Equity Investing Insights Into A Better Portfolio
Equity Investing Insights Into A Better Portfolio
Equity Investing Insights Into A Better Portfolio
Equity investing:
Insights into a better portfolio
unique qualities of
...the
towerswatson.com/equity-investing
2 towerswatson.com
Contents
06
Section one:
Portfolio construction
30
Section two:
Manager selection
60
Section three:
Manager monitoring
08
Best-in-class equity structure
What is best practice when
considering equity portfolios?
32
Assessing investment skill
in equity managers
A necessary task prior to
making any investment and
as part of an ongoing
monitoring process
62
Benchmarks matter
It is important to ensure
that they continue to
be appropriate
16
Using smart beta in equities
Smart beta can greatly
improve an investors ability
to achieve its objectives
20
Understanding emerging
market equity
How to best access
the expected growth in
these markets
25
Low volatility equity
strategies should
you include them in
your portfolio?
These strategies target
market returns but with
much lower risk
40
Do not hire managers
for past performance
More evidence of why this
approach can lose value
66
What results should
dictate firing a manager?
At what point is the result
so bad that you just have
to move on
43
Quantitative investing
will quants strike back?
Our current views
on quantitative
investment strategies
48
Concentrated equity products
Why we generally prefer them to
diversified products
52
Low volatility equity from
smart idea to smart execution
How to avoid the
potential pitfalls with
this investment idea
55
Sustainability in
investment research
a pragmatic approach
Adding transformational
change to the asset
owners agenda
56
What to look for in
a passive manager
Rigorous qualitative research
can lead to better outcomes
It
is hard to find managers capable
of sustained outperformance, combine
them in a risk-proportionate portfolio
and manage this through different
economic and market conditions.
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Introdction
Section on
Portfolio construction
6 towerswatson.com
01 Portfolio construction
...we
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
01 Portfolio construction
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
Probability of at least:
10 11 12 13 14 15
Number of managers
Style diversification
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20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
-5%
-10%
-15%
-20%
2012
1928
1932
1936
1940
1944
1948
1952
1956
1960
1964
1968
1972
1976
1980
1984
1988
1992
1996
2000
2004
2008
Rationale/benefits
Ensure returns from smart beta and alpha are expected to come from differentiated
return drivers
Use of best-in-class
active managers
Appropriate diversification
Academic studies have shown and behavioural analysis supports the view
that investors often destroy value by hiring managers with good performance,
and firing managers with poor performance. Conversely a contrarian approach
should add value2,3
Incorporating longer-term
views of equity market
risk factors and current
market conditions
Portfolios should reflect longer-term capital market views in the context of current
market valuations. Towers Watsons views are provided by its Global Investment
Committee and Asset Research Team
Consideration given to attractiveness of style risk factors (see Towers Watsons
articles on Value investing4 and Low volatility equity5)
01 Portfolio construction
150%
125%
Growth
100%
75%
50%
Value
Value
25%
0%
Value
Quality
Value
Growth
-25%
-50%
Quality
-75%
Dot-com
2000
bear market
00s
bull market
Global
financial crisis
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Alpha
(manager skill)
Bulk beta
Internal
portfolio
management
skill
Smart beta
Governance
High
Low
Complexity
High
Bulk beta
Broad global
Lower
Expected returns/
financial efficiency
Higher
01 Portfolio construction
Unconstrained equity
model portfolio
Performance
net of fees
Tracking
error
Net information
ratio
+1.9% pa
3.4% pa
0.6
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3.7%
Tracking error
4.0%
Information ratio
0.94
Approximate fee
0.9%
01 Portfolio construction
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Bulk beta
Smart beta
Diversifying
Market
capitalisation
passive
Alpha
Stock selection
Thematic
Systematic
Market timing
Overvalued
Investors extrapolate
good news
Fair value
Investors overreact
to bad news
Undervalued
01 Portfolio construction
Replace active
management
Governance
saving
Portfolio
completion
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Conclusion
The smart beta concept has significantly expanded
the tools available to an investor, particularly within
equities. While it brings new governance demands,
if used effectively, smart beta can greatly improve
an investors ability to achieve its objectives and so
merits its place in the investors toolbox.
