CalPERS Moving to All-Passive
Investments?
Kevin Roose of the NYT reports, Are Pension Funds Getting Smart About Passive Investments?:
Pensions
& Investments ran a story yesterday about how the California Public
Employees' Retirement System is considering moving to an all-passive
portfolio. You probably didn't read it, because stories about pensions are
boring.
But this story only looked boring. In fact, it was probably
the most important Wall Street development you'll read this week. It's an
undeniably good sign for people who care about the retirement funds of
teachers, firefighters, and other public-sector employees. And it should
strike terror into the heart of every hedge-fund manager and private-equity
executive in midtown.
The backstory is that, for many years, public
pension funds have had a love affair with so-called "active investments" —
basically, hedge funds, venture capital funds, private-equity funds, mutual
funds, and assorted other outside money managers who charge a fee for managing
other people's money. Every year, pensions plow more and more millions of
dollars into these funds, hoping for better returns than they could get by
buying low-risk index funds and exchange-traded funds on their own. They're
happy to pay through the nose for the privilege — most alternative asset
managers charge at least a 2 percent management fee and 20 percent of profits
— under the assumption that since these complex, active investments make
better returns than simple, passive investments, the fees are worth it.
Except that they're usually not. In aggregate, and especially in recent
years, most active management firms don't perform any better than a simple,
passively managed index fund that costs nearly nothing to buy, and many
expensive funds perform significantly worse. As P&I says:
Over the past 10 years, just 38% of
large-cap-equity managers have beaten the S&P 500. Over five years, it
shrinks to 31%, and over three years, it is just 18%, according to
Morningstar Inc. Making things even harder for those trying to pick active
managers is that just 9% of large-cap managers outperformed the S&P 500
over all three time spans.
Private-equity firms and hedge funds,
in particular, tend to love pensions, which typically provide a majority of
the money they manage. (In fact, many private-equity firms and large hedge
funds couldn't exist without pensions.) But they haven't held up their end of
the deal. Start with their subpar returns, and subtract their onerous fees,
and you get a very bum deal for the average pension fund.
But
CalPERS — a large and influential fund, which can act as a Pied Piper for lots
of smaller pensions — is waking up to the fact that it's paying too much to
active managers and not getting enough in return. After years of pushing for
lower and lower fees from the private-equity firms and hedge funds who manage
its money, CalPERS is considering saying, "You know what? Never mind," and
giving up on active management altogether.
This would be a good
thing! Most pension funds should not be in the business of selecting active
managers, and I would cheer any pension fund that followed CalPERS's example
and put more of their money in index funds and passive bond funds. Risky
investing isn't always a bad thing, and it's true that some private-equity
firms, hedge funds, and mutual funds have done well for their pension
investors.
But if they want to handle the retirement money of
America's retirees, these firms have to prove they're worth the fees they
charge. And so far, they haven't measured up.
Investment News also
covered this story, providing more details on trends in passive investing in
their article, Passive investing: If it's good enough for CalPERS ...:
Passive investing has reached a watershed
moment.
The second-largest pension fund in the United States is
considering a move to an all-passive portfolio while at the same time, the
largest brokerage firms are falling over themselves to push passively managed
exchange-traded funds.
The California Public Employees' Retirement
System's investment committee started a review of its investment beliefs last
week, with the main focus on its active managers, according to sister
publication Pensions and Investments.
CalPERS oversees about
$255 billion in assets, more than half of which already is invested in passive
strategies.
gIt's sort of an exclamation mark on a trend that
most are aware of,h said Chris McIsaac, managing director of the institutional
investor group at The Vanguard Group Inc.
Fidelity Investments,
meanwhile, has responded to the enthusiasm for passive strategies by doubling
down on its agreement with BlackRock Inc.'s iShares unit. Fidelity increased
the number of iShares ETFs that trade commission-free to its clients to 62,
from 30, two weeks ago.
Fidelity's move came just a month after The
Charles Schwab Corp. launched an ETF platform that offers investors more than
100 commission-free ETFs.
TD Ameritrade Inc., the third leg of the
online brokerage world, has been offering more than 100 commission-free ETFs
since 2010.
gWe see don't see it as either passive or active, we see
it as both. In a low-return environment, fees matter a lot,h said Scott Couto,
president of Fidelity Financial Advisor Solutions.
gThat's getting
interest in passive investing over the short term. Over the long term, active
management adds a lot of value,h Mr. Couto said.
gThere will continue
to be a growing interest in the passive side because cost matters to
investors,h said Beth Flynn, vice president and head of third-party ETF
platform management at Schwab.
gVirtually all our adviser clients use
ETFs in some way, shape or form,h she said. gUsage is much lower on the
individual-investor side, but growing at a pretty steady and rapid clip.h
More than 40% of individual investors plan to increase their use of
ETFs over the next year, for example, according to a recent Schwab
survey.
TD executives couldn't be reached for comment.
SHIFTING PREFERENCE
Passive investing is nothing new. Vanguard founder
John Bogle launched the first index mutual fund in 1975. But the fund world
has always been dominated by active management.
