Common characteristics of institutional investors
1/ Scale (size) 2/ LT investment horizon 3/ Regulatory FM 4/ Governance FM 5/ Principal- agent issues
Scale (size) of institutional investors
Long term investment horizon of institutional investors
Regulatory frameworks of institutional investors
➝ legal, regulatory, tax, accounting
– differ by national jurisdiction
Key drivers: investor protection, safety/soundness of financial institutions, integrity of financial markets
The governance framework of institutional investors
→ BoD + investment committee establish investment policy (SAA), define risk appetite, set investment strategy, monitor investment performance
- banks/insurance implement investment internally
Principal-agent issues of institutional investors
Implementation approaches of Investment Policy
1/ Norway model
2/ Endowment model
3/ Canada model
4/ Liability- driven investing (LDI) model
Norway Model
Endowment Model
Canada Model
Liability- driven investing (LDI) model
Benefit payments, Contributions, Investment Decision making, Investment Risk, Mortality/Longevity risk of DB
Benefit payments, Contributions, Investment Decision making, Investment Risk, Mortality/Longevity risk of DC
Stakeholders of DB
Stakeholders of DC
Liabilities of DB
Liabilities and Investment Horizon of DC
Liability → equal to the contribution (for the sponsor/employer)
Investment horizon: each beneficiary will be at a different life stage
∴ given different risk tolerance & time horizon
- provide life-cycle options or target-date options
Liabilities need of DB is driven by
1/ proportion of active to retired - more mature, higher liquidity needs
2/ participant switching/withdrawals
- if allowed, higher liquidity needs
3/ age of the workplace - if older, sooner liquidity needs/higher liquidity needs
4/ plan funded status - surplus, means fewer contributions will be made, thus higher liquidity needs
Funded ratio formula
= FV (plan assets)/PV (benefit obligation)
The investment horizon for DB
How is the DB funded?
External Constraints of DB and DC
Legal & Regulatory/ varies by country - similar themes: ➝ reporting & transparency ➝ funding requirements ➝ discount rates Tax & Accounting/ restrictions on plan design, governance, and investment activities in order to qualify for favourable tax treatment DB/ – typically tax exempt DC/ – typically tax-deferred (contributions are pre-tax)
Risk Considerations for DB
1/ Plan Funded Status of DB 2/ Sponsor Financial Strength 3/ Sponsor and pension fund common risk exposures 4/ Plan design 5/ Workforce characteristics
Expand on plan Funded Status of DB
→ higher funded status → greater risk tolerance
if (fully-funded)
•LDI, duration-mgmt., cash-flow matching
if (under-funded)
• grow assets at a higher rate than liabilities - involves more investment risk
• invest in more defensive assets to reduce
funded status variability – plan sponsor is willing to make higher contributions over time