Tread carefully among systemic risks

Funds managers, pension trustee boards and fund members should adjust to a low-returns environment and think carefully about investment risk in such uncertain times, warned Tim Gardener, global head of consultant relations at AXA Investment Managers (AXA IM) and a veteran of the UK asset consulting industry.

Tim Gardener, who was global CIO of Mercer before joining AXA IM, said communicating this reality to all fund stakeholders was vital to secure long-term investment returns.

“God didn’t come down from the mountain and say you can always have 10 per cent returns on your investments, and I do think that this is a period where we will get lower returns and people just have to get used to it,” he said.

“The danger is [that] if they don’t get used to it, investment managers will go in pursuit of riskier and riskier investments to try and maintain returns.”

Such strategies would stray from the core purpose of pensions: to deliver long-term, risk-adjusted returns.

Gardener said the investment industry should look at ways of truly focusing on long-term objectives and not be too distracted by short-term performance rankings or market ‘noise’.

Sponsored Content

“There are a number of things you can do, and none of them are a silver bullet, but the prize is so worthwhile that they are worth doing.”

Such as: presenting information to members and boards that emphasised long-term aims and objectives; eliminating market-capitalisation indexes as benchmarks; and implementing governance processes – rather than just talking about them.

Contrary to popular opinion, Gardener argued that the global financial crisis was not caused by dishonest bankers and incompetent regulators but by a misreading of investment risk.

“It is not very newsworthy, but what caused the great financial crisis is that everyone had the same mean-variance risk models and statistical risk models,” he said.

“While they may have had different forms, these risk models were all giving the same message: that risks were manageable and the problem is that statistical models have their limitations.”

He said investment managers should look for the “build-up of pressure” in the financial system – such as the untrammeled securitisation of US mortgage debt before the financial crisis – as an indicator of the next “financial earthquake”.

Rejecting the notion that the financial crisis was a so-called “black swan” event, Gardener said market tumults were likely to happen again because there was little evidence the “buy more, work less” approach of Western societies had changed.

He said current inflation worries were an indication that pressure was again building in the global economy.

“If you start looking at events in this way – if you think of them as earthquakes – then you don’t know when or where, and you know it isn’t going to be exactly like the last one,” he said.

“But the one thing you do know is that it is going to happen.”

He advised investment managers to stress-test their strategies in a range of simulated worst-case scenarios to make sure they could withstand downturns.

An advocate of integrating thematic and behavioural investing theories into an overall investment strategies, Gardner also said long-term investors should identify future trends that could impact investment returns.

Some themes he identified for the next 10 years included:

  • the shift in economic power from West to East;
  • extreme wealth inequalities in many emerging nations, particularly the oil-rich nations;
  • energy, food and water shortages; and
  • demographic trends, which include an aging population in the West.

Speaking alongside Gardener, AXA IM’s senior adviser for responsible investment, Dr Raj Thamotheram, talked about how sustainability concerns should play a major role in investment decisions as they had the capacity to substantially affect the value of investments.

He pointed to the causes of the global financial crisis and compared them with a case study of the recent BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Thamotheram said the two events shared underlying drivers. These included:

  • the degrading of regulatory authority through extensive lobbying;
  • the inability to learn from past mistakes;
  • a narrow conception of risk; and
  • a focus on short-term returns that were unsustainable.

Rather than treating sustainability as a peripheral concern, Thamotheram argued the diminishing safety culture at BP resulted in a number of incidents that were unheeded until the final spill occurred and resulted in an environment catastrophe and wiped $40 billion in shareholder value from the company.

He provided a number of solutions, including more transparent reporting and genuine integration of sustainability principles into investment strategies.

One response to “Tread carefully among systemic risks”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Mercer goes global and adds more to plate

Two new global roles have been added to Mercer’s investment business executive suite, with Russell Clarke appointed global chief investment officer of mainstream assets, and Cara Williams global head of wealth management.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Carbon is next bubble, warns report

Capital markets may be creating a so-called carbon bubble by mispricing known fossil fuel reserves as assets, leaving investors with a systematic risk to their portfolios, new research claims.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Robin Hood had it so simple

A Maid Marian of sorts, I like the idea of taking from the rich to give to the poor, and I certainly believe in a low-carbon economy, so it’s pleasing to see momentum building for the causes behind a financial transaction tax in Europe and the UK. But I’m not convinced such a tax is

Is this the beginning of real reform in NY?

New York Governor, Andrew Cuomo, has introduced a reform agenda for the $140 billion State Common Retirement Fund in a bid to reduce the burden of its liabilities on taxpayers, but there is no sign of fulfilling his election promise of changing the governance structure of the fund. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Columbia students solve governance problems

Financial studies students at one of New York’s most-respected business schools, Columbia Business School, are asked to suggest a new governance model for the State Common Retirement Fund, as its current model of a single trustee is held up to be “the worst example of governance” in a large pension fund in the developed world

Bespoke is the new black of risk management

Risk management is the new black – never out of fashion and always reliable. Russell Investments’ director of investment strategy, Canada, Bruce Curwood, explains why risk management is the cornerstone of investing and why now is the perfect time to talk to fiduciaries about their governance structures.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous