The end of beauty contest active management?

Designing and implementing concentrated, long-horizon investment mandates would support longer term thinking, align pension organisation’s goals with its stakeholders, and reduce transaction costs.

This was one of the recommendations of a two-day workshop in Toronto last month, attended by a delegation of 80 pension fund executives from around the globe.

Aimed at uncovering the meaning and application of a 2012 Generation Investment Management white paper, Sustainable Capitalism, the workshop was co-hosted by the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management and the Generation Foundation.

It specifically wanted the funds to explore the practical implementation of the white paper’s recommended action plans, which were:

  1. Identify and incorporate risks from stranded assets;
  2. Mandate integrated reporting;
  3. End the default practice of issuing quarterly earnings guidance;
  4. Align compensation structures with long-term sustainable performance; and
  5. Encourage long-term investing with loyalty-driven securities.

The participants were broken into small groups and asked to think about what micro actions their pension organisations might take internally, and what collective macro action they would join in a larger industry, national or international collaboration.

The participants recommended that their own organisations design and implement concentrated, long horizon investment mandates, and ensure that they have the necessary resources to successfully implement them.

Sponsored Content

They also said they wanted to develop a “model investment mandate” through an organisation like ICPM that could be widely shared and reported on by investors.

The participants, that included representatives from funds such as the Washington State Investment Board, Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board, PGGM and APG, thought that a model mandate would force the development of new performance measures and incentive compensation schemes and challenge the dysfunctional inertia that continues to exist in many pension organisations.

Commenting on the investor recommendations Keith Ambachtsheer, director of Rotman ICPM and Rob Bauer, associate director of Rotman ICPM programs, said such mandates would be a radical departure from the traditional Keynesian “beauty contest” style of active management, and also from the broadly-diversified “formula” of passive management.

The key concept, they said, was the broad adoption of “concentrated long-term investment mandates” that require investor engagement.

The funds agreed that they would commence and advocate the adoption of integrated reporting of their own organisation’s results and for assessing the long horizon prospects of investments.

They would also focus on yearly results in one-on-one meetings between investors and corporate management, in a bid to end the focus on short term earnings.

Ambachtsheer says the next step in the process, to facilitate change and to really have a profound effect in the bid to make sustainable capitalism mainstream, is collaboration.

“We need to take an activist approach to the conversations with a collaborative model. Investors as a group should make four or five choices about how to change behaviour and all get behind it,” he says.

ICPM has written papers in the past on successful models of collaboration concluding they need to have clarity, common interest, an executive function and a budget, and the ability to track success and adjust plans accordingly.

Ambachtsheer uses asset management incentive structures as an example of potential change via collaboration.

“If asset owners insisted on new structures then managers would do it because they wouldn’t have a job,” he says. “If they think in the short term they will get away with it they’ll do it, it’s easier, more exciting and they get feedback immediately. If enough of an investor base changes their expectations it will create demand.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

MSCI: the data toolmaker

With hundreds of indexes, portfolio and risk analytics, and a growing emerging-markets and environmental, social and governance (ESG) focus, MSCI is a business in constant evolution, but chief executive and chairman, Henry Fernandez, says institutional investors are demanding further development, such as private-equity indexes. Fernandez has been chief executive of MSCI since 1996, when the

Illinois pension reform

At least one state in the US is acting on the need for epic reform of its pension system, but the political difficulty associated with such reform – something all states are wary of – was demonstrated in the violent outburst by Illinois representative, Mike Bost, last week (see video) and the inability of representatives

Ang angles for more dynamism at CPPIB

The Ann F Kaplan professor of business at Columbia Business School, Andrew Ang will teach a case study on the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board’s (CPPIB) reference portfolio in the fall. While for the most part complimentary of the approach and process, he challenges the Canadian fund to consider a more dynamic reference portfolio. The

Governance disclosure needs nutrition label

Pension funds should disclose their governance arrangements using a methodology similar to a nutrition label, with members easily able to compare the transparency and accountability of fund standards, a leading corporate-governance expert from Yale says. Dr Stephen Davis, the executive director of Yale School of Management’s Millstein Centre for Corporate Governance and Performance, has called

Mercer lists priorities for Norway’s GPFG

A report finding Norway’s $582.7-billion sovereign wealth fund could face significant losses in a range of climate-change scenarios is unlikely to result in changes to the fund’s investment strategy, Norway’s state secretary Hilde Singsaas says. Norway’s Ministry of Finance released the report into the Government Pension Fund Global’s (GPFG) that it commissioned from Mercer and

CheckRisk rethinks the risk business

Beta-driven equity investors may currently be taking far greater risks than they are getting paid for when seeking broad market exposure, British risk expert Nick Bullman warns. Bullman, the founder of specialist risk consultancy CheckRisk, has developed a methodology using macroeconomic research along with econometric and behavioural risk inputs to identify what he describes as

Previous