Inversion therapy:
the investor as benchmark

The pension and funds management industry needs to redefine performance to an absolute return measure, according to The Influential Investor: How Investor Behaviour is Redefining Performance, a paper that is the result of 12 months of research with more than 3000 investors and investment providers across 68 countries.

The report, which sought to uncover the forces that will shape the investment management industry over the next decade, found that while relative performance based on peer groups or indices may serve the provider, the investor’s view of value is more complex and reflects their own personal blend of alpha seeking, beta generation, downside protection, as well as liability and income management.

“In the future, the investor will be the benchmark,” says Suzanne Duncan, global head of research at State Street Centre for Applied Research and co-author of the report.

The Influential Investor states that performance is the most highly rated factor by investors but it is simultaneously the number-one weakness when rating managers.

“Our research finds that the value proposition must evolve to one that defines performance as personal, a new definition of performance in absolute returns,” Duncan says, “but we are yet to see an academic framework that defines performance as personal.”

Personal, in three parts

State Street has developed a framework for this new definition that is made up of three components:

Sponsored Content
  • an alpha-seeking component, which will only be paid for if it is reached;
  • income management, which will be different for each investor and requires the income stream to be managed and protected in the context of the aims; and
  • liability management, which Duncan says has begun with liability-driven investing but hasn’t gone far enough.

“Investors need to understand current and future cash flows and manage to that,” she says.

The State Street research shows that investors are too busy looking at what their peers are doing and not defining performance as personal to what their own needs are.

“There is so much pressure, so investors are looking at what their peers are doing, but they need to look at their own needs and the needs of their beneficiaries, and manage that. It is an exciting period because there is awareness of the issues and the need for outcome-oriented investing and there can be experimentation around that.”

Industry direction

The impact of this shift will be massive, the industry will need a keen understanding of the role of local intelligence in decision-making systems, the report says.

It will need to streamline the delivery model at both industry and organisational levels to eliminate complexity and bring strategic priorities in line with what investors want most: personal performance.

And it will need to define a formula for sustainable returns to account for investors’ unique performance goals, to align fees with value delivered and to be fully transparent so the investor can appreciate that value.

“Under the new definition of performance, the investor is the benchmark,” she says. “This will have a profound change and impact. The system itself is in the way. There is too much of everything – funds, service providers, fees – the delivery model will be rationalised.

“Everyone has to agree with what we mean by success; there are different expected outcomes by different participants. If there is a precise definition of what performance means then there is a level of commitment. Investors need to measure success on their own income and balance sheet, not some other.”

The research also identified that the investment management industry is very different to other industries in the number of layers and level of participants or players.

“There are too many levels of decision-making in the governance structure. We looked at the added value across each layer, and there is not enough value to have that level of intermediation,” she says.

 How retail and institutional investors behave

Behind these headline findings, State Street examined the behaviour of retail and institutional investors, concluding that investors are not acting in their own best interests.

For example, while retail investors say they will invest more aggressively, they are moving more towards conservatism that is demonstrated by a 30-per-cent average allocation to cash.

Similarly, institutional investors are not acting in their own best interests and are becoming more aggressive due to what they see as artificially high expectations.

For institutional investors, the ultimate allocation in terms of growth is alternatives, but they also cite that their greatest risk is their inability to deal with the risks of these assets.

“There is a divergence of goals by institutional investors: they are looking at alternatives and they also believe they’re not prepared to handle the risks associated with their actions,” Duncan says. “There is nothing wrong with alternatives or risk per se. But there is herding and convergence into alternatives, and they believe that they’re taking on risks and there is a knowledge gap in that. There is not the evidence they have the governance structure or investment knowledge.”

She says investors are also becoming increasingly aware of the system’s instability.

“There is a very low level of trust in markets and in regulators.”

The future investment management business model
1 The value proposition – a new definition of performance
2 Delivery method – must be rationalised
3 Profit formula – or how to measure success  – will be sustainable returns
unique to an individual organisation regardless of others.

 

 

 

 

 

To access the full report, click The Influential Investor.

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Target date funds go to Washington

Last week, Professor of Finance at Griffith Business School at Griffith University, Michael E. Drew*, was the only academic invited to present at the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Labor Joint-Hearing on target date funds. He writes exclusively for conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com on his submission, which questions the conventional use of age-based approaches to

New York fund fulfills green promise with $200m Generation mandate

The $122 billion New York State Common Retirement Fund has allocated $200 million to Generation Investment Management, partly fulfilling the commitment made by New York State Comptroller, Thomas DiNapoli, in April last year to increase commitments to environmentally focused strategies across the whole portfolio by $500 million in three years. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2

Time to rebalance, equities are back: McCaughan

Economic evidence is starting to show the US is emerging from recession, but the really good news, according to Jim McCaughan the chief executive of Principal Global Investors, is that credit is flowing again, which means a sustained recovery. Amanda White spoke to him about the implications for institutional investors. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2

OMERS widens its scope to third-party offerings

The C$43 billion ($38 billion) Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System (OMERS) has been granted expanded powers by the Ontario government to provide third-party investment and pension administration services, and is at various stages of discussion with a number of plans to provide investment management services. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalPERS officially alters asset allocation, reduces discretionary ranges

The $183 billion CalPERS board has made the first formal changes to its asset allocation targets since January 2008, increasing exposures to private equity and cash, and narrowing the discretionary ranges around all asset classes set in December last year. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Climate change and capital markets: A global opportunity

Tackling the social, environmental and economic risks presented by climate change will require one of the biggest public-private partnerships ever seen.

Previous