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

Australian contributions increase shifts retirement burden

The increase in the Australian superannuation guarantee (SG) from 9 to 12 per cent of salary is an example of how the retirement savings burden, a global phenomenon, can be shifted from the public to private sectors, according to senior partner at Mercer, David Knox. The increase in the SG, which has been approved in

Why you should take notice of what we write

New research released this month gives impetus to the evidence that newspaper articles can predict aggregate future stock returns. Conducted by Professor of Finance at the University of St Gallen in Switzerland, Manuel Ammann, it examines articles in the German finance paper, Handeslblatt, from July 1989 until March 2011, and overall found that “newspaper content

CalPERS to move $1bn fixed income in-house

CalPERS plans to move $1 billion of its externally-managed international fixed income portfolio in-house in the next 12 months, but it will require board approval to do so.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Texas Teachers extends manager partnerships

Texas Teachers Retirement System has extended a unique public markets strategic partnership structure to two of its private market managers in a move it claims will give the fund a long-term strategic advantage over other investors.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Keynes and the character required for a long-term view

In the interests of educating myself I recently read Chapter 12 “The State of Long-Term Expectations” in John Maynard Keynes’ seminal economics tome General Theory. I particularly like his statement: “it needs more intelligence to defeat the forces of time and our ignorance of the future than to beat the gun”, but then I’ve always

Recipe for avoiding half-baked dynamic asset allocation

In what is lauded as somewhat of a Laurel and Hardy performance, APG’s Stefan Lundbergh and academic provocateur Jack Gray, demonstrate the disparity between ideology and action in a hypothetical dynamic asset allocation case study. But jokes aside, it highlights the misnomer in the words “best practice”, and the lack of courage in this industry.

Previous