Over the industry? Change it

The pension and funds management industry is self-serving.

There are too many players, there’s too much jargon, too much leakage and too much patting each other on the back.

And that’s not just my opinion: the results of a 12-month research project, across 60 countries and more than 3000 investors concur.

The research by State Street’s Center for Applied Research sought to find the forces that will shape the future of the investment management industry over the next decade, and has concluded that there is too much of everything in this industry.

It says that the delivery model will have to be streamlined at both industry and organisational levels to eliminate complexity and bring strategic priorities in line with what investors want most: personal performance.

It’s the system, stupid

According to this research, the system itself is in the way, and will need to be rationalised.

Sponsored Content

If you look around for a minute or two, this is self-evident. A simple example is the sheer number of pension plans in the UK – around 10,000!

In Australia there has been rationalisation on the buy side – with the number of APRA-approved superannuation funds falling from 1244 in 2004 to around 300 now.

Many consultants – including Jeremy Cooper, who chaired the MySuper reforms – believe this will, and should, continue.

However, while the pension funds have rationalised, the Australian market remains over serviced. Mercer reports there are more than 130 funds managers offering largely similar strategies in Australian equities and yet Australian equities makes up about 2 per cent of the MSCI.

While choice is a product of the free world, it also comes with costs and unintended consequences. Further, if choice is good, does that make more choice better?

The paradox of choice is at the core of attention economics – first articulated by economist and psychologist, Herbert Simon, in the early 1970s – that a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention.

Two Australian academics, Ron Bird and Jack Gray from the Paul Whoolley Centre for Capital Market Dysfunctionality at the University of Technology, have been proposing the need for rationalisation for years.

Too much of everything

In the Rotman International Journal of Pension Management article, Improving Pension Management and Delivery, the authors say the plethora of agents – trustees, fund staff, managers, consultants, custodians, lawyers, financial advisors, regulators, ratings agencies, government, academics, placement agents, even journalists – create substantial indirect and direct costs.

This plethora is driven by the ready availability of money, massive and intrinsic uncertainty and growing complexity, sometimes intentional.

Estimating the indirect costs of an excess of agents is especially difficult because almost all agents genuinely believe they are adding value net of their costs, just as each of us believes we are in the top quartile in intelligence and driving ability, the authors say,

“This belief justifies agents resisting market forces aimed at reducing their number. We expect total unnecessary agency costs to be substantial. The most evident and dominant direct agency cost is active equity management, a predictable consequence of competing on performance. Because active management is effectively a zero-sum game, aggregate retirement incomes are reduced by at least the cost of 1 per cent per annum of playing the game.”

Bird and Gray question whether more than 80 active Australian equities managers, managing more than 150 broadly similar strategies are needed to achieve efficient pricing in such a small market.

Writing this article five years ago, Bird and Gray concluded that fewer agents and less-destructive competition will force a sharper focus on members’ long-term interests.

Five years later and nothing has changed, State Street’s comprehensive research, interviewing more than 3000 industry participants, concludes the same thing. There are too many players and there needs to be a sharper focus on personal performance.

 Artscience embraces change

So what happens next? A little less conversation, a little more action! But how do you make change happen?

Change happens out of necessity, if there is opportunity and if there is strong leadership.

Clearly change in this industry is necessary if it is going to take seriously the very large and very global problem of funding retirement.

Leaders in the industry are needed to embrace the conclusions of the State Street research, and the pontificating of academics, and actually facilitate change.

Apparently, change doesn’t happen quickly, according to the Nobel-prize winner, Max Planck, who was considered to be the founder of quantum theory, “science advances one funeral at a time”.

His view was that new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it. Fortunately, funds management is not a pure science.

In fact, most participants in the industry like to believe investment management is part art and part science. And while science may advance one funeral at a time, the art world changes quickly – there have been 36 contemporary art periods since the term was defined in the 1960s.

Maybe there is hope for change in this industry.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Why integrated reporting makes sense: Robert Eccles

Robert Eccles has been trying to change the nature of corporate reporting for more than 20 years. He has been an advocate for supplementing financials with information on non-financial factors that are leading indicators of financial results – such as product development, customer satisfaction and the development of intangible assets. The premise is those companies

Opportunities in Europe

Investors and academics agree that political developments in Greece are important because they may shape how financial markets will respond to future political situations in the Eurozone. But according to Olivier Rousseau, the executive director of the FFR, the French pension reserve fund, there is more hype outside of the Eurozone on the implications of

More evidence big is better in pension funds

A pension fund that has 10 times more assets under management has on average 7.67 basis points lower annual investment costs according to a working paper from authors at De Nederlansche Bank, that explores the relationship between pension fund size and investment costs. Written by Dirk Broeders, Arco van Oord and David Rijsbergen the paper

European investment plan requires public private collaboration

The two largest institutional investors in the Netherlands, PGGM and APG, have responded to the European Commission’s investment plan, urging the commission to call on institutional investors to collaborate on the investment proposal. However they also warn that institutional investors are not just a “subsidising entity” and the Juncker Plan is best executed as a

Why Andrew Ang joined Blackrock

Andrew Ang believes factor investing is a more efficient way to organise a portfolio as it allows liquid and illiquid strategies to be managed across the portfolio. It also has the added benefit of honing managers on value creation. He’s been working with a handful of investors while Professor of Finance at Columbia University on

The power of engagement

It is called the “CalPERS’ Effect” but it could easily be called the asset owner effect, or the institutional investor effect, or the power of engagement effect. Wilshire, which is a consultant to the $300 billion Californian fund CalPERS, has provided an update on its study measuring the effect of engagement on a targeted list of companies called the Focus List.

Previous