Institutional investors fall behind USA Inc

Institutional investors are clearly behind in risk management compared to the innovative techniques implemented in treasury departments of corporate America, chief investment officer of Wurts and Associates, Jeff Scott says.

Scott, who spent his career managing the balance sheet at Microsoft, Dow Chemical, the Alaska Permanent Fund and now investment consultant Wurts, says institutional investors want to manage returns, which is impossible.

“Returns are a function of animal spirits. They swing between fear and greed. Do companies really change in long-term valuation over the weekend?” he asks.

And while he points to investors such as Warren Buffet who “thinks about risk constantly with his capital”, Scott says many institutions are not thinking about risk.

“There is poor governance, and poor risk management. A lot of losses experienced by funds throughout the financial crisis were a function of missing simple risk-management concepts like custody of collateral and liquidity. You didn’t need fancy mathematical risk models instead of common sense you can get in Omaha.”

Scott says that institutional investors are behind in their risk-management practices.

Sponsored Content

“Many asset-management firms and hedge funds have far superior approaches to risk management than institutional investors. There are steps to take and it has to start with governance, and then understanding the risks you are taking.

Change of hats
As chief investment officer of Alaska, Scott managed a number of strategic partnerships with service providers, and now has flipped to the other side of the table to be providing those strategic partnerships.

“It is the same hat and we have switched it around,” he says.

Scott says he works with funds at an organisational level discussing a new approach to asset allocation, that is really risk allocation, but before that there needs to be a discussion around knowing the funds’ risk tolerance, which is a lot more than standard deviation.

“Two different funds could have the same investment objective but the exposure for each is different because of what it “means” to them in the overall context.”

“We take the objective and liability of a total enterprise and manage a diversified portfolio relative to that,” he says. “We show them how we manage that, take an active risk budget around that and how we manage that risk budget and how investments change.”

While a few managers may have similar propositions, what Wurts does is have a service agreement alongside the investment-management agreement, whereby that knowledge will be applied at the portfolio level.

In other words, Wurts is transparent about the risk of the discretionary portfolio it manages, but it also communicates that thinking at the organisational level, feeding back advice on organisational and governance change management.

“We have an investment-management agreement and a service-level agreement, which defines in writing what the strategic partnership program is designed to accomplish and how it will operate.”

The key to good governance, Scott says, is a clear delineation between who has authority, responsibility and accountability.

Scott says some concepts applied during his tenure at Alaska were concepts and methods developed in treasury management learnt at Microsoft and Dow Chemical.

Resourcing was an obstacle to applying more than about 60 per cent of the concepts.

The current chair of the Microsoft investment-advisory committee chair is Mohamed El Erian, co-chief investment officer of Pimco, demonstrating the complexity in the portfolio.

 

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Did they say that? CIO quotes from 2013

Each year conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com interviews CIOs and executive staff of the world’s largest asset owners, gaining insight into their investment strategy, asset allocation and demands from managers. In 2013 funds were focused on costs, increased portfolio look-through, “partnering” with managers and how to position fixed income exposures. This selection of quotes from CIOs of some of

Merton’s message: give up on alpha

Nobel Prize winner, Robert Merton, has thrown down the gauntlet. He claims that by focusing on a retirement income goal he can beat any competitor that is managing a 70:30 portfolio that has wealth accumulation as the goal. Do you dare take him on? The defined contribution pension management industry has it wrong, according to

New York’s budget, how would you spend it?

The city of New York spent $472.5 million on asset manager fees in 2012/13. The allocation of these funds is part of the $68 billion annual budget the City Comptroller has to run the city of New York. The bureau of asset management that oversees the $137.4 billion in pensions fits within that budget, but

Carbon credit market gets a boost

Norway and Britain have both announced plans to buy carbon credits, giving the United Nation’s struggling Clean Development Mechanism a boost.   Sovereign institutions have thrown a lifeline to the United Nation’s struggling Clean Development Mechanism, CDM, set up under the Kyoto Protocol which awards tradable carbon credits to projects like wind farms or solar

Contingent-COLAs the cornerstone of reform success

What can other states can adopt from the pension reforms at Rhode Island. The most significant item from the pension reform at Rhode Island is the fact the Cost of Living Allowance (COLA) is conditional. Or in other words, the fund will only pay the COLA if it can afford to do so. This simple

UK local authority funds question “bigger is best”

UK local authority schemes are under pressure to merge. It’s their turn to suggest ways in which pooling investments, or adminstriation, could achieve the economies of scale necessary for survival, but many are resisting the notion that “bigger is better” when it comes to investments.   The United Kingdom’s local government pension schemes have begun

Previous