Greenwich: How US institutions are recalibrating
strategies<http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2009/06/16/57181/greenwich-how-us-institutions-are-recalibrating-strategies/>Posted
by *Gwen Robinson* on Jun 16 10:08.

The main conclusions of a new report by Greenwich
Associates<http://www.greenwich.com/>on how US institutions have
responded to the global downturn are hardly
surprising - that big US institutions used the the first half of 2009 to
re-examine their investment policies, asset allocations and investment
managers to determine what went wrong last year; pinpoint the policies,
investments and managers that performed as expected through the market
crisis; and to identify those that fell short.

Nevertheless the report, based on what seems to be a fairly exhaustive
survey of 152 US institutions, identifies some trends worth noting for the
year ahead.

The lessons that these institutions drew from their internal reviews will
have a “profound impact, not just on the US investment management industry,
but also on the world’s financial markets and on the millions of American
workers who rely on the nation’s pension system for their security in
retirement”, predicts Greenwich.

Of the 162 respondents, 97 were corporate pension funds, 34 public funds,
and 21 endowments and foundations with at least $1bn of assets under
management.

The key findings of the survey:

   - Institutions are sticking with diversification strategies: they
   continued to reduce allocations to US equities through the second half of
   2008 and into the first six months of 2009, and remain committed to
   significant allocations of hedge funds, private equity and other alternative
   investments.


   - At the same time, corporate plan sponsors  hit last year by plunging
   portfolio asset values are moving to reduce the volatility of pension fund
   investment performance by increasing allocations to fixed income, even as
   they shut defined benefit plans to new employees and reduce matching
   contributions to defined contribution plans.


   - The financial crisis has had an equally profound effect on public
   pension funds. As public funds are not subject to the same accounting rules
   that govern corporate pensions, they are accepting greater levels of
   short-term volatility and lower levels of liquidity in return for the chance
   to make up for last year’s setbacks with strong investment returns. As such,
   fewer public funds are shifting assets into fixed income and more are
   increasing allocations to alternative asset classes with higher potential
   for returns.


   - After finding themselves forced to sell assets into a falling market in
   order to fund operations and other needs during the crisis, endowments and
   foundations are revising their views on cash holdings and increasing
   liquidity requirements within their portfolios. But there are no indications
   they are reconsidering investment policies that now emphasise
   diversification and incorporate relatively high allocations to hedge funds,
   private equity and other alternative asset classes. In fact, 44 per cent of
   endowments and foundations have actually increased their allocations to
   hedge funds over the past 12 months.


   - Public pension funds and endowments have been the first movers among US
   institutions to make opportunistic investments related to the market crisis.
   Almost a quarter of US institutions overall have already made investments in
   opportunistic funds, including vehicles looking to exploit rare
   opportunities in fixed income, secondary private equity and other asset
   classes. Endowments and foundations have led the way, with 45 per cent of
   them investing in opportunistic funds, followed by public pension funds at
   roughly one-third.


   - More than 20 per cent of US institutions have shifted assets from
   active managers to passive strategies in the past year, but it is not yet
   clear whether this move represents a temporary “parking” of assets as
   institutions abandon underperforming active strategies and managers, or a
   more secular change in approach.


   - Almost half of US institutions have scaled back their securities
   lending programmes after discovering unexpected levels of risk during the
   market dislocations of last year.


   - Manager turnover could reach historic highs over the course of the next
   12 months if institutions follow through on their plans for managing hiring
   and firing. At the very least, managers can expect tough new demands for
   increased transparency and disclosure.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
""GLOBAL SPECULATORS"" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/globalspeculators?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to