References
1 Global Investment Commitee: secular outloook 2013
assimilating thematic thinking, Towers Watson Limited.
01 Portfolio construction
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20
40
Utilities
Telecommunication services
Information technology
Financials
Healthcare
Consumer staples
Consumer discretionary
Industrials
Materials
Energy
01 Portfolio construction
Emerging markets
Accessing EM equity
The usual ways of accessing equity markets apply
similarly in emerging markets. There are investment
options for traditional bulk beta (passive market
capitalisation approaches), smart beta and alpha
(active managers). However, there are important
considerations for implementation which are
specific to emerging markets.
Developed markets
10
20
30
Morocco
Hungary
Czech Rep
Egypt
Peru
Philippines
Colombia
Poland
Turkey
Chile
Thailand
Indonesia
Malaysia
Mexico
Russia
India
South Africa
Taiwan
Brazil
Korea
China
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40
Smart beta
The main objective of smart beta is to capture
a particular risk premium for a low cost.
These strategies are expected to provide
superior investment efficiency than bulk beta
(passive market capitalisation). Please see
Towers Watsons article Using smart beta in
equities1 for further information on this topic.
These smart betas include value-weighted
strategies, low volatility strategies and
diversification-based strategies. All require
careful consideration and have implications
for portfolio implementation. Fees for these
strategies are more expensive than their
developed market equivalents but, at around
0.30%, represent reasonable value in
emerging markets.
Active management
Active management is, in theory, very attractive
in emerging markets. It is often argued that EM
equity is a less efficient asset class, in part due
to the issues discussed above, but also because
sell-side analyst coverage has typically been lower
in emerging markets (although this is increasingly
less the case). Active managers are potentially
better able to assess the quality of company
governance and the actions of management,
which can be very important in emerging markets.
Active managers may also have freedom to
invest in emerging market stocks that are listed
on developed market stock exchanges. These
can include multi-national companies with high
emerging market presence/exposure. But more
importantly, genuine emerging market businesses
that have, for various reasons, chosen to list
elsewhere. Active managers are therefore able to
select those companies that are most exposed
to key emerging market drivers, which may not be
some of the large EM index stocks.
However, there are also some structural challenges
facing active management in emerging markets.
1. Large teams: Diverse markets, cultures and
languages often lead managers to hire more
staff to gain broader local knowledge. Bigger
teams can typically present more challenges to
communication and culture and can potentially
become bureaucratic.
10
00
00
00
,0
,0
,0
30
10
20
Assets under management (US$ millions)
0
00
1,
00
2,
00
5,
01 Portfolio construction
Frontier markets
In a similar manner to emerging markets, frontier
markets offer a broad and diverse opportunity
set that we believe can benefit from long-term
growth drivers. However, lack of liquidity, relatively
poor governance standards and earlier stages
of economic development make these markets
unattractive for many investors. We believe that
significant investor skill is required when investing
in these markets due to the above constraints and
so avoid passive allocations in these markets.
We believe that allowing skilled emerging market
managers the ability to invest in frontier markets
can give further potential for added value in the
long term.
24 towerswatson.com
References
1 Using smart beta in equities. Towers Watson Limited, 2013.
2 As at Q2 2013.
01 Portfolio construction
As derived from
classical theory
As observed
empirically
Beta of stock
26 towerswatson.com
Collectively,
01 Portfolio construction
Conclusion
Low volatility products expand the options
available to equity investors. Even better,
some of them give investors cheap access
to important investment anomalies. Even
then, these strategies raise concerns that
all prospective investors should resolve
before proceeding further, such as the
focus on too narrow a subset of the market
by strategies that are increasingly popular.
