Five big issues for all pension funds

The academic world has not really been attracted to the pension fund world as a field of study. Most academic research, by a wide margin, usually goes into the workings of the capital markets rather than the workings of the pension fund participants in those markets.

One major exception to this is the Canadian academic and strategy adviser Keith Ambachtsheer, who has written three books on pension fund governance and was the co-founder of the CEM Benchmarking consulting firm, which monitors the organisational performance of about 300 big pension funds in various countries.

Ambachtsheer, director of the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management at the University of Toronto, addressed a conference in Hong Kong last week where he openly addressed many of the ills of the pensions industry and provided suggestions for what fund executives and directors could be doing going forward.

The conference, of the Pacific Pension Institute, attracted a record 185 attendees from 23 countries, including some of the largest pension and sovereign wealth funds in the world.

Ambachtsheer says there are five big issues which pension funds need to look at if they are going to aim for world’s best practice in investing as fiduciaries.

They are:

Sponsored Content

1.     Alignment of interests. Funds need to minimise their agency issues with service providers, particularly fund managers, which means having appropriate benchmarks and incentivisation schemes in place. Agency costs can amount to 1-2 per cent a year, he says, which can equate to up to 50 per cent of the entire value of a retiree’s pension.

2.    Good governance. Funds have to be well-run which needs skill at management level and an effective supervisory board. Also, the people involve need to ‘care’. The fund has to provide a balance of skill and being representative of the members, but this should not be a ‘dichotomy’, he says. Good governance could also add between 1-2 per cent a year to returns.

3.    Sensible investment beliefs. Most importantly, the fiduciaries have to agree on an investment horizon for the fund and be open to various investment theories, some of which – such as the efficient market hypothesis – were not necessarily helpful. Ambachtsheer points out that pricing and risk change over time.

4.    Scale matters. Ambachtsheer’s research indicates that ‘large’ funds tend to outperform ‘small’ funds by 30-40bps a year. This can be at least partly explained by the more widespread use of passive funds by large pension funds and their early adoption of private markets.

5.    Competitive institutions need to pay competitively. “Funds that pay on the inside tend to spend a lot less on the outside,” he says. By this he means that building internal teams usually pays off through better performance, reduced external fees and an overall reduction in costs.

Ambachtsheer questions whether the pension fund industry as a whole has had the leadership required to address each of these issues.

“We know a lot about what we can do better,” he says. “It’s a leadership issue as to whether it gets done.”

He also believes funds can improve their communications with stakeholders so that their decisions are sustainable, fair and understandable.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Disparity in policy portfolio risk profiles

A policy portfolio is a poor reflection of investor preferences, argued Peter Bernstein. This philosophical question has now been empirically tested by MIT’s Mark Kritzman, who shows the inter-temporal disparity of a policy portfolio’s risk profile. He suggests a simple framework for addressing this deficiency. Kritzman encourages investors to replace rigid policy portfolios with flexible investment policies.

Ventures on the risk spectrum

Hershel Harper received an early education in finance when he used to read Business Week in High School. The 43-year old now at the helm of the $27-billion South Carolina Retirement Systems, investing on behalf of South Carolina’s 350,000 public sector workers, says he knew back then he wanted to manage money: “I really am

Getting the commodities mix just right

While commodities are a controversial and problematic asset class to some investors, for others they are an ideal diversifier looking more attractive than ever. A mini-revival in commodity investing among US pension funds suggests the asset class may be enjoying a resurgence. The Los Angeles Fire and Police Pension System, Municipal Retirement System of Michigan

The end of beauty contest active management?

Designing and implementing concentrated, long-horizon investment mandates would support longer term thinking, align pension organisation’s goals with its stakeholders, and reduce transaction costs. This was one of the recommendations of a two-day workshop in Toronto last month, attended by a delegation of 80 pension fund executives from around the globe. Aimed at uncovering the meaning

Italian fund rides out crisis in style

The wrath of the European sovereign debt crisis may have left its mark on Italy in more ways than one, with both its financial and political scenes regularly sliding into crisis mode for the past year or two. However, the nation’s largest private pension investor, the €7.75-billion ($10.1-billion) Cometa fund, has firmly kept on track

Paul Marsh: live with low returns

The London Business School’s emeritus professor of finance Paul Marsh admits that you have to be slightly mad to embark on the kind of research detailed in the latest edition of Global Investment Returns Yearbook. This year Marsh and colleagues Elroy Dimson and Mike Staunton – Marsh describes the three of them, pictured below, as

Previous