Investors collaborate on governance guide

A practical guide to good governance for pension board trustees was one of the results of the Rotman ICPM Board Effectiveness Program which included participants from 21 funds from nine countries.

The program, the first of its kind to be aimed specifically at board members of pension funds and other long-horizon investment institutions, looked at the functionality of boards, examining when they get stuck and why, as well as the right way for a board to approach strategy, planning and execution.

The impetus for the program came from the desire of the program’s academic director, Keith Ambachtsheer, to provide help to pension fund boards to overcome areas where they may be dysfunctional, which he believes arise from a desire to implement rather than oversee.

The program asked participants to submit in advance the top challenges facing their boards. This revealed good governance and sensible investment beliefs as the two of the key challenges.

As a result of the program, which is collaboration between Rotman Executive Programs and the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management, a plan was developed for trustees to use as a guide.

The good governance advisory team decided on three key steps to implementing a governance improvement program:

Sponsored Content
  1. Create a current board skills/experience matrix and document board member roles and behaviours.
  2. Revisit the organisation’s mission and mandate, formalise board processes and agree on board norms and behaviours.
  3. Implement the roadmap through updating board policy documents, through internal board bonding sessions and external board training.

Similarly participants developed a step-by-step guide with regard to sensible investment beliefs and organisation design that included:

  1. Investment beliefs should be explicit
  2. If you have scale then insource
  3. Insource in stages, with public equities first
  4. Prepare the ground for the required compensation plan
  5. Build capacity for internal management.

The other challenges nominated by the board included robust risk management, effective stakeholder communications, and financial sustainability.

The program will be held again next month, and is already sold out, but to register for future offerings visit www.rotman.utoronto.ca/icpm

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Why you should take notice of what we write

New research released this month gives impetus to the evidence that newspaper articles can predict aggregate future stock returns. Conducted by Professor of Finance at the University of St Gallen in Switzerland, Manuel Ammann, it examines articles in the German finance paper, Handeslblatt, from July 1989 until March 2011, and overall found that “newspaper content

CalPERS to move $1bn fixed income in-house

CalPERS plans to move $1 billion of its externally-managed international fixed income portfolio in-house in the next 12 months, but it will require board approval to do so.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Texas Teachers extends manager partnerships

Texas Teachers Retirement System has extended a unique public markets strategic partnership structure to two of its private market managers in a move it claims will give the fund a long-term strategic advantage over other investors.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Keynes and the character required for a long-term view

In the interests of educating myself I recently read Chapter 12 “The State of Long-Term Expectations” in John Maynard Keynes’ seminal economics tome General Theory. I particularly like his statement: “it needs more intelligence to defeat the forces of time and our ignorance of the future than to beat the gun”, but then I’ve always

Recipe for avoiding half-baked dynamic asset allocation

In what is lauded as somewhat of a Laurel and Hardy performance, APG’s Stefan Lundbergh and academic provocateur Jack Gray, demonstrate the disparity between ideology and action in a hypothetical dynamic asset allocation case study. But jokes aside, it highlights the misnomer in the words “best practice”, and the lack of courage in this industry.

HOOPP boss goes out on a high

Chief executive of HOOPP, John Crocker, has only one more board meeting before he retires, and except for travel plans to the Caribbean and Europe his dance card is empty. After 10 years in the position he leaves a fund in good shape – fully funded, technologically primed and with investments that use innovative, low-cost

Previous