28 towerswatson.com
References
Further reading
The preference for this mandate raises some broader issues, including
some about investment strategy. For example, should loss-averse investors
just allocate less to equity? Would the equity allocation change dramatically
with a low volatility mandate rather than a traditional quantitative equity
mandate? A key consideration is whether the low volatility product
produces a sizeable fall in the volatility of the total portfolio. After all,
reducing the volatility of a certain product in a portfolio may not reduce the
volatility of the portfolio itself by much. However, reducing the expected
return of a product within a portfolio will certainly lower the portfolios
expected return. For that reason, an investor may be able to achieve a
better overall risk-adjusted return by hiring a traditional equity mandate
that targets the same anomalies. The answer to this question will differ by
investor, given their existing allocation. However, investors should consider
these questions before proceeding with such a mandate.
While the index of small capitalisation value stocks has a high beta
relative to the broad market index, the same is not true for all of its
constituent stocks. As it happens, it is these lower beta stocks that
often appear in low volatility products.
A broader question also arises at this point. That is, why focus only on
cheap equity anomalies? If you wish to be consistent, shouldnt you
be considering as many anomalies as possible in your portfolio? After
all, many of these anomalies, like the illiquidity premium, may present
themselves across multiple assets. For that reason, some expert
investment boards now base their investment strategy not on asset
allocation but on an allocation of factor exposures (that they implement
by investing in certain subsets of an asset class). Ang et al (2009)
describe such an approach in great detail. Other investors use risk parity
funds to achieve a similar aim, although doing so raises more questions,
such as the potential fragility of a risk parity portfolio in the face of
steepening yield curves.
In equities, for example, see Fama and French (1992) for details of the
value-growth and large-small anomalies. (Note that, under specific
assumptions, Fernholz and Karatzas (2006) disagree and view the small
capitalisation and illiquidity premium as identical.) Carhartt (1997) then
considers an additional anomaly, called momentum, while Pastor and
Stambaugh (2003) reflect on an anomaly for illiquidity.
Brav and Heaton (2002) skilfully show the uncanny similarity between
these two types of theory.
Snowberg and Wolfers (2010) reflect this consistent bias in more detail
and conclude that it likely results from behavioural biases.
This form of argument is based on the work of Shleifer and Vishny (1997),
concerning the limits of arbitrage.
Section two
Manager selection
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02 Manager selection
32 towerswatson.com
-15%
-10%
-5%
0%
5%
10%
15%
This chart presents the expected returns (shaded area) assuming returns are random and normally
distributed, and the distribution of actual returns achieved by all large capitalisation US equity portfolio
managers (the red line) over the past three years (net of fees at an estimated 0.5%). As can be seen, the
realised excess returns have a random distribution with a mean return just above 0%.
Source: eVestment Alliance, Towers Watson
75%
50%
25%
0%
Skilled
Unskilled
...we
02 Manager selection
- 10%
- 20%
- 30%
March
1970
March
1975
March
1980
March
1985
March
1990
March
1995
March
2000
March
2005
March
2010
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02 Manager selection
Complex structure
(many alpha sources)
Analysts
Portfolio managers
Products
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Case study 1
We discussed a managers investment in Kingfisher, a UK-based home
improvement retailer. As part of our discussion regarding the investment
rationale, the manager suggested that he expected operating profit
margins to reach 12%. Through research undertaken prior to the meeting
we were aware that in the previous year margins were 6.5% and that
during the past 20 years they had never been above 8.8%. Knowing
this information enabled us to recognise that the forecast for operating
performance was aggressive and led us to drill into the basis for this
forecast to build a clearer picture of the managers depth of analysis
and objectivity. This exposed weaknesses in the application of the
process and behavioural flaws.
