Merton’s message: give up on alpha

Nobel Prize winner, Robert Merton, has thrown down the gauntlet. He claims that by focusing on a retirement income goal he can beat any competitor that is managing a 70:30 portfolio that has wealth accumulation as the goal. Do you dare take him on?

The defined contribution pension management industry has it wrong, according to Professor Robert Merton.

“There is so much competition over getting alpha, but everyone has access to the same hedge funds. Give up! That’s not what is important,” Merton says.

Instead the focus should be on goals-based investing, he says. And the right goal for most people is an inflation-protected income at retirement, not wealth accumulation. It’s something Merton talks about with a passion that has supported a 45-year career researching risk and lifecycle investing.

Conventional retirement fund investments focus on wealth accumulation and measure risk as volatility of the portfolio, he says. In this context success looks like maximising the size of each individual’s account balance.

Instead, Merton proposes a new generation defined contribution plan – called Managed DC – which puts retirement income squarely in focus as both the investment goal and as the measure of success. Risk then becomes falling short of achieving the income you need. Managing retirement funds in such a way will provide a much higher degree of certainty of actually succeeding, he argues.

Sponsored Content

“The secret sauce of Managed DC is that if you are willing to agree on a goal, say for example $58,000 per year protected against inflation in retirement, and my competitors and I start with the same Sharpe ratio, but I use dynamic strategies based on the goal versus a 70:30 portfolio, then I promise you I’ll beat them,” he says. “Focusing on the goal is like having 20 per cent more assets.”

Merton, who has spent his entire career writing and researching lifecycle investing first publishing in 1969. These days he is the School of Management Distinguished Professor of Finance at the MIT Sloan School of Management. He is also the University Professor Emeritus at Harvard University,

In his opinion the retirement management industry should change its language, and techniques, to focus on income, and to look at earnings for spending and lifestyle.

“For people outside the financial services industry that is normal, but for the entire history of defined contribution the language is about portfolio returns, not income.”

Most lifecycle products use age as the only trigger for investment allocation differences, but Merton argues income is an essential piece of information.

“Adding income a big step up from age alone,” he says. “For example, a 34-year old woman earning $168,000 is very different to a 34-year old man earning $56,000. Age doesn’t tell you nearly enough to make a sensible asset allocation.

With target date funds the investment mix is such that as you get older you get more conservative because of age alone. That’s wrong. Actually the prime drivers of fund asset allocation are the risk composition of total retirement assets. That includes future contributions and how close you are to fully funding the income goal.”

In this way Merton argues that what drives the asset mix is not age, but the amount of remaining human capital and the funding ratio.

“Although they are correlated why go on a correlation? Go to the primary drivers including income and account balance., Those give you all the answers.”

He believes that defaulted defined contribution funds can get that income information from the administrator, and that getting that information is really important.

Merton who co-founded Long-Term Capital Management, is currently resident scientist at Dimensional Fund Advisors, where he is developing this next-generation, integrated pension-management solution system that addresses the deficiencies associated with traditional defined benefit and defined contribution plans.

He says the motivation for the Managed DC concept came out of the 2000-02 crisis when worldwide stock markets fell and interest rates fell at the same time, an experience repeated in the global financial crisis of 2008-09.

“Traditional DC was not well set up to serve as the core retirement product,” he says, adding in the US defined contribution was originally a supplement to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) as a footnote for higher paid executives motivated by tax.

As corporate funds were struggling with their offering, Merton saw an opportunity.

“What would a CFO rather hear from a manager – a 17 per cent return alongside a 10 per cent fall in the funding ratio, or a 3 per cent return alongside a rise in the funding ratio? The CEO wants to hear that they don’t have to contribute. The funding ratio looks at the income.” Traditionally defined contribution plans only looks at one side of the balance sheet, the asset side. In contrast Merton’s Managed DC borrows some of the elements of defined benefit schemes and takes into account the liabilities side in asset allocation.

To put his ideas into action, Merton chose Dimensional, an independent, transparent firm founded on financial science, something dear to his heart. (Merton received the Alfred Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1997 for a new method to determine the value of derivatives.)

“For innovating you need the right culture, and Dimensional has the quality people, it’s transparent and has had great success,” he says. “I want to succeed at this, I don’t like the idea of failure, I don’t plan on failing.”

The basic premise of “Managed DC” is income for life adequate for a good retirement, rather than unlimited risk taken in static wealth maximisation strategies. And the investment strategy is the dynamic management of each member’s asset allocation.

“You have to stay live, not fixed, and continuously innovate on a cost benefit basis. It is the art of the science,” he says. “Believe in better not best. It is not realistic to be perfect.”

 

 

 

Robert Merton’s work can be accessed here

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Ventures on the risk spectrum

Hershel Harper received an early education in finance when he used to read Business Week in High School. The 43-year old now at the helm of the $27-billion South Carolina Retirement Systems, investing on behalf of South Carolina’s 350,000 public sector workers, says he knew back then he wanted to manage money: “I really am

Getting the commodities mix just right

While commodities are a controversial and problematic asset class to some investors, for others they are an ideal diversifier looking more attractive than ever. A mini-revival in commodity investing among US pension funds suggests the asset class may be enjoying a resurgence. The Los Angeles Fire and Police Pension System, Municipal Retirement System of Michigan

The end of beauty contest active management?

Designing and implementing concentrated, long-horizon investment mandates would support longer term thinking, align pension organisation’s goals with its stakeholders, and reduce transaction costs. This was one of the recommendations of a two-day workshop in Toronto last month, attended by a delegation of 80 pension fund executives from around the globe. Aimed at uncovering the meaning

Italian fund rides out crisis in style

The wrath of the European sovereign debt crisis may have left its mark on Italy in more ways than one, with both its financial and political scenes regularly sliding into crisis mode for the past year or two. However, the nation’s largest private pension investor, the €7.75-billion ($10.1-billion) Cometa fund, has firmly kept on track

Paul Marsh: live with low returns

The London Business School’s emeritus professor of finance Paul Marsh admits that you have to be slightly mad to embark on the kind of research detailed in the latest edition of Global Investment Returns Yearbook. This year Marsh and colleagues Elroy Dimson and Mike Staunton – Marsh describes the three of them, pictured below, as

Blinder: a power of paradox at Princeton

Pension funds or any investor holding a slug of long-term fixed income needs to factor in some capital losses soon, says Princeton academic and former vice president of the Federal Reserve, Alan Blinder. “The timing is difficult to predict, but three or 15 months, it doesn’t matter. It is predictable,” he says. “The unpredictable part

Previous