Liquidity premium escapes UK investors

 

UK pension funds have not taking advantage of their comparative advantage as long-term investors and have not earned a positive long-run liquidity premium on their investments, according to a paper from the Cass Business School that examines UK pension funds’ monthly allocations to major asset classes over the period 1987-2012.

The authors – David Blake, Lucio Sarno and Gabriele Zinna – identify that the combination of herding behaviour of these investors and short-term automatic rebalancing towards a long-term optimal asset allocation, driven by their liabilities rather than by expected returns, can be obstacles to asset prices reaching their equilibrium values.

Published by the Pensions Institute at the Cass Business School at the City University London, the paper, The market for Lemmings:Is the Investment Behavior of Pension Funds Stabilizing or Destabilizing, finds that although UK pension funds are long-term investors they have not earned a positive long-run liquidity premium on their investments because their investment behavior is driven by different incentives.

“Pension fund managers fear relative underperformance against their peer-group, which encourages them in the very short term to herd around the average fund manager who turns out to be a closet index matcher,” the paper says.

“Further, their short-term objective is to rebalance their portfolios when valuation changes across different asset classes cause portfolio weights to violate investment mandate restrictions, while their long-term objective is to systematically switch from equities to bonds as their liabilities mature. Overall, our results show that pension fund investment behavior might be less stabilizing than previously believed.”

Sponsored Content

Analysis of the data by the authors finds that pension funds herd and, in particular, they herd in subgroups defined by size and sector type, consistent with reputational herding.

Pension funds also rebalance their portfolios in a way that is consistent with meeting their mandate restrictions in the short term and with maintaining a long-term strategic asset allocation that matches the development (in particular the maturity) of their liabilities.

This mechanical rebalancing could also be destabilizing if it has the effect of driving prices away rather than towards equilibrium values.

 

 

The paper, The market for Lemmings:Is the Investment Behavior of Pension Funds Stabilizing or Destabilizing, can be found here

http://www.pensions-institute.org/workingpapers/wp1408.pdf

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Ag investors release responsible investment principles

A group of eight institutional investors has launched a guiding set of principles for responsible investment in farmland, which forms part of a UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) push to provide practical guidelines for specific asset classes.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Norges Bank forges closer research links

Some of the brightest investment minds gathered recently in Oslo for the first Financial Research Conference, conducted by the asset management arm of Norway’s central bank.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Property survey highlights green stars

The Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB) is being actively used by its investor supporters, including PGGM, to make service providers accountable for ESG performance, with the second annual survey finding a larger proportion of managers in the top quadrant this year. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Life’s lessons can be applied to pension reform

The UK’s London Pension Fund Authority issued a green paper this week outlining the key ingredients needed to build a better scheme and its successful implementation by 2015. In all corners of the world building a better pension scheme is on the agenda. What then are some of the universal principles for success that all funds can adopt regardless of geography?

UNPRI looks for new horizons

The UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) is focused on expanding into China, India and the Middle East and driving environmental, social and governance (ESG) integration beyond equities and property and into other asset classes, says PRI executive director James Gifford.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Defined benefit still dominates largest funds

Defined benefit funds still dominate the structure of the largest 300 pension funds globally, and this troop of large funds now make up almost half of all pension assets around the world.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous