Russell changes tune on TAA

After a long history of opposition to tactical asset allocation, Russell Investments has not become a convert but is allowing for a “slower twitch” version of the discipline, says global chief investment officer of the consultant and multimanager, Peter Gunning.

An Australian now resident in Tacoma Beach, Gunning said he had come to appreciate the “rules-based culture” of the United States, and said applying it more to investing could help portfolios “stop falling prey to human emotion”.

Gunning used historical data on US small caps to show that one year of active underperformance by a manager, enough to get them sacked by many investors, was typically followed by three years of outperformance.

Gunning said this monitoring of the cycles of active management was now incorporated into Russell’s multimanager process as a way of reducing behavioural biases.

The suitability of individual markets for active management are also taken into account – for instance UK equities is one of the worst asset classes in the world for active management, in Russell’s opinion, because it has high local investor sophistication, high reporting frequency for companies (less room for price discovery), a relatively narrow and relatively concentrated benchmark, and high transaction costs (at least 50bps a trade, Gunning says).

Sponsored Content

Gunning said Russell is shifting internal resources toward areas of larger alpha opportunity, and expanding its research universe into new betas such as closed-end funds, green investing, natural resources, public private partnerships, agriculture and, through the “Edge Strategies Group” established by Gunning, insurance-based asset classes such as catastrophe bonds.

He made it clear that Russell, which has $151 billion in assets under management, was prepared to only take passive exposure to areas where it could sense no competitive advantage in eking out alpha.

Gunning also advised against auto-rebalancing, saying Russell had developed the ability to take tilts of up to 5 per cent away from long-term strategic asset allocation in its global diversified funds.

Russell has to manage this discretion carefully, advising its “traditional” advisory clients of its plans before implementing the tilts in its funds.

 

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

The power of technology: forward looking risk tools

The finance industry is slow in its willingness to innovate around technology, and is behind other industries says Jessica Donohue executive vice president, chief innovation officer and head of advisory and information solutions at State Street. And the cost of that inability, or stubbornness, around technology innovation is not inconsequential. State Street recently released its

AustralianSuper contemplates foreign outposts

Australia’s largest superannuation fund, AustralianSuper, is considering whether it should have its own investment management and currency hedging teams based in Europe and America. Due to the mandatory nature of the system in Australia, the current rate of funds under management growth means assets are doubling every four to five years. Peter Curtis, head of

Stanford dumps coal: why divestment doesn’t work

The decision by the Stanford University endowment to divest from coal stocks might produce some positive PR, but from an investment perspective it’s only making them worse off, says Andrew Ang, professor of finance at Columbia University, who says the move prompts the bigger question of what the purpose of a university endowment actually is.

GPIF continues equities rampage

The giant Japanese pension fund, the Government Pension Investment Fund, continues its quest to move from bonds into equities and shift around 30 per cent of assets, or around $327 billion, out of domestic bonds and short term assets, appointing four new equities managers. The new asset allocation, approved in October last year, sees the

How to use smart beta

While smart beta is a much-talked about concept, implementation is slow. Part of the reluctance of investors is the risk of sustained underperformance, but that can be overcome by matching portfolio liquidity requirements with factor cycle duration. Amanda White speaks to Michael Hunstad, head of quantitative equity research, global equity management, at Northern Trust. Sustained

Liquidity premium escapes UK investors

  UK pension funds have not taking advantage of their comparative advantage as long-term investors and have not earned a positive long-run liquidity premium on their investments, according to a paper from the Cass Business School that examines UK pension funds’ monthly allocations to major asset classes over the period 1987-2012. The authors – David

Previous