Hermes chief calls for mandate overhaul

Pension funds should demand an overhaul in the product offerings of funds managers and change the terms of mandates to incorporate environmental, social and governance issues in portfolios, according to Colin Melvin, chief executive of Hermes Equity Ownership Services, who pointed to a number of funds in the UK, including the owner of Hermes, BT Pension Scheme, considering such action.

Melvin said the industry looked to pension funds as signatories of the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (UN PRI) to be leading the implementation of the principles, however investors were not being presented with the products that were needed.

“Look at carbon, it is difficult to get funds managers to take carbon risks seriously, but it is collectively agreed that pension funds should be able to integrate it into their portfolios,” he said. “Pension funds need to change the terms of mandates to facilitate this.”

He said the pension fund of the Environmental Agency in the UK now considered PRI in manager selection, and the membership of the Marathon Club, a collaboration of investment organisations in the UK promoting active long-term investing, was also considering long term mandates.

Hermes’ owner, the £27 billion ($44 billion) BT Pension Scheme was also considering such mandate conditions, in an attempt to incorporate the Principles.

Sponsored Content

While a lot of the focus of corporate governance is on the buying and
selling of shares, it is more relevant for pension funds to be looking
at asset allocation and funds manager selection. With this in mind,
Melvin called for participants at this week’s PRI In Person conference to
consider
manager selection as a key determinant of ESG portfolio implementation.

“Funds managers need to be courageous. They need to say the industry has been damaged and we have been behaving in a way that’s unsustainable, this has to stop and we need to make a change,” he said.

Melvin said in the past 30 years the average holding period in a company by an institution had gone from eight years to eight months.

Long-term mandates are being considered by some managers, including Generation Investment Management.

Hermes is an engagement service that acts for pension funds with combined assets of $86 billion.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Risk-averse investors widen search for safe havens

While a flight to quality characterised the response of investors to the previous financial crisis, the latest figures on capital flows reveal that the new risk-off landscape could involve a wider search for safe havens, following the recent market tumble.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

DB dose needed to purge DC parasites

This month Australia celebrated 20 years of its compulsory superannuation guarantee system. Observing the past two decades, “entrepreneurial academic” Jack Gray has some advice for those rebooting their system, and it’s not defined contribution. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

POLL1

Have your say What is the collective noun for a group of global pension funds? * What is the collective noun for a group of fund managers? * The best results will be published next week. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Back to the future: short-selling ban lambasted

Cliff Asness must be a very stressed man. Not only has he been “mad as hell” for nearly three years (or is it mad again?) but also the reprise in responses by regulators around the globe to market crises, namely banning short selling, means he doesn’t have to write any original words in response.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored

Texas Teachers examines incentive pay to staff

The Teacher Retirement System of Texas has reviewed the benchmarks it used to calculate investment staff compensation after concerns were raised over the level of bonuses it paid to senior staff earlier in the year.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Are pension funds really long-term investors?

Pension funds used to be considered long-term investors, but the reactionary behaviour of a recent prudence* of pension funds globally has changed my view of their time-horizons and subsequent role in capital markets. *Prudence is the newly-crowned collective noun for pension funds as per the competition in our newsroom. Have your say in our poll.

Previous