Public frat-boy investors skirt high returns at members’ peril

With the skills, practices and expectations that are embedded in the private corporate sector being brought to pension management maybe we need to expect the turnover in senior investment jobs to increase, but that doesn’t mean it is a good thing for the industry.

While everyone has their own reasons for leaving a job, when a high profile investment officer moves on after what might seem a premature tenure, it prompts questions about the sustainability of the model. And the turnover of late is notable.

Increasingly, chief investment officers are stamping the ground they land on with dramatic and far-reaching reform: strategic asset allocation reviews, expensive and time-consuming reforms.

Bringing the skills, practices and expectations that are embedded in the private corporate sector to the pension industry can be beneficial. But not at the expense of long-term strategic thinking.

Outside of investments, one of the biggest problems with sustainable social reform is the short termism of politics, with leaders staying in power for two, three years, stamping their change, and seemingly lacking long-term vision. Why would they? Is the management of societies’ long-term savings at risk of being managed by those at the senior level with short-term tenures, and therefore by nature short-term vision?

Pension funds are under increasing pressure when it comes to long-term investing which is reflected in a number of trends such as the de-risking of investments following the crisis.

Sponsored Content

In an article for the Rotman International Journal of Pension Management, head of the Rotman School of Management, Roger Martin, says “admonishing CEOs (and investors) to ignore the expectations market is about as effective as admonishing frat boys to stop chasing girls”.

In addition to the pressure defined-benefit funds have of meeting liabilities, a defined-contribution structure creates its own short-term pressures, with peer comparison a favourite past-time.

But aligning the long-term nature of pension investing with vision is important for a number of reasons.

Importantly the investment pools are long-term. From the beneficiaries’ point of view their money could be entrusted to a fiduciary for 30 years or more.

From a return point of view, long-term investing allows access to structural risk premiums, such as liquidity risk, as well as long-term macroeconomic trends, encourages good corporate behaviour, and the avoidance of behavioural and transactional costs.

There are also the more feel-good aspects such as the role in nation building via investing in infrastructure, and the integral and unique opportunity fiduciaries have in the development of a low-carbon economy.

A recent World Economic Forum paper on the future of long-term investing found the constraints on long-term investors were the key driver of how much long-term capital was available to invest.

These constraints included an institution’s liability profile, investment beliefs, risk appetite and decision-making structure. CIO turnover, and why that happens, should be part of the discussion when it comes to decision making.

Much has been written recently on investment compensation schemes within pension funds, including Keith Ambachtsheer’s “How Should Pension Funds Pay Their Own People?”

But it is not just compensation that motivates senior executives in any business, and perhaps funds need to focus on these broader set of non-monetary personal, institutional and social goals.

Good talent will be frustrated by a job that doesn’t allow autonomy, control (for example is the CIO the implementer or the decision-maker), personal and career development, and reward in other forms such as peer recognition, and, perhaps, the wider good.

How this industry, and individual pension funds manage the balance between attracting senior minds from the corporate sector, and then keeping them, will be a challenge.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Why US funds can drive harder fee bargains

Many US fund sponsors believe they have not received fair value for the fees they paid to investment managers in recent years, a survey by Callan Associates found. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CEM survey reveals private equity partnership details

CEM Benchmarking has completed a review of the private equity investments of 30 large pension funds globally, with an average of $935 million committed to private equity, revealing detail of their partnership structures, fees, and investment stages, timing and regions, and is now embarking on its first ever risk practices project. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1

More private equity funds abandoned

Only $38 billion was raised in private equity worldwide in the third quarter of 2009, the lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2003, with the number of fund raisings abandoned more than tripling in a year, according to Preqin. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Mercer 2009 funding and credit balance report

Principal at Mercer, Craig Rosenthal, was among the witnesses who gave testimony to the US House of Representatives Committee On Ways and Means, under the hearing “Defined Benefit Pension Plan Funding Levels and Investment Advice Rules” on October 1. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

UAE and Malaysia strengthen investment ties

In another deal struck in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) financial sector, the $25 billion Khazanah Nasional Berhad of Malaysia has bought a 25 per cent stake in Dubai Islamic investment firm Fajr Capital for $150 million. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

HMC to increase in-house management

Harvard Management Company, with responsibility for managing the $26 billion Harvard endowment fund, has hired a number of senior investment staff and reorganised its internal structure as it positions itself to bring more asset management in-house. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous