Managers want more public companies

Asset management firms are concerned about the trend of companies going, or staying, private, warning that many investors could miss out on growth.

State Street president and chief operating officer Ron O’Hanley said some of the fastest-growing businesses in the 1980s and 1990s were small-cap technology companies, but now those companies don’t go public.

“We should be worried about this,” O’Hanley said. “This will contribute to income inequality, it’s part of the un-democratisation of markets.”

In part, the move to the private side is a way for companies to get out of the quarterly reporting limelight, he said.

“Regulation has had an impact,” MetLife executive vice-president and chief investment officer Steven Goulart said. “The burdens imposed on public companies are pretty significant.”

David Hunt, (pictured) president and chief executive of PGIM, which manages more than $1 trillion, said there were now half as many public companies as 15 years ago.

Sponsored Content

“This is troubling because individual investors can’t get access to high-growth tech companies,” Hunt said.

He predicted that in 2018 there would be an unprecedented number of public companies going private.

O’Hanley said there had also been a boom in private credit and that the ability to oversee that had been limited.

“Systemic risk has been taken out of banks successfully and distributed, but [there has been] massive growth and that needs to be regulated in some way,” he argued.

But Nobel Gulati, chief executive of systematic investment manager Two Sigma Advisers, believes regulators are aware the pendulum may have swung too far and he hopes there will be some balance in public/private assets.

The managers were speaking on a panel at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Los Angeles, traversing many aspects of the outlook for asset management.

They looked at the impact of artificial intelligence on their businesses and agreed the hype was bigger than the reality.

“The expectations are way ahead on what we can deliver on regarding AI,” PGIM’s Hunt said. “It is extremely difficult, and you can spend days coming up with false signals or start with data that is not clean. Technology is not necessarily the answer. Active management is about humans and how they interpret data.”

Two Sigma’s Gulati agreed, and called AI “over-hyped”.

“Our business is constantly evolving, so human context is extremely important,” he said. “We have 1400 people working at Two Sigma. AI has its limitations, we need humans.”

Also on the panel was Ron Mock, president and chief executive of the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan.

Mock said, in terms of innovation, OTPP was focused on investing in the “whole world” of technology, in particular buying companies before their initial public offering. But he was concerned with the technology revolution and the impact on the industry’s ability to attract talent.

“In our case, we are actively looking at the next decade of talent acquisition and the value proposition,” he said. “There is huge competition for talent, and if our industry is going to be more technologically driven, how do we compete? Every MIT class is being swallowed by Google and Facebook. How does the asset management industry compete? It’s not an insignificant problem.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

How to allocate assets to combat climate risk

  Mercer’s extensive climate change report, launched today, gives investors a practical framework for monitoring and managing climate risk, shifting the discussion from philosophical agreement to practical investment implementation.   In Investing in a time of climate change Mercer outlines extensive dynamic investment modelling that analyses changes in the return expectations of assets between 2015

Behind Norway’s coal divestment

The Norwegian Parliament’s finance committee recommendations to direct the Government Pension Fund Global to divest from companies that generate more than 30 per cent of their output or revenue from coal-related activities, is the evolution of a climate-related investment strategy that dates back to 2010. Amanda White explores the raft of tools the fund uses

CalPERS gives its managers ESG ultimatum

In what promises to be a transformational moment for ESG integration and investment manager accountability, CalPERS will require all of its managers to identify and articulate ESG in their investment processes. CalPERS staff led by Anne Simpson, senior portfolio manager and director of global governance, presented the ESG manager expectations, and draft sustainable investment guidelines,

Sourcing liquidity in fragmented markets

As equity trading becomes more fragmented, and more trading is done outside exchanges, it is prudent to assess whether alternative liquidity pools contribute to well-functioning markets. Norges Bank Investment Management has done the work for you, analysing the contributions, structures and functions of trading venues with limited pre-trade transparency. One of the benefits of liquidity

Factors the same in credit and equities

Robeco will launch the world’s first multi-factor credit fund, after academic research by its quantitative research team reveals that size, low-risk, value and momentum factors have economically meaningful and statistically significant risk-adjusted returns in the corporate bond market. David Blitz, co-head of quantitative strategies at Robeco in Rotterdam, tells Amanda White why an active approach makes

Experts mull strategies in slow growth climate

Speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Oxford University’s Rhodes House Fiona Trafford-Walker, director of consulting at Frontier Advisors argues that Australian investors are operating in a changed environment and need to “get used to slower economic growth.” Speaking as part of an expert panel on how the continued environment of slow growth and low

Previous