capable of generating alpha and providing diversification.

“However, the landscape has changed and so have the skills necessary to succeed,” Dallas warned. “With long-only equities and credit valuations at multi-decade lows, investors should be judicious in determining when to pay higher fees and incur illiquidity associated with alternative assets.”

Sponsored Content

In November 2008,

Dallas said the consultancy maintained its “long-held belief that alternative investments play an important role in institutional investors’ portfolios”.

“In fact, as previously closed hedge funds open to new money due to redemptions and distressed investing opportunities, investors may have a unique opportunity to invest in top-notch funds,” she said.

Secondary markets also allowed investors to buy “significantly discounted positions” in alternative assets.

After returning 8.6 per cent for the 2007-08 financial year, the $29 billion endowment managed by the HMC began underperforming in the second half of calendar 2008.

The “targeted reductions” now taking place would include manufacturing, backoffice, IT, human resources and legal personnel, HMC said in a statement.

But it is understood that the reduced headcount would not result in a smaller proportion of money managed internally at HMC. The endowment runs a large portion of its assets internally, “in some respects looking more like a long-short hedge fund than a traditional endowment,” Ian Kennedy, global director of research with Cambridge associates, said.

As endowments experienced negative returns, they should remain focused on their core competencies and relative weaknesses, and invest accordingly, he said.

“All endowments should focus on prospective return opportunities and should avoid the classic behavioural risks of chasing yesterday’s great performers in asset classes or managers, chopping and changing course as the investment winds blow.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

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

Kay calls for philosophical shift

In an interview with conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com, John Kay, economist and author of the UK government-commissioned enquiry into long termism and the UK equity markets, has said it is “fanciful to imagine large number of trustees will have the skills and knowledge to have long-term relationships with corporates”. Kay says the key players in the UK equity

UK equity allocation falls

Equity allocation by UK pension schemes continues to fall, but the assets are being re-allocated into “everything else except gilts”, according to Mercer chief investment officer, Andrew Kirton. Last year equities allocations by UK pension funds fell by 5 per cent, according to Mercer, as they attempt to deal with the enormous amount of pension

CalSTRS considers
asset risk factors

The $152.5-billion Californian State Teachers Retirement System (CalSTRS) is undertaking an asset-allocation review that will consider the underlying risk factors of assets for the first time. Chris Ailman, chief investment officer of CalSTRS, says the fund is in the middle of an asset-allocation study, which would likely take six months, and would take a different

Natixis champions
Asian alternatives

In a bid to achieve long-term returns without incurring the risk of today’s choppy markets, Asia’s biggest institutional investors are increasingly opting for alternatives in their asset allocation. The majority of respondents in a survey of 120 Asian institutional investors no longer deem long-held industry norms – such as lengthy holding periods or conventional 60/40

PIP in to infrastructure

A swathe of UK pension funds is poised to increase its exposure to infrastructure. In a small start, which enthusiasts believe will quickly grow, the Pension Infrastructure Platform (PIP) will launch as a fund in January 2013, targeting £2 billion ($3.24 billion) worth of projects with the backing of around 10 UK pension funds. The

Previous