US equities’ reallocations to hit small players

Tim Barron

The US asset management and consulting arena is undergoing massive change, with large institutions re-allocating away from domestic exposures potentially having a big effect on the market, president of Rogerscasey, Tim Barron, says.

According to Barron, large US institutions are selling domestic equities to buy fixed income, international equities, commodities and timber, which could have massive implications for US funds managers.

“It will be particularly hard for the small players running US equities only to continue to survive in this market,” he says. “The mid-sized firms will also struggle. The big guys will get bigger and the small, specialised guys will do well.”

In addition the US market is undergoing reorganisation on the consulting side, with firms merging – such as Aon Hewitt EnnisKnupp – and the decision by Mercer to exit the defined-benefit consulting market.

There are more than 200 consulting firms in the US, Barron says, and about 90 per cent of them are small.

“The decision by Mercer to pull out of consulting to defined-benefit funds has changed the landscape for consulting again in the US. Mercer had about 25 such clients and now that’s opening the market to the other players.”

Sponsored Content

Barron believes the plan sponsor community has been innovative in the post-crisis environment.

“We’ve seen things like risk parity and asset liability matching gaining traction. It’s like medical innovation during the war: you have a lot of patients that need help. I’m not sure that 60:40 is the promised land.”

Barron says he has been a proponent of diversification and more global weightings by US pension funds since Rogerscasey started in 1984.

“Diversification reigns; it is still the only free lunch. But so many US institutions are so US-centric.”

He says the US equities market is so mature now, and questioned whether there was still room for industrialisation.

“There is still some premium in equities but it feels like the growth rate will be less than it has been historically. The equity risk premium has assumed a rate of growth in the developed economies that doesn’t look likely. So the equity risk premium will either be not as significant, or not in developed markets.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

ESG seeks meaningful relationship with performance

Research on environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) and investments has advanced in rigour, coverage and volume, but data quality, and the problems of reverse causality are still concerns for academics looking for a meaningful relationship between ESG factors and investment performance.

How BlackRock’s Russ Koesterich sees the coming year

Emerging market equities in Asia and Latin America could be a bright spot in the lingering gloom hanging over global markets this year, according to BlackRock’s managing director of iShares Russ Koesterich.

Critical thinking in pension design and management

There is too much trend following and too little intellectual irritation in pension management, according to Keith Ambachtsheer, principal of KPA Advisory Services.

Preqin survey of private equity investors

The tide may be turning for private equity investments, with 73 per cent of investors planning to make new private equity commitments in 2012, according to a global survey of 100 institutional investors by Preqin.

Outliers outdo averages in hedge funds

Hedge fund investors should focus on a few exceptional managers and keep allocations to just 1 or 2 per cent of a diversified portfolio, according to the former head of JP Morgan’s hedge fund seeding operations, Simon Lack.

Study casts doubt on liquidity of UK market

A study into the workings of the UK stock market has found that its liquidity is reduced by high-frequency trading, raising concerns that Europe’s biggest equity market is not as deep as once thought.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous