Rethink remuneration

Institutional investors around the world have been lobbying for the right to have a say on pay, a right to have an input into the remuneration of the executives in the companies they invest in. In June the UK’s business secretary, Vince Cable, laid out new plans that will give shareholders three-yearly votes on executive pay in that country.

Speaking to the House of Commons, Cable said “…it is neither sustainable nor justifiable to see directors’ pay rising at 10 per cent a year while the performance of listed companies lags behind and many employees are having their pay cut or frozen.”

Similarly the issue of pay is rife in the investment industry: everything from paying internal pension investment staff enough to the over-pay and pay structure in funds management firms.

 

The wrong ratio
Saker Nusseibeh, chief executive of Hermes Fund Managers, believes the debate is centred on the wrong issue.

“Personally I think the remuneration structure needs to change. Quantum is the wrong issue,” he says. “The bonus structure is flawed with a short-term focus. The industry needs to tie managers into paying for what they do and a bonus is above what you do or a specific task.”

Sponsored Content

Nusseibeh is comfortable speaking out on issues in the industry. He is chair of the 300 Club,  a group of global investment professionals whose aim is to raise and respond to urgent uncomfortable and fundamental questions about the very foundations of the investment industry and investing.

The 300 Club’s mission is to raise awareness about the potential impact of current market thinking and behaviours, and to call for immediate action. Short-term behaviour and short-term bonuses is one such issue, and was highlighted extensively in the recent Kay Review.

“In the funds management business the ratio of salary to total compensation is 2:1. The ratio is wrong,” Nusseibeh says.

Other structural problems worth highlighting in the industry, he says, include longevity – or lack of it in leadership positions – and compartmentalisation, in which each actor in the financial industry is being rational in their own silo but in totality is creating irrational behaviour.

“This leads to the law of unintended consequences,” he says. “An example is with ownership of companies; we have to collectively decide what we want companies to do.

“It goes back to honesty. The financial business is not necessarily comfortable with full transparency and honesty. It is a very elitist culture and things are made more complex than they need to be so players can take a margin.”

By way of example he says: “There were enough people around before the crisis who knew what was happening to stop it. There’s asymmetry of information. We think to encourage honesty you have to lead by example.”

 

True advice
Hermes Fund Managers is owned by BT Pension Scheme and that fund remains its largest client, however the multi-boutique asset manager also, increasingly, manages money for third-party clients.

“With our third-party clients we’re prepared to be completely transparent; hopefully they’ll ask that of other funds managers,” he says. “We are a great believer in transparency of pay and we publish how much we pay everyone” *

“If you’re hiding something, like how much you’re being paid, you have to ask why,” he says

Nusseibeh sits on the BT Pension Scheme investment committee. He says the Hermes business has been built on three pillars: excellence, responsibility and innovation.

“We have to show the same care and responsibility to our third-party clients that we show to our parent. This means transparency. They have access to our internal spreadsheet, risk analysis and attribution, and our qualitative assessment of the manager. We review all of our portfolios on a continual basis, have a formal review monthly and investors have access to the minutes of the meeting. It is true advice: telling a client when we don’t agree.”

 

* According to a document called Pillar 3 Disclosures at the end of December 2011, aggregate annual remuneration of senior management who have a material impact on the risk profile of the firm is £9,381,000 in respect of the 2011 performance year. This is made up of fixed pay and variable pay. The bonus structure includes an equity participation scheme and a bonus deferral scheme.

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

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

UniSuper defies accepted thinking

Mention any asset class to John Pearce, chief investment officer of Australian superannuation fund UniSuper, and he will doggedly set out the good and bad thinking around it. A common source of his ire is the sight of investors herding around a belief based on a lack of rigorous thinking. Good practice for him involves

OTPP deals with underfunding

Even the most successful and well run pension plans are facing underfunding challenges. The $129-billion Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan is the latest to investigate solutions to solve the mismatch between the pension promise and the funds required to meet that, says Jim Leech, chief executive of the organisation . OTPP has appointed a taskforce – chaired

Fewer, bigger funds for UK?

Australia, the US, Canada and Denmark have all done it. Kazakhstan and even Oman are talking about it. Increasingly, public sector pension funds are merging or pooling their assets into fewer bigger schemes. It’s no surprise the debate is gathering momentum in the United Kingdom, ripe for consolidation with a Local Government Pension Fund Scheme

Scenario analysis: applicable to anything?

Attempts to apply a formula to asset allocation based on an asset’s historical volatility and relationship with other assets tend to fail when presented with black-swan events. Equities tend to rise along with commodities except when presented with political events such as the price hikes in oil in 1973 that sent equities into free fall.

Kurtzer on Holy Land of opportunity

The Middle East is in a state of dynamic flux, with positive change manifesting itself in the countries going through an economic and financial revolution as much as a political one. Institutional investors from all parts of the world have a role to play in that revolution, according to former US ambassador to Egypt and

Previous