Harvard factors in rebalancing to endowment

The Ann Kaplan professor of business, finance and economics at Columbia University, Andrew Ang, who also consults to the Norwegian sovereign wealth fund, describes the shortcomings of research on asset allocation and illiquid assets, and how to overcome behavioural biases.

Andew Ang’s paper, “Liquidating Harvard”, details the workings of the world’s largest endowment, its own catastrophe during the recent financial crisis, and importantly the choices it faced to meet the return shortfalls.

“I looked at Harvard, that’s a big name, but many have the same problems. The endowment model didn’t work because it didn’t have a floor for returns,” Ang says. “Harvard has one-third of its operating costs from the endowment so its choices were: it could liquidate the endowment, raise taxes, cut costs, or a fund-raise. It goes back to what’s the endowment for: is it a buffer, like a sovereign wealth fund. Harvard University chose to issue debt – $2 billion of it – and in doing so doubled the leverage ratio.”

The experience of Harvard highlights the implications of its various available actions on the portfolio management of the institutional investment pool, and the lack of research in the area of how to conduct asset allocation with a long-time horizon and illiquid assets.

“There is little research on how to do that, my paper is the first coherent framework,” he says.

“There is a general equilibrium question, do you invest in illiquid assets (or diversification); then given that how do you structure the portfolio to liquidate when you can’t.”

Sponsored Content

One of the key areas Ang highlights is a mean variance model that does not take into account that liquidity will give you an allocation to illiquid assets that is too high.

Investors in illiquid assets also lack control, he says, because the vehicles are complex, opaque, and investors have no right to take their money out.

“If you invest in equities you do have control, and you should you own that capital,” he says. “It would be good with illiquid assets to separate the monitoring, money paid to the manager etc, from the investments themselves but we are a long way from that. Where’s the balance of power? In liquid assets it’s with asset owners, with alternatives it’s with the talent.”

The other difficult area is in rebalancing, with a right skew inherent because of the difficulty in rebalancing.

Ang is a big believer in factor analysis and says the ‘ideal portfolio for a large investor should be factor oriented’.

“Investors do a disservice by putting asset labels on allocations. Instead they should conduct factor analysis, including looking at macro factors like inflation and growth, but also investment factors like active managers use such as value, growth, momentum, volatility, credit,” he says. “This decision should be made with the asset owner and there are some cheap ways to do this that can be in-house and automated.”

In fact Ang says allocating according to factors, and diligently rebalancing are two keys to successful portfolio management for institutional investors.

“It is naturally counter-cyclical to rebalance, that when an asset is doing well you need to sell. But the biggest mistake investors make is pro-cyclical, it’s when discretion gets in the way, when behavioural aspects get in the way,” he says.

“But you have to be brave and to buy what someone’s selling and vice versa, it’s very hard to do.”

He says the most simple counter-cyclical mechanism is to make sure investors buy low and sell high, and if processes, with well-defined events to override those are in place, behavioural tendencies can be overcome.

“It’s like with the Mississippi flooding, the army has criteria about whether to breach the level, which would mean flooding the area, people would die and towns would be ruined. The Army Corp has training and processes to deal with this, because the guy at the front may have a friend in that town and can’t make that decision,” he says.

Similarly he says, analysing factors and allocating assets according to that, as well as diligent rebalancing should be the base line for investors.

“If you can do better then do it, but you must have the base line in place. With short-term asset allocation deviations, unless they are done properly behavioural biases always creep in.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

New method for incentive compensation at CalPERS

CalPERS is contemplating an incentive schedule for senior investment executives that builds in downside risk, by expanding the range of the factor multipliers for the quantitative elements of investment performance plans, a move which could potentially eliminate a small compensation incentive award. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

End of an era as APG appoints new CIO

A focus on governance and sustainability has been recognised by APG Asset Management, in appointing former global chief executive of ING Investment Management, Europe, Angelien Kemna, as successor to chief investment officer Roderick Munsters, the man who has sat at the helm of two of the Netherlands’ biggest pension funds. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2

NYSTRS leaves UNPRI but remains committed to governance

The New York State Teachers Retirement System has voluntarily withdrawn active participation in the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (UNPRI) initiative but will continue to support strong corporate governance principles through memberships in the Council of Institutional Investors and Ceres. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Pastoral musings on investments

Chief research strategist and head of beta research at RogersCasey, Cynthia Steer, takes a summertime look at the “New World” of investing. She compares today’s investment challenges to those of gardening, and in contemplating the stoicism and constancy of long-time gardeners and farmers, she notes that portfolios today need to be re-constituted, the risk within

CalPERS’ securities lending loss

CalPERS will continue its securities lending program following an annual review, despite significant pressure on its collateral pool, with income of $220 million generated for the year to March but unrealised losses on the internal collateral reinvestment of $854 million. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Does less leverage mean lower returns for listed property?

The financial crisis has put an end to the excessive use of leverage by real estate companies, and the prospect of distressed assets presents opportunities for pension funds. Kristen Paech discusses the outlook for the sector with Ritson Ferguson, CEO and chief investment officer of ING Clarion Real Estate Securities.   mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1

Previous