In-house not for
every house: WSIB

While the trend for most large institutional investors is to insource asset management, the $85-billion Washington State Investment Board (WSIB) has decided to take a different path.

Much-cited CEM Benchmarking research shows that funds with internal-management platforms are better performers after cost, and this is largely driven by the lower costs of internal management.

Many of the Canadian funds manage the majority of their assets in-house including OMERS, OTPP, CPPIB, and HOOPP, which manages all of its assets internally.

More broadly, AustralianSuper, New York City Retirement System and CalPERS have all made moves in recent months to bring more assets in-house, in line with CEM’s study.

However, the $85-billion WSIB is bucking the trend, which comes after much executive research on the topic and debate with the board, says executive director of the fund, Theresa Whitmarsh.

“The fundamental point is the CEM work is good but I don’t find it a definitive case for insourcing,” she says.

Sponsored Content

 

Staff in the house

One of the reasons for this is the case for talent, she says.

“Many of the funds CEM cites are unique because they are in Toronto and they can attract the talent. Toronto is like pension Mecca, like a Silicon Valley for pension funds; it has a labour market that’s reinforcing and that is completely different to Washington State and Olympia where we are based.”

In addition, many US public-pension funds are restrained by their budgets.

By way of example, CEM reports in its organisational design study of the world’s largest 19 funds, that the average salaries of investment departments in Canada was $536,000, in Europe it was $246,000, for the US$148,000, and in Australia and New Zealand $139,000.

In June, the WSIB board approved a compensation plan for investment staff, which it says will make progress in closing the 42-per-cent compensation gap between WSIB investment officers and the average investment officer of its peers.

Clearly this is an obstacle for the fund to hire more staff, which would be necessary to bring more assets in house, despite the potential future savings.

“At the board level, if we do more internally, we will need more legislative authority for budget, and that’s a non-starter in this market,” Whitmarsh says. “We’re succeeding under the current structure. I’m not completely convinced the insourced model is proven out.”

 

At a deeper level

Whitmarsh believes it is critical to look beyond peer statistics and to the circumstances that created the success.

“It’s not that simple. Success is not just governance and structure, but it is also asset allocation and the talent that could manage that. You have to look at it at a deeper level.”

She says the success of OTPP and CPPIB are often attributed to their insourced model, but it is also due to asset-allocation decisions and the organisations’ maturity.

“OTPP has had a high allocation to fixed income, which ruled last decade, and in the early 2000s CPPIB was not investing, so they missed the 2001 crash. Washington State has always been top-quartile with a largely outsourced model.

“What they’ve accomplished is excellent, but is it replicable for us just based on the insourcing model?”

The WSIB manages investments for 17 retirement plans, and at the end of June 2011, 31 per cent of its assets were in fixed income, 35 per cent public equities, 18 per cent private equity, 10 per cent real estate, and the rest allocated to tangible assets, innovation and cash.

The fund will conduct an asset allocation review in 2013.

Theresa Whitmarsh will join a panel on the insourcing debate at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Santa Monica. For information, click here.

To find out more about in-sourcing and other management options, click here to read The scope of financial institutions: in-­sourcing, outsourcing and off-­shoring.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

USD 10% undervalued, says State Street

Investors should reconsider their currency hedging strategies as an undervalued US dollar is predicted to strengthen according to Colin Crownover, State Street Global Advisors global head of currency management. The US dollar is as much as 10 per cent undervalued relative to other major currencies, says Crownover, who also forecasts that the economic-growth gap between

De-worming the Big Apple

A few weeks ago I had a meeting with Ranji Nagaswami, chief investment advisor to New York City mayor, Michael Bloomberg. She’s the first mayoral chief investment adviser in NYC to oversee pensions and investments, an area that is usually the domain of the comptroller. She is an experienced and dynamic enthusiast with ideas galore

Project Telos: a map to sustainable investing

The complexity of sustainable investing could be a step too far for many asset owners with current governance not up to the complexity of embedding environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors into decision-making, according to head of Towers Watson Roger Urwin. The comments come as the global asset consultant is set to release the results

How do the current economic risks facing developed economies affect your allocation to emerging markets (EM) debt?

How do the current economic risks facing developed economies such as the eurozone and the US impact your thinking regarding allocating assets to emerging markets (EM) debt? mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

US public pension funds underperform

US public-pension funds significantly underperform their global peers in real-estate portfolios due to a propensity to manage the assets externally, according to a new ICPM-sponsored research paper by three Maastricht University academics. Value added from funds management in private markets: an examination of pension fund investments in real estate looks at real-estate investing among the

Rotman ICPM research

The Rotman International Centre for Pension Management (ICPM) has approved five research projects for funding this year, including a behavioural-finance project by Swedish academics, to investigate plan members’ views of the “extended” fiduciary duty of pension funds. This project, to be conducted by Joakim Sandberg, Anders Biel and Magnus Jansson from the University of Gothenburg

Previous