Plan Sponsors Act Defensively in Making Investment Decisions

Institutional investors are not acting fully on their own expectations when making their asset-allocation decisions, research suggests.

Newly published research finds that plan sponsors’ expectations of performance are driven by past performance, investment consultants’ recommendations, and soft factors which they identify in their asset managers, such as having a consistent investment philosophy, clear decisionmaking processes and capable investment professionals.

Researchers Howard Jones, from the Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, and Jose Martinez, from the University of Connecticut School of Business, say the partial dependency of expected performance on past performance and soft factors is not, in itself, irrational. Investors could use such variables as signals of future performance. However, what they did find irrational is that past performance is relied upon when it is uninformative about future performance, and the same was true for soft factors.

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According to the researchers, it seems likely that plan sponsors’ actions are at variance with their own expectations because they feel that past performance and consultants’ recommendations are more defensible explanations for their decisions to their the superiors and other stakeholders. “The policy implications of this are sobering. For, as long as sponsors consider that they will be judged by others who do believe that past performance and consultants’ recommendations are informative about future performance, sponsors will behave as if they do so themselves, even if this is not the case,” the research report says.

Jones and Martinez compared surveys conducted by Greenwich Associates between 1999 and 2011, looking into the judgements by plan sponsors of their asset managers with data provided by eVestment about the returns of institutional U.S. equity asset managers, as well as their assets under management for the same period. The analysis was limited to U.S. long-only active equity asset managers.

The researchers suggest that past performance and consultants’ recommendations are widely followed measures because plan sponsors know that, if they fail, they “fail conventionally.” The researchers conclude that their findings support the theory that plan sponsors implement scapegoat strategies and their decisions are affected by career considerations and their interest in deflecting responsibility.

The research report may be downloaded from here.

Fidelity Investments Aligns Clearing and Custody Units

Fidelity Institutional announced plans to align its clearing and custody units, while the wider firm will establish a new technology group to create digital solutions across the Fidelity enterprise.

Fidelity Institutional is the division of Fidelity Investments that provides clearing, custody and investment management products to registered investment advisers (RIAs) and broker/dealers. Moving forward, Fidelity says the clearing and custody units will be unified under a single leader—Sanjiv Mirchandani, appointed president of Fidelity Clearing and Custody.

“Combining our clearing and custody organizations into one unit under a single leader helps us deliver the best solutions for our clients and is the next logical step in the process that we started several years ago,” suggests Gerard McGraw, president of Fidelity Institutional.

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In conjunction with that change, Fidelity also announced the creation of a new organization, Fidelity Wealth Technologies, a group that will drive and deliver digital solutions across the Fidelity enterprise and throughout the financial advice industry. Michael Durbin becomes president of the new Fidelity Wealth Technologies group.

Mirchandani is currently the president of Fidelity’s National Financial, while Durbin is currently president of Fidelity Institutional Wealth Services. Fidelity says the creation of the new leadership roles is part of a long-term strategy to recognize the growing, emerging and converging business models in the financial advice industry—and to organize the clearing and custody units to better serve clients.

In the last five years, Fidelity has aligned several core functions across the clearing and custody businesses, including the client experience team, the product group and the platform technology team. In July 2013, the business was further realigned around several core client segments: banks and broker/dealers are served under National Financial and RIAs and recordkeepers are served under Fidelity Institutional Wealth Services.

Mirchandani will continue to report to McGraw, and Durbin will report to Michael Wilens, president of Fidelity Enterprise Services. 

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