Markets main fear for CIOs: survey

The fourth-annual Chief Investment Officer Sentiment Survey, conducted by conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com and Casey Quirk, a practice of Deloitte Consulting, has revealed a clear picture of how large institutional investors are viewing and responding to current market conditions.

Most CIOs in the 2018 survey (52 per cent) lowered their return target during the last year, compared with 40 per cent of respondents in 2017. This confirms investors’ more cautious outlook for markets. A large majority of respondents (71 per cent) now have a return target below 7 per cent.

While more respondents said they were confident of reaching these new, lower targets, (57 per cent, compared with only 27 per cent the previous year), there were still some concerns.

Falling equities markets were the most common concern (51.6 per cent cited it), followed by rising interest rates (40.1 per cent) and geopolitical risks (24.8 per cent).

Active long-only managers losing share

The survey, which included 132 respondents from pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, endowments and insurers, with total assets worth $3.1 trillion, also revealed that active long-only managers are receiving lower allocations, as investors seek returns outside of traditional asset classes.

In the 2013 survey, respondents said they allocated 60.3 per cent of their portfolio to active long-only managers, this has fallen to 57.9 per cent.

Sponsored Content

Instead, investors are looking to more exotic asset classes. Investors were planning to allocate more capital to infrastructure and real assets (31.8 per cent of respondents), liquid alternatives (29.9 per cent), emerging market equities (25.5 per cent), real estate (22.9 per cent), and private equity/venture capital (21.7 per cent).

Casey Quirk consultant Chloe Gardner says there are broad implications for the providers of long-only active management and their role, as it is not seen as a sustainable long-term strategy.

“The search for alpha is more challenging, and as allocations to infrastructure and real assets and alternative types of equities are increasing, there is a push away from long-only active, and a dramatic shift to good alternative managers,” Gardner says.

Her colleague, Casey Quirk senior manager Tyler Cloherty, says he has been observing the bifurcation of strategies between traditional and alternative for years.

“I’m surprised the reduction to long-only active managers wasn’t larger in this survey,” he says. “There is plenty of supply of new strategies; the question is, are there good enough managers with high-quality opportunities and track record to sustain the demand.”

Focus on costs

The survey revealed reducing investment costs is a growing priority for investors, with 42 per cent of respondents calling it “very important”, compared with 36 per cent in 2017.

While investors are employing a wide range of strategies to reduce these costs, by far the most common that respondents mentioned was negotiating harder with external managers (57 per cent), followed by allocating more to passive or smart-beta strategies (26 per cent), insourcing (20 per cent) and shifting out of high-fee asset classes (13 per cent).

The most popular fee structure among investors is a performance-based sum with a smaller management fee.

Better control, rather than cost, is the primary motivation for insourcing. But it is clear that those investors with internal capabilities have lower costs than those without.

For example, in the investor cohort with assets greater than $25 billion, the total investment costs for those with internal capabilities was between 22 and 60 basis points. For those with no internal capabilities, total costs were between 50 and 92 basis points.

“There is a clear benefit of scale, because larger asset owners are more likely to negotiate with managers and insource asset management,” Gardner says. “They are more efficient and have better cost structures [based on] salaries and bonuses, rather than on basis points.

“For smaller asset owners, it might be better to wait it out to negotiate with managers, rather than take on the organisational and operational issues of insourcing, such as portfolio attribution and retaining staff.”

Cloherty says managers have been more flexible and open in negotiating performance fees, even in traditional strategies.

“This creates more operational complexity for managers, and sometimes more confusion for trustees in predicting costs, but the upside is in alignment and evaluating the value add of a manager,” he says.

The consultants say they are clearly seeing the preference for some combination of management fee and performance fee from the buyer side.

“This gives some baseline, for stability, and the performance fee for alignment,” Cloherty says. “The performance fee is typically highly negotiated.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Defining fiduciary duty

What constitutes fiduciary duty is an ongoing discussion in the pension sector. The UK Law Commission has weighed in on the debate with its own interpretation.     Pension funds mulling the definition and obligations of their fiduciary duty can now refer to a consultation paper from the Law Commission, Fiduciary Duties of Investment Intermediaries.

Investors call for conflict of interest code

As an outsourced provider, fund managers make a series of promises to investors. Anything that tempts the promise to be broken is a conflict of interest, according to chief executive of Carne Group, John Donohoe, whose organisation has conducted a survey of institutional investors’ attitudes to conflicts of interest. In a survey of global allocators

Stock exchanges ‘need nudge on sustainability disclosure’

 A study ranking the world’s stock exchanges against disclosure on sustainability themes ranks the BME Spanish Exchange at the top. But the study’s author managing director of CK Capital, Doug Morrow, says stock exchanges need a nudge by regulators to enforce tougher disclosure standards.   The world’s stock exchanges “need a bit of a nudge”

Dry up: how investors assess water risks

The world is running short of water, but what does that mean for investors? Asset owners in the Netherlands and Norway assess and manage the water-related risks in their portfolios, including the measurement of portfolio companies’ water dependence and water security. The drought hitting South Africa’s North West Province sounds another warning shot around the

Serving itself: why the financial services industry needs reform

What would the financial services industry look like if it was structured to service the non-financial services sector, rather than itself? Economist John Kay, author of the Kay Review into short termism in UK equity markets, aims to find out.   In an ideal world there would be one, maybe two, intermediaries between the saver

Lepelmeier: interest rates ruin German strategy

German institutional investors face an urgent need to reconsider their bond-heavy investment strategies, argues Dirk Lepelmeier, a former investment head at one of the country’s largest pension funds. Herr Prof Dr Dirk Lepelmeier, to use his appropriate German titles, would rather be addressed as Dirk. That might be of no surprise to many, but it

Previous