Case study 2
We discussed a small UK-based technology company, CSR, with a
manager. During this interview the manager stated that his competitive
advantage in assessing this company was largely based on the markets
preoccupation with short-term earnings momentum when valuing IT
hardware stocks and his discipline in exploiting the mispricing that could
occur as a result. He was clear that he had no better understanding
of the technologies applied by this company than the market. He
comprehensively illustrated both the case for investment in the business
and the case for the shares to underperform thereby demonstrating
balance and emotional detachment from the investment decision,
something we believe helps to avoid behavioural errors.
02 Manager selection
Figure 05. Cumulative outperformance of the Towers Watson Global Equity Model Portfolio
45%
40%
35%
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
0%
2000
5%
This chart shows the cumulative excess returns achieved by the Towers Watson Global Equity Model Portfolio since its inception net of all fees and expenses.
Source: Towers Watson
In
order to improve the probability of forming a
correct judgment a good manager researcher or
asset manager will look for opportunities to gain
additional insight.
38 towerswatson.com
Explicit
References
1 Stewart, S D. Neumann, J J. Knittel, C R. and Heilser, J. Absence of
Value: An Analysis of Investment Allocation Decisions by Institutional Plan
Sponsors. Financial Analysts Journal, Vol. 65, No. 6 (2009): 34-51.
2 Based on a hypothesis test (one tail t distribution analysis at 95%
confidence and IR=0.5) , one would need more than 13 years of yearly
observations. t stat = (X 0)/(X/0.5/sqrt(n)) should be bigger than
t(0.05, n-1) to accept the hypothesis that annual outperformance
X is positive.
3 Keynes, J M. The General Theory of Employment
Interest and Money, 1936.
4
Replacing managers for performance reasons.
Towers Watson Limited, 2011.
5 Goyal, A. and Wahal, S. The Selection and Termination of Investment
Management Firms by Plan Sponsors, 2005.
6 Minahan, J R. The Role of Investment Philosophy in Evaluating
Investment Managers. The Journal of Investing, Summer 2006.
7 The Search for Alpha. Watson Wyatt Limited, January 2007.
02 Manager selection
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Mediocre
Bad
2,000
1,000
0
Skilled
Mediocre
Bad
02 Manager selection
42 towerswatson.com
Conclusion
Using our standard assumptions, we showed that
nearly 80% of US equity managers with good past
performance lack the skill to outperform reliably
in the future. In other words, only 20% of the
managers that boast good past performance did
so because of skill. That begs the question: why
do so many investors rely on past performance,
when it contains so little information?
In our view, investors should downplay the
importance of past performance and focus
on reliable drivers of future excess returns.
Comparing these factors across many firms
is more time consuming than just measuring
performance, but can provide genuine insight into
the quality of the manager. Investors can then
use this insight to improve their forecast of their
managers likely excess return.
References
1
Of course, some managers run more than one portfolio, but well
ignore the distinction between manager and product, for the sake of
simple storytelling.
Whilst our view on this matter may seem to come from only one paper,
Barras, L. Scaillet, O. and Wermers, R. False discoveries in mutual
fund performance: measuring luck in estimated alphas. Journal of
Finance, February 2010. It also reflects our experience of dealing
with institutional investment managers.
Quantitative investing
Will quants strike back?
02 Manager selection
Quants on a roller-coaster
Quants, who use systematic factor-based
models to analyse and invest using widely
available data, have a long history in equity
management. Financial market historians
ascribe the beginning of quantitative
investment strategies to Harry Markowitzs
seminal work on portfolio theory in 1952. 1
From a few early adopters, quants slowly found
their place as providers of niche investment
approaches alongside traditional fundamental
managers. Much of that popularity stems from
the growing support of finance academics. 2
44 towerswatson.com
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
What happened?
2005
2006
2007
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
-5%
-10%
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
Momentum Value
Source: Style Research Limited, Towers Watson
...it
is no coincidence that recent style
headwinds in value and momentum
coincided with negative performance
for quantitative managers.
