If macro is back, who you gonna call?

Is stock picking dead? Fiduciary investors should be starting to wonder, given the cross-sectional volatility of markets over the past three years. But this seems counter-intuitive. Managers have told us we are in a “stock-picker’s paradise”.

Greg Bright*

As is always the case with investment management, there are no easy answers to these questions.

Whether or not more value is likely to be added by the macro beta-related calls over the next year or two, or whether pension funds should continue their love affair with alpha-generating stock pickers – long or short – is certainly an important question.

Most fund investment professionals will be inclined to try to do both, as they have always done: set a strategic asset allocation, allow for tactical tilts and look to also add value through skill-based bottom-up management.

But here is the rub: the whole funds management industry went through a massive change, away from “balanced” management from the late 1980s and towards “sector specialisation”, prompted by the rising influence of big asset consulting firms.

Notwithstanding a flirtation with TAA (tactical asset allocation) overlays and funds around the mid-1990s, which Americans tended to think of as “global balanced”, the most successful managers of the past 20 years have been specialist equities or bond managers. They have added value largely through their securities selection.

Sponsored Content

Before the global crisis, TAA managers re-emerged as “global macro” hedge funds and at a time when all alpha-seeking strategies were sought after, did quite well.

But, they were really only operating within the small alternatives allocations of funds. They were not dictating big shifts in allocations which would have a significant impact on funds.

Now, people are starting to question whether the era of “micro management”, or stock-picking, is over, at least for the time being.

A recent paper by Morgan Stanley Investment Management in the US, suggests, for instance, that we may be going “Back to the ’70s, with a Twist”. The manager’s “thought leadership” team says: “We think that there is a secular shift underway towards macro investing.”

There are several questions for pension funds which follow, if this is true.

First, who should make asset allocation decisions, irrespective of the time period – the funds themselves, their asset consultants, or managers?

Second, whoever does it, are they any good as a whole at asset allocation?

Third, what sort of resources should be put into these decisions?

The whole industry has spent the past 20 years, it seems, in a largely micro world. Asset allocation has been the realm of the pension funds themselves. Asset consultants have openly expressed more confidence in picking bottom-up managers than the top-down variety.

Taking a step back, the development of specialist TAA services followed a period of increasing evidence that managers could not time markets very well. It was thought that to do so, they had to have separate teams which were not encumbered by other asset management responsibilities in whatever sectors.

When TAA fell out of favour in the late 1990s, with the onset of the tech boom, pension funds became increasingly reluctant to give up the decisions of tilting asset allocation to their outsourced providers.

Notwithstanding the rise of global macro from the mid-2010s, pension funds, with the advice of asset consultants, made the big calls – or more often, didn’t.

The problem with pension funds making those decisions is that only the very large funds have the resources which are likely to lead to them doing a good job at it. And, for the most part, they spend less time and money on asset allocation than they do on the selection of individual sector managers.

Morgan Stanley says that key to its thinking is that three forces will be at work for some time. These are: re-regulation or outsized government involvement; extreme monetary policies throughout the world; and, globalisation.

The manager does not look to answer the fundamental question of who should be making the big macro calls. But if you doubt whether this will be the way pension funds can add the most value for their members over the next year or two, then check the full paper on: www.morganstanley.com in the investment management section under “thought leadership”.

Greg Bright is the Beijing-based publisher of Top1000Funds.com

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

SWFs eye offshore deals after quiet Q1

Hurt by mark-to-market losses and exercising caution in the face of an unforgiving investment environment, sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) made only 26 investments, worth $6.8 billion, in the first quarter of 2009 – their lowest deployment of capital since the fourth quarter of 2005. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Caisse pulls out of risky real estate after $5 billion write-down

Canada’s largest pension fund manager, the C$120 billion ($108 billion) Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec, has restructured its real estate group and ceased investing in the mezzanine and subordinated loans sector after suffering more than $4.5 billion in losses on its real estate and private equity portfolio in the first half of the

….. as 14-member international advisory board named

The CIC has named a 14-member International Advisory Council, which will advise the board and senior management on issues including portfolio development, strategy, and overseas investments. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CIC to invest cash, as global portfolio returns – 2.1 % for the year…

CIC is poised to invest more than 80 per cent of the assets still allocated to cash in its $100 billion global portfolio, as it outlined in its first annual report to stakeholders it”cannot achieve its goals without productively deploying its capital”. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

UK funds lead charge on ESG

The £3.6 billion ($5.9 billion) London Pensions Fund Authority has recently beefed up its internal environmental, social and governance capabilities, resulting in more effective engagement, including with the Mayor of London. Kristen Paech talks to chief executive Mike Taylor about LPFA’s short, medium and long-term objectives for ESG and why the fund has taken matters

Reorienting retirement risk management

The Pension Research Council, part of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, recently hosted the 2009 Wharton Impact Conference, where leading academics, public pension sponsors and their advisors met to examine ways to reformulate and restructure retirement risk management. This is a summary of the proceedings, organised by Olivia Mitchell and Robert Clark.

Previous