February 18, 2014 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Jim Mitchell joined BMO Global Asset Management as vice president and relationship manager, BMO Taft-Hartley Services.
Mitchell will be responsible for developing new, national
relationships in the organized labor community. Based in Chicago, he will work
in collaboration with Keith Giemzik, vice president and relationship manager at
BMO Taft-Hartley Services.
Before coming to BMO Global Asset Management, Mitchell was a
senior vice president specializing in Taft-Hartley investment sales and
services at an investment and asset management firm in Chicago. He has
experience in custodial relations for the same firm, and was also executive
director for the Inter-Local Pension Fund in Carol Stream, Illinois.
BMO Global Asset Management is a global investment manager
with more than $132 billion in assets under management, and more than $162
billion in assets under administration as of October 31.
Importance of Risk Management for Institutional Investors
February 18, 2014 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – More than 80% of institutional investors expect risk management to play an even greater role in the investment decision process in the future, says a new study.
Published by BNY Mellon, an investment management and services
provider, “New Frontiers of Risk: Revisiting the 360-Degree Manager” also finds
over the next five years, 73% of institutional investors expect to spend
more time on investment risk issues, while 68% expect to spend more time on
operational risk issues. Only 25% of respondents, however, have a chief risk
officer.
The study, which was done in collaboration with Nobel
Prize-winning economist Dr. Harry Markowitz, examines a broad array of
risk-related topics and issues, including: market risk; investment risk
measures; performance versus liabilities; credit risk management; emerging markets
and non-domestic investing; alternative investments; asset allocation;
diversification versus returns; liability-driven investing (LDI); operational risk
management controls; operational risk insurance; liquidity risk; political
risk; regulatory change; and best practices.
“Institutional investors are up against some formidable risk
pressures, from new regulations to transparency concerns to investment risks
across the board,” says Debra Baker, head of BNY Mellon’s Global Risk Solutions
group, based in New York. “For many, risk management has been a puzzling
proposition. Just when they think most risks have been measured, managed and
mitigated, new ones emerge and old ones evolve. We see the need for a
collective risk management framework that incorporates all areas of risks,
their impact on each other, and one’s overall investment program. Using some
form of quantitative scoring across major risk categories may be the next
frontier of risk management.”
The new study expands upon material covered in BNY
Mellon’s 2005 white paper “New Frontiers of Risk: The 360-Degree Risk Manager
for Pensions & Nonprofits,” which also included input from Markowitz. While
the 2005 paper highlighted how the need for more structured and holistic risk
management was just beginning to be recognized, the newer study finds, in
the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, risk management has now become a key
priority of almost all institutional investors.
“The crisis of 2008 was different. So was the crisis that
started in March of 2000 with the bursting of the tech bubble. So will be the
next crisis. The moral is that one will never be able to put the portfolio
selection process on automatic,” says Markowitz, adding that investments need
to constantly be evaluated with the current situation kept in mind.
Markowitz explains that institutional investors should also
make sure higher management understands what assumptions are being made,
how and by whom any exotic asset classes being used have been evaluated, and
what the vulnerabilities are of the general approach that is being taken. “Furthermore,
the push to integrate risk-control at the enterprise level, rather than at the
individual portfolio level, should be continued,” he says.
Key findings of the new study also include:
No more chasing alpha: Institutional investors are
placing greater emphasis on achieving absolute return targets as opposed to
outperforming a market benchmark. Risk budgets, matching liabilities and
avoiding downside risk all play an important role in this shift.
Increased use of alternatives: Study respondents have
expanded their use of alternative investments to improve diversification and
potentially help with downside risk. Institutional investors plan to increase
their allocations to alternatives over the next five years.
A re-awakening of risk awareness: The 2008 financial
crisis caught many institutional investors off guard. The risk management
procedures then in place were widely perceived to be insufficient for a crisis
of such magnitude. The drive for more effective, holistic risk management was
soon on.
Analytical tools on the front lines of risk management: Analytical
tools based upon risk-return analysis and performance attribution continue to
be the most commonly used to model, analyze and monitor investments. Total
plan/enterprise risk reporting tools are on the rise to encompass traditional
and alternative investments, as well as liabilities.
Avoidance of unintended bets: A desire to avoid
unintended leverage and to better understand underlying investments has grown
markedly since the 2008 financial crisis and appears to be driving
institutional investors toward solutions offering greater investment
transparency.
Those queried for the 2013 study indicate that market
events surrounding the 2008 financial crisis and subsequent recession represent
their biggest motivator when it comes to focusing on risk. More than 60% of
respondents say increased management awareness of the growing field of risk
management caused their firm to institute risk management practices.
Over the last five years, 59% of respondents say their firms
have benefited through the evolution of risk management, though many remained
undecided about the impact, with results varying markedly by region.
The 2013 study also finds a significant shift since the 2005
version, with respondents rating “under-achieving overall return targets” and
“underperforming versus liabilities” as their two most important risk policy
measures. Between the 2005 and 2013 surveys, these two measures increased more
than any other response within this category.
More than 100 institutional investors were queried for the
study, including pension funds, endowments and foundations with
approximately $1 trillion in aggregate assets under management. The full study report can be found here.