02 Manager selection
Introspection
The best quant managers are highly reflective
and well aware of the natural shortcomings
in quantitative approaches. They know that
quantitative tools may introduce discipline but are
not inherently better than traditional, subjective
methods. These managers are more likely to
foresee problems rather than react to events.
46 towerswatson.com
Factor differentiation
We are cautious of managers claiming an edge
through the exploitation of unique factors. Such
factors are, in fact, rarely unique. We see similar
insights spreading rapidly across the quantitative
investment community, inevitably impairing their
effectiveness. In order to prolong its competitive
advantage, a manager may become more
secretive. But this reduces transparency and
can make it more difficult to confirm competitive
advantage. Data mining can also be an issue
as ever-growing swathes of data series are
scrutinised. Finally, even when we see more
differentiated factors, they frequently do not
account for a significant part of the quantitative
models overall risk budget.
Low assets
Everything else being equal, a modest level of
assets under management is an advantage. Our
view remains that it is easier to deliver alpha with
total assets of US$1 billion than it is with, say,
US$20 billion. This is particularly true for higher
portfolio turnover approaches which use factors
with a short-time horizon for potential added value.
Suitable fees
Fees for quants are often too high for the likely
level of value added. Managers often have
over-optimistic assumptions about the future
information ratio (the ratio of relative return per
unit of relative risk taken) of their strategies.
Some managers also develop products with
very low active risk in order to optimise gross
information ratios of the strategy, effectively
ignoring the real-world drag from fees paid
by clients.
In summary
Following disappointing performance from some
products, traditional active quantitative equity
investing is now far less popular. We have a positive
view of some strategies, but remain cautious on this
group as a whole. Despite efforts by managers to
differentiate themselves, innovation rarely remains
unique for long and process enhancements often
lead to greater complexity.
Nonetheless, we believe that quantitative investing
can still play a useful, and expanded role in
portfolios via greater use of smart beta strategies.
Asset owners can use systematic strategies to
target style exposures inexpensively and in a way
that is consistent with their beliefs or portfolio
construction needs. To achieve this, it may not
be necessary for quantitative approaches to use
unique inputs or to be very complicated if they are
well-grounded and available at reasonable fees.
A smarter quant could be a simpler quant.
References
1 Markowitz, H. Portfolio selection. The Journal of Finance, March 1952.
2 For example: Fama, E. and French, K. The cross-section of expected stock returns. The Journal of
Finance, June 1992; or Jegadeesh, N. and Titman, S. Returns to buying winners and selling losers:
Implications for stock market efciency. The Journal of Finance, March 1993.
3 For example, Casey Quirk & Associates LLC. The geeks shall inherit the Earth?, 2005.
4 Average relative returns of representative active global or international equity strategies from 10
large quantitative managers. Manager selection based on assets managed in active quantitative-only
strategies. Performance is relative to stated strategy benchmark, gross of fees.
5 US$ value of coincident holdings, as taken from 13F filings in US, of the largest eight
quantitative-only investment managers.
6 Value investing an old idea, but probably a good one. Towers Watson Limited, January 2013.
7 Simulated performance of selected strategies; momentum: highest quintile by 12 months
price momentum; value: highest quintile by earnings yield. Universe: Largest 2500 global
companies in global universe, market capitalisation weighted, quarterly rebalance.
02 Manager selection
48 towerswatson.com
02 Manager selection
Tracking error
Information
ratio at the
product level
Information
ratio at the
portfolio level
1% pa
3% pa
0.33
0.43
2% pa
9% pa
0.22
0.29
Risk
6% pa
15.2% pa
0.40
7% pa
16.5% pa
0.42
50 towerswatson.com
Further reading
Clarke, R. de Silva, H. and Thorley, S. Portfolio Constraints and the
Fundamental Law of Active Management. Financial Analysts Journal,
September/October 2002: 48-66.
Cremers, K J M. and Petajisto, A. How Active Is Your Fund
Manager? A New Measure that Predicts Performance. The Review
of Financial Studies, 2009.
Track records Luck or judgement? Introducing hit rates
and win loss ratios. Inalytics Limited.
Scherer, B. and Xu, X. The Impact of Constraints on Value-Added. Journal of
Portfolio Management, Summer 2007.
Concentrated Portfolios: An Examination of their Characteristics and
Effectiveness. The Brandes Institute, 2004.
Remapping our investment world. Watson Wyatt, 2003.
References
1 This article concerns equity portfolios but many of the principles
also apply to other asset classes, even though the definitions of
concentrated and diversified may differ.
2 When combined with a managers commercial goals, these conclusions
may help to explain why managers often target the best information
ratio for their product. After all, an investment manager usually gains
most commercial benefit if it retains its mandate with the client. As it
can improve its odds of retention by trying to minimise its odds of
underperformance, it does so by targeting the maximum information
ratio for its product. Of course, this action makes commercial sense
for the manager, but does not necessarily benefit the client.
3 Grinold, R C. and Khan, R N. Active Portfolio Management.
McGraw-Hill Professional, 2000.
4 We base these assumptions on performance after fees. We recognise,
however, that the fees for concentrated products typically exceed those
of diversified products in absolute terms, but not in risk-adjusted terms.
5 The article from Inalytics also considers this dynamic. Put briefly,
it shows that managers collectively tend to win more than they lose
in overweight positions. However, they lose more than they win in
unintended short positions.
6 See Cremers and Petajisto (2009) for further details. Seemingly running
counter to these views, other studies have shown that the average
concentrated manager does not outperform the average diversified
manager, both before and after a risk adjustment. One such example
is the paper from The Brandes Institute. To us, these findings are
reasonable but potentially misleading, as we condition our preference
for concentrated managers on them being skilled, not average.
7 Investors can improve the information ratios of many skilled
managers, however, by relaxing the constraint against holding
a negative weight in a stock. That said, fees are often higher and
these long/short portfolios tend to suit the investment approach
of only a subset of fundamental managers.
8 For further details, see Clarke et al (2002), and Scherer and Xu (2007).
9 See Kroll, B. Reach for more excess return but dont hurt yourself.
Part II: The paradox of portfolio concentration are your managers
best ideas good enough? JP Morgan Asset Management, 2004,
for further details.
10 The cost of trigger-happy investing. Towers Watson Limited, 2012.
02 Manager selection
52 towerswatson.com
Potential pitfalls
While the low volatility concept is worth investigating,
there are potential hazards along the path from the
initial idea to final implementation. There is a very
wide range of strategies to consider and smart beta
investments are a new avenue for many investors.
Furthermore, the effect of impressive results from
the strategy tends to raise expectations, rather
than raise caution which may be a more appropriate
reaction. We believe it is essential to navigate the
potential pitfalls, which we highlight here.
Realistic expectations
Empirical evidence suggests that there is a trade-off
between return and risk, but that this relationship
may be flatter than traditional market theory
suggests. If so, a low volatility equity portfolio may
have a higher risk-adjusted return than the market as
the reduction in risk is achieved with only a moderate
sacrifice of return. Note that we still expect a
somewhat lower than market return from (unlevered,
long-only) low volatility equity strategies over the
long term. Having an expectation of significant risk
reduction without any sacrifice of long-term return
is, in our view, counterintuitive and based on an
overemphasis on period-specific historical backtests.
Hence, we are cautious of the statement used in
marketing presentations: market level returns for
below market level risk.
Empirical
Investor A
Low volatility
strategy
(beta 0.8)
Investor B
5 years
Investor A
is unhappy
Low volatility
strategy returns
12% per annum with
15% volatility
Cash returns
2% per annum
Investor B
is happy
02 Manager selection
Figure 02. Number of low volatility products on eVestment database over time
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
Summary
We advocate smart beta investments as a new
avenue for many investors. In our view, low volatility
equity can be smart, but only by avoiding the
potential pitfalls.
References
1 In the example given, Investor B could also have used alternative
risk-adjusted performance measures such as Jensens alpha.
This article is based on a Towers Watson article first published in Investment Pensions Europe (IPE) in November 2012.
54 towerswatson.com
2011
2012
02 Manager selection
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Portfolio management
High quality systems
Efficiency of trading
Securities lending
Opportunity set
Size of individual index tracking funds
Appropriate fund structures
Alignment
Low fees and costs
A range of ancillary services
Strong client service
Investment professionals
Indexation, unlike other areas of fund
management, does not tend to attract star
portfolio managers. However, index tracking
requires a specific skill set, so a dedicated and
high-quality team can make a lot of difference
to the strength of the offering. Experience
is an important characteristic, as well as a
good understanding of both quantitative risk
systems (their strengths and limitations) and
more lateral risk metrics. Depth of team is
also important, to ensure a comfortable level
of coverage for each portfolio manager. In
our opinion, portfolio managers should not
have too many different accounts to manage
and should also have an understanding
of different types of client accounts.
...managers
02 Manager selection
Portfolio management
High quality systems
The nature of indexation management means
there is a strong focus on cost and risk. The
best managers have systems that allow them
to see their portfolios easily, understand what
the key risks are and transact efficiently within
their defined parameters. Pre- and post-trade
compliance checks that are built into the portfolio
and order management systems are another
important risk mitigation feature. A high level of
commitment to buying, building and maintaining
these systems is a differentiating factor for the
leading firms. While a high specification and easy
to use system may seem nice-to-have rather than
essential, we believe that these tools materially
reduce risk of human error.
Efficiency of trading
Almost no index that is tracked, be it in equities,
bonds or alternatives, takes account of transaction
costs. Every penny that is spent on transactions,
administrative costs, fees and taxes represents a
negative tracking difference. All managers should
be aware of trading costs, but for indexation
managers that often hold large numbers of
securities in relatively small proportions and
have no alpha in which to hide costs, reducing
these is a crucial efficiency. Again, scale can help
here, as large managers are likely to have more
money moving around in order to match buyers
and sellers of stock, and are able to negotiate
favourable terms with brokers. Some managers
have periodic days where they try to encourage
all clients to trade, so as to maximise crossing
opportunities. As technology and trading venues
continue to broaden and expand with the growth of
direct market access, algorithmic trading and dark
pools, we would expect to see the best indexation
managers leading efforts to drive trading cost
efficiencies for their clients.
Securities lending
Securities lending within the portfolio is an
additional method that a manager may use to add
return to the portfolio, but it is not without risks.
These risks were graphically illustrated in 2008
when many funds had problems with their stock
lending programs, mostly where cash collateral
had been reinvested in assets that became
illiquid. This caused underperformance and, in a
number of cases, withdrawal restrictions.
Securities lending programmes in particular should
be reviewed to ensure that investors are happy with
the risks they bring, looking for details such as:
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Opportunity set
Size of individual index tracking funds
Within each index tracking fund, size is almost
always a benefit. A large pool of assets can mean
a manager can hold more stocks in the index, but
it also gives a broader base over which to spread
the (often largely fixed) administrative costs.
When funds are very large they can also use this
scale to create further efficiencies. A bigger fund
is likely to have more buyers and sellers than a
smaller one and so may offer opportunities for
investors to trade at mid-price (through matching
these buyers and sellers together). A large
fund may also be able to use its scale to earn
fees for sub-underwriting new stock issuance
(which the fund has to buy as the stock enters
the index), and to trade more opportunistically
than a smaller fund might be able to.
Alignment
Low fees and costs
As we have illustrated, headline fees do not tell
the full story when assessing a passive product.
Nonetheless, it is clear that one of the key
benefits that passive management offers when
compared to active management is its low cost.
Understanding the total cost involved (fees and
other costs) will factor into any assessment.