A decade ago, 86% of
the $4.4 trillion in mutual funds and ETFs were in active strategies,
according to Lipper Inc.
Investors' preference is
clearly shifting, though. Active management's market share was down to 72% as
of the end of last month, and passive funds clearly have all the momentum
now.
As investors have gotten back into stocks this year, they have
done so largely through passive funds. Passive funds took in $65 billion in
the first two months of the year, while active funds took in $40 billion.
For anyone who has been watching fund flows over the past few years, the
surge in passive strategies shouldn't come as a surprise.
Since
2003, investors have pulled $287 billion from actively managed equity funds,
while investing just over $1 trillion in passive funds.
Even
though the preference for passive strategies has been most dramatic in equity
funds, passively managed bond strategies are gaining steam, as well.
Passive bond strategies have had $260 billion of inflows since the
beginning of 2008. Between 2003 and 2007, they had $73 billion of inflows,
according to Lipper.
gIndexing has proven to be a very compelling
investment strategy, especially for investors with an extended investment
horizon,h Mr. McIsaac said.
Costs have played a big part. They are,
as Mr. Bogle likes to point out, the only thing that an investor really can
control, and passive strategies are much cheaper than their active
counterparts.
U.S. equity ETFs have an average expense ratio of 40
basis points, compared with an average expense ratio of 134 basis points for
actively managed mutual funds, according to a recent Morgan Stanley Wealth
Management research note.
What's more, a number of
large-capitalization ETFs charge less than 10 basis points, while the cheapest
actively managed large-cap fund charges 50 basis points.
Active
managers haven't given investors much reason to stick around.
gBeing
active over the past 15 years has not been rewarding,h said industry
consultant Geoff Bobroff.
The percentage of managers beating their
benchmark has been shrinking.
Over the past 10 years,
just 38% of large-cap-equity managers have beaten the S&P 500. Over five
years, it shrinks to 31%, and over three years, it is just 18%, according to
Morningstar Inc.
Making things even harder for those trying to pick
active managers is that just 9% of large-cap managers outperformed the S&P
500 over all three time spans.
The inconsistency of actively managed
returns is what prompted the review by CalPERS.
As P&I
reported: gCalPERS investment consultant Allan Emkin told the investment
committee that at any given time, around a quarter of external managers will
be outperforming their benchmarks, but he said the question is whether those
managers that are doing well are canceled out by other managers that are
underperforming.h
'EVALUATING MANAGERS'
Rick Ferri, founder of
Portfolio Solutions LLC, ran into the same problem while he was working at a
brokerage firm early in his career.
gI spent a lot of time and money
evaluating managers,h he said.
gIt was a revolving door
for most of them,h Mr. Ferri said. gYou can't win unless you get very, very
lucky.h
Mr. Ferri now runs an all-index portfolio for his
clients' equity exposure. On the bond side, he still favors active management
— when it is cheap.
gSometimes that's the best way to get market
representation,h Mr. Ferri said.
The $39.2 billion Vanguard
Intermediate-Term Tax-Free Bond Fund (VWITX) owns 3,854 bonds and charges 20
basis points, for example. The $3.6 billion iShares S&P National AMT-Free
Municipal Bond ETF (MUB), the largest municipal bond ETF, holds 2,196 bonds
and charges 25 basis points.
CalPERS is expected to decide the fate
of its active managers in about five months. At this point, it looks as though
it could go either way.
Chief operating investment officer Janine
Guilot told P&I that 27 preliminary interviews of CalPERS staff members,
board members, money managers and external consultants showed a gwide
disparity of viewsh on active management.
Mr. McIsaac isn't ready to
write off active management altogether.
gThere will come
a period of time when active managers will do much better,h he said.
That is, if good active management can be found at a low
cost.
gIt's hard to find both,h Mr. McIsaac
said.
The market ultimately will have the biggest say in the future
of active management, Mr. Bobroff said.
gIs this the end of a trend?h
he asked. gIt depends where the market is going over the next five years. Your
guess is as good as mine.h
Indeed, the future of active management
does depend on where the market is going over the next five years. If it tanks
or goes sideways, a few good active managers which don't gouge investors on fees
will be in very high demand.
But if the bull market that gets no respect keeps trending up, the
percentage of active managers that beat their benchmark will keep shrinking.
This will be great news for large banks offering 'index solutions' to their
clients but it will be bad news for the active management industry struggling to
compete, especially after the 2008 financial crisis.
Will CalPERS move to
an all-passive portfolio? While that would please those who are disgusted with
the latest indictment involving their former CEO and a middleman
charged with defrauding a private equity fund, doubt CalPERS will go
all-passive.
Instead, I think CalPERS will reevaluate all their external
managers in public, private and absolute returns strategies, scrutinizing the
fees they've paid out and the value added (alpha) these funds have actually
produced, net of fees and costs.
I can tell you that the biggest problem
at CalPERS for the longest time was they wanted to invest with everyone. When
you invest with everyone, you end up paying huge fees and getting back mediocre
benchmark returns. This is what happened in their large private equity portfolio
before Réal Desrochers joined a couple of years ago to clean it up.
