Natixis champions
Asian alternatives

In a bid to achieve long-term returns without incurring the risk of today’s choppy markets, Asia’s biggest institutional investors are increasingly opting for alternatives in their asset allocation. The majority of respondents in a survey of 120 Asian institutional investors no longer deem long-held industry norms – such as lengthy holding periods or conventional 60/40 splits – as the best way to manage their portfolios. Respondents, including sovereign wealth funds, pension funds and foundations, each with an average $15.4 billion of assets under management, said the financial crisis has forced a change in their approach to risk management and a reappraisal of portfolio construction.

“Asian institutional investors have been shaken by the failure of conventional investment theories to protect assets and produce returns,” said John Hailer, Asia and Americas chief executive officer of Natixis Global Asset Management, publishers of the report.
“We’ve found that they are applying the lessons they’ve learned to create more durable portfolios. Increasing the use of alternative investments and making smart use of traditional asset classes is more likely to help them reach their goals in the current volatile markets, which appear to be here to stay.”

 

Alternatives are here to stay

Terry Mellish, head of business development at Naxtixis in London adds:
“The traditional long-only way of constructing a portfolio is sometimes no longer relevant. Alternatives add alpha and they are here to stay.”

One of the reasons institutions are increasing their asset allocation to alternatives is because the financial crisis means that traditional assets now correlate. It means volatility and illiquidity bleed across bond and equity asset classes, leaving few traditional safe havens. “A significant majority (71 per cent) agree that the best way to temper market volatility is to increase allocations to non-correlated assets,” finds the report.

Alternative-asset allocation means investment in hedge funds, private equity and even venture capital are increasingly sought after. Risk budgeting is another key, with institutions increasing their allocation of liquid alternatives such as global macro or long-short equity strategies. The low-yield environment encompassing bond-like asset classes with regular income streams, such as infrastructure, and diversified fixed incomes spanning bank loans and emerging debt, are also popular. The report found “89 per cent of respondents cited increasing allocations to fixed incomes as an effective risk-management strategy”. Commodity and real-estate asset allocations were the least popular among investors looking at alternative allocations.

Sponsored Content

The shift towards alternatives is a direct attempt to try and manage risk, which is now viewed as the “new normal”, and the overwhelming worry for investors – or, as Mellish puts it, the “thing that keeps them awake at night.”

“In the past, most schemes looked at the risk once their portfolio was in place,” he adds. “Now they are putting that risk at the front of the process and factoring risk into all decisions.”

Mitigating volatility and so-called tail risk – those events that impact portfolios unexpectedly – is now at the forefront of managers’ minds.

 

Fewer shocks

Encouragingly, the shift towards alternatives among Asia’s biggest institutional investors is starting to pay off. The survey found that eight out of 10 respondents “were pleased” with the performance of their alternatives, with more than half expecting that their alternative strategies “will outperform last year’s returns.” The survey found “alternatives are important not only for diversification but also for performance. The majority of respondents believe it is essential to invest in alternatives in order to outperform the broader markets”. 

Going forward, all the signs suggest alternative asset allocation and “new approaches to achieve results” will remain on the radar. Almost all respondents said government-debt levels and contagion from Europe will influence their investment decisions in the coming year and that the “staggered pace” of financial reform increases systemic risk. The findings – drawn from institutions in China, Japan, Taiwan and Singapore, and which chime with Naxtixis research across other regions – show institutional investors implementing and being rewarded for pursuing new and innovative strategies in today’s unchartered waters.

“Alternatives give clients the chance of achieving their long-term objectives but with fewer shocks along the way,” concludes Mellish.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Listed companies are failing on sustainability

US companies are failing to meet a 10-year roadmap to sustainability and some sectors globally are ‘inherently unsustainable’ requiring a drastic refocus, according to two separate reports released this week by leading sustainability research firms Ceres and EIRIS. A report on the progress that some of the world’s biggest companies are making towards achieving sustainability

OECD, ITUC call for more green investment

Amid calls from global leaders for pension funds to invest more in the green economy, institutional green investments still languish at less than 1 per cent of portfolios. A recent OECD report looks at some of the barriers facing investors wanting to invest more in the sector, with regulatory uncertainty and a lack of suitable

Money for water

The global scarcity of water continues to make headlines, but a water-themed investment approach is only just starting to make waves with large institutional investors. Estimates of the assets in equity funds in this niche corner of the investment world vary from about $3 billion to $6 billion in funds under management – a veritable

GMO’s Grantham bets against irrational markets

Supposedly long-term investors typically have the patience to wait about three years to see if an investment strategy will pay-off with managers needing to manage to their own and their client’s career risk tolerance, investment icon and Grantham, Mayo and van Otterloo (GMO) founder Jeremy Grantham says. In his quarterly letter to investors, Grantham says

Mercer: think laterally on bonds

The angst in Europe has calmed down, relatively speaking, but according to Mercer, it will be a long haul, with deleveraging there and in the US taking many years. Investors need to act accordingly. Part of the problem is that conventionally safe assets, such as US Treasuries, are expensive. “That will take years to work

CEM study reveals in-house savings

A defining characteristic of leading pension funds globally is the cost savings garnered from in-house investment management. An organisational design study by CEM Benchmarking has revealed that “leading” funds have an average of 49 per cent of assets managed in-house, and yet the internal staff and non-manager third-party costs make up only 15 per cent

Previous