It is important to note the details, such as cut
off points on sliding fee scales and discounts
offered for holding more than one index product
with a manager: typically it is cheaper to find one
manager than can offer multiple indexed products,
as fees can be negotiated on total assets.
Summary
Passive management is a fast-growing sector in
fund management, as many institutional investors
focus on costs and efficiencies within their funds.
It is often regarded as easy and argued that the
selection decision should be based solely on fees.
Here, we have demonstrated that while price is
an important factor, there is a lot more to good
passive management than low fees. We believe
that broader qualitative due diligence, using
the detailed criteria we have set out should be
undertaken to ensure that appropriate managers
are hired to meet an investors needs, now and
in the future.
Section t hree
Manager monitoring
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03 Manager monitoring
Benchmarks matter
Investors use benchmarks to:
1. Define an investment universe for their managers
2. Measure and evaluate performance
It is therefore important for investors to review the
benchmarks that are being used and ensure that they
continue to be appropriate.
Benchmarks are not static and often it is unclear
what the differences are between similar-sounding
benchmarks. The increase in absolute return
mandates has made benchmarking decisions
even harder.
As an example, consider Asian equity indices.
There are well over 100 different Asian equity
indices available to investors covering a range
of styles, sizes and regional variations. From a
sample of 50 of these indices, the narrowest of
these indices contains two countries, the broadest
thirteen, and there are large differences in
performance over prolonged periods of time.
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2. Completeness
3. Investability
4. Independent and
regular data
-1.0%
-2.0%
-3.0%
-4.0%
-5.0%
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Source: eVestment, MSCI
...
even if a managers benchmark was the
most appropriate choice when the manager
was appointed, manager benchmarks
should be reviewed to make sure they
are still the right fit several years on.
03 Manager monitoring
Market-weighted benchmarks
One example of how benchmarks are important for passively
managed assets is the recent development of alternatives to
the traditional market-weighted benchmarks. The majority
of commonly-used benchmarks are weighted according to the
market value of the securities that a company has in issuance.
The benefit of this approach is that it gives exposure to the
whole of the available universe at low cost.
However, there are also several drawbacks with this approach:
Market-weighted benchmarks hold more of a security as it
increases in value. If a security becomes overpriced and then
falls in value again, the benchmark holds the largest amount
of that security right before the price begins falling. Similarly,
a market-weighted benchmark holds less of a security as it
falls in value, and its allocation to a security is at its lowest
right before the price begins to increase in value again.
This means that market-weighted benchmarks tend to have
high allocations to over-priced assets and low allocations
to under-priced assets.
For bond markets, a market-weighted benchmark has the
highest allocations to the most indebted borrowers (the
companies or countries with the most bonds in issuance),
which seems counterintuitive.
In recent years, investors have become increasingly aware
of these issues, and index providers have developed
alternative ways to construct a passive benchmark. For
equity benchmarks, these tend to involve gaining exposure
to different factors or approaches, such as value-weighting
or targeting a certain level of volatility. For bonds, the focus
has been on improving diversification and considering metrics
which measure a companys ability to repay its debt.
The
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03 Manager monitoring
66 towerswatson.com
Some context
Some commentary
03 Manager monitoring
Lack of liquidity
Securities caught up in forced deleveraging
Securities affected by government interventions
A flight to (perceived) quality
Other aspects of sentiment, in which fear has
played a big part
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03 Manager monitoring
What
References
1
G oyal, A. and Wahal, S. The Selection and Termination of Investment
Management Firms by Plan Sponsors, 2005.
70 towerswatson.com
Further information
For further information, please contact your usual
Towers Watson consultant or:
James MacLachlan
Global Head of Equity Manager Research
+1 212 309 3876
james.maclachlan@towerswatson.com
Fabio Cecutto
Senior Investment Consultant
+1 212 309 3867
fabio.cecutto@towerswatson.com
Towers Watson
21 Tothill Street
Westminster
London
SW1H 9LL
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