He's halfway done but still cleaning it up.
And this is what is going on
in their large real estate and hedge fund portfolios. They're is a lot of
cleaning up that needs to be done as these portfolios are dolling out huge fees
and not getting the value added to justify such big allocations to external
managers.
Think CalPERS can learn a lot from small and large funds. Last
week, I wrote on HOOPP's stellar 2012 results where Jim Keohane, their
president and CEO, stated that they add value internally by focusing primarily
on arbitrage opportunities in fixed income markets and by engaging in trades --
like their long-term volatility strategy -- which just make sense but don't fall
under benchmark or absolute return strategies.
CalPERS can also learn a
lot from Ontario Teachers', CPPIB and other large Canadian pension funds which
run active management internally but also invest with external managers where it
makes sense, typically in strategies where they cannot reproduce the alpha
internally.
Admittedly, this will be hard because CalPERS and other US
pension funds are not governed the same way and do not compensate their managers
as well as their Canadian counterparts but this doesn't mean they can't
implement similar approaches to these Canadian funds.
Finally, CalPERS
can learn from smaller US pension funds engaging in flexible approaches with
their active managers. Dawn Lim of Money Management Intelligence recently
reported, Philly Rethinks Approach On Hedge Funds, Seeks
Flexibility:
The City of Philadelphia Board of Pensions &
Retirement has rethought its approach to hedge fund investing and will seek to
weave the funds throughout its $4.3 billion portfolio as a style rather than a
separate asset class.
The more open framework, which was adopted after
a portfolio review late last year, also calls for higher investment targets to
private equity and hedge funds. The new portfolio mix is expected to be
implemented this year.
gWe have a more flexible model than most
public plans that permits us to use hedge fund in real estate or bonds or
equity,h CIO Sumit Handa said at IMNfs Public Funds Summit in Huntington
Beach, Calif., last week. By introducing long-short strategies into buckets
that have traditionally been long-only, the pension fund can more easily slot
strategies to dampen volatility into its portfolio, documents
indicate.
Consultant Cliffwater played a role in the asset
allocation review and will assist in the execution. The asset allocation
review raised the fundfs hedge fund target to 12% from 10%.
While
fund officials have as yet disclosed no manager searches in connection with
the new strategy, they note that they have been in talks with managers to
create special accounts. gWefve tailored an opportunistic vehicle and we
believe we have more coming,h Handa said. Private equity targets will get a
boost to 14% from 9.75% and the pension plan is reviewing its pacing
schedule.
Fund documents indicate that Philadelphia was working last
year with managers to create private equity and hedge fund vehicles that will
help it mitigate possible J-curve losses and get earlier distributions. Within
the fixed-income bucket, the pension has also done away with the specificity
of sub-asset classes such as ghigh yield,h gnon-U.S.h and gemerging marketsh
and implemented broader categories such as ginvestment gradeh and
gnon-investment grade.h
In December, Philadelphia made a $30
million commitment to structured credit-focused Axonic Credit Opportunities
Overseas fund, as the first public pension to commit to Axonic Capital, a $1.7
billion New York hedge fund that had previously only raised endowment and
private pension dollars, fund documents indicated.
The pension is
looking to reduce the number of managers for better risk control and higher
returns. gWe have too many positions for a $4.3 billion fund,h Handa said at
the panel, gWefll be scaling back on this.h The fund, which has 130 managers,
has moved to make higher commitments, generally in the range of $30 million -
$50 million. It also shifted 1% of portfolio assets in-house to be managed
tactically.
The latest fund manager Philadelphia disclosed it
terminated was credit hedge fund manager Regiment Capital, axed in December
for sitting on cash and failing to ride on the high yield and levered loan
rally in 2012. Regiment didnft immediately respond to queries.
The
pension fund also restructured its real assets bucket as part of the portfolio
overhaul. The target for master limited partnership was raised to 3% from
1.75%. The real estate bucket was reduced and brought under real assets; it
had previously been a standalone asset class. In line with the new targets,
the pension fund exited J.P.Morganfs and INVESCOfs core real estate funds, in
the view that the core real estate market was overvalued and it was time to
redeem cash from both mandates.
Separately, a push to bring smaller
managers into the portfolio may be brewing. gWe are exploring methods to
increase the number of women, minority, disabled and emerging managers into
the areas of private equity, real estate and hedge funds,h according to an
email from Executive Director Francis Bielli. There is currently no time frame
for implementation, he stressed.
Among pension consultants, Cliffwater provides
excellent advice to its institutional clients and they know the
alternative investment space extremely well. There are a few others who provide
equally sound advice.
One of them is Simon Lack, founder of SL Advisors and author of "The Hedge Fund Mirage," who
recently appeared
on CNBC stating that outsized risks by hedge funds and fees could imperil
pensions.
You bet, these are treacherous times for hedge funds but in the pension world,
memories are short and many have already forgotten about the pensions' alternatives albatross which hit them hard four
years ago. They should listen carefully to Simon Lack below as he knows what
he's talking about.