Texas CIO dismisses calls for flexibility

A successful tactical bet by the investment team of the Teacher Retirement System of Texas fuelled a heated debate at the April investment committee meeting which concluded with chief investment officer, Britt Harris, dismissing the need for more flexibility in the fund’s policy statement.

For more than a year the fund had an overweight position to credit, and an underweighting of 5.5 per cent to long treasury bonds, which was the fund’s largest risk position at an asset allocation level.

The investments were primarily in dislocated credit, and the allocation was a large contributor to the fund’s outperformance, and top ranking in its peer group, for the 2010 period.

Subsequent analysis of the performance, and the fund’s asset allocation positions, at the most recent board meeting triggered discussion about the appropriate benchmark against which to measure such outperformance.

It was also suggested that staff should have the flexibility to make an opportunistic play, and perhaps a percentage allocation be made for opportunistic or tactical bets.

Chief investment officer, Britt Harris, dismissed this idea, saying: “We have all the flexibility we need. There are tactical asset allocation ranges within the investment policy statement.”

Sponsored Content

The fund’s consultants, Hewitt Ennis Knapp, said by any measure the fund outperformed, whether the benchmark be LIBOR+200 or Lehman 10-year swap.

The consultant also said another alternative was to benchmark the performance against the policy asset allocation as an aggregate, or an opportunity cost benchmark.

Looking at the fund’s investment performance attribution revealed 80 basis points of outperformance was due to asset allocation, including the tactical credit position, while security selection accounted for 90 basis points.

 

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Breaking bad habits: why investors aren’t good at asset allocation

Institutional investors act like momentum investors, chasing returns, even over longer time horizons according to Asset Allocation and Bad Habits, a new research paper that looks at the impact of past returns on asset allocation. The paper commissioned by Rotman-ICPM and authored by Amit Goyal professor at Univeriste de Lausanne, Andrew Ang professor at Columbia Business

Is in-house management the future for large asset owners?

The allure of potentially higher net returns from portfolios precisely tailored to values, beliefs and risk appetite is hard for any asset owner to ignore, yet needs to be balanced against the many challenges associated with managing assets in-house. To this end, it is worth outlining the key benefits that in-house asset management can offer.

Addressing shortcomings in current corporate reporting

Investors don’t have access to all the information they need today. Raj Thamotheram, Mark Van Clieaf and Alan Willis ask: why aren’t investors (and their clients) demanding it? Without relevant, timely and reliable information, investors are unable to make informed long-term investment decisions. The efficiency of capital markets in allocating invested funds – the only real value of

To invest in China today you must be at the head of the kewfie

Regulatory proposals announced in April mean that in October foreign investors will be able to buy the top shares listed on the Chinese mainland stock exchange within annual quota limits. The momentum of market liberalisation is such that MSCI is considering using such A shares in its emerging market indices, a move that will take Chinese

Chinese SWFs need co-investors

China’s biggest sovereign wealth funds need, and want, co-investment opportunities in real assets and private equity and are open to new partnerships with international investors of the right credentials, and the longer term the partnership the better. This is the feedback of Michael Wadley, a specialist lawyer of Australian origin based in Shanghai, who runs

Foundations and endowments flock to long duration

The risk of a US equity market decline and concerns over the future direction of interest rates has been driving US foundations and endowments’ asset allocation decisions in the past year, with a distinct move away from US equity to global allocations and away from US-focused core to longer duration and high yield. The latest

Previous