Addressing Home Country Bias in DC Plan Investments

“Home country bias” is a diversification problem that is still dogging investors, new research suggests.

U.S. companies account for about half of the total global market capitalization and a far lower percentage of total global revenue, according to independent reports from Strategic Insight (an Asset International company) and Portfolio Evaluations, Inc. (PEI)—yet it’s common for U.S. investors to maintain 80% or more of their equity allocations in domestic stock. Both firms recently published research warning that a greater global focus is required to truly diversify portfolio exposures and broaden potential sources of investment returns.

Achieving proper diversification across U.S. and global markets is especially important for workplace retirement savers, the research contends. Workplace investors are easily spooked by volatility—leading to poor buy-high-sell-low behaviors and ill-fated attempts to time the market. This puts pressure on plan sponsors and advisers to tailor investment menus to achieve a global perspective that can keep volatility down as much as possible. And as Strategic Insight’s report explains, increasing regulatory acceptance of non-U.S. investments in individual portfolios indicates that “the time has come to deepen the discussion on geographic classifications.”

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Investors succumb to the home country bias for a variety of reasons, researchers from Strategic Insight (SI) and PEI contend. Investors often have a greater feeling of comfort and familiarity with companies listed in their own country. PEI’s report, in particular, suggests investors feel more in control of a localized portfolio because they believe proximity to home provides them with a relative informational advantage. The PEI report also points to investors’ fears—in most cases unfounded, thanks to digital communications and recordkeeping technology—that capital invested globally will be less liquid or harder to recall than domestic assets.

Even as these fears continue to hold back many investors, SI suggests global diversification is more necessary than ever to achieve top tier investment returns. Although the emerging and developing markets should experience a slowdown from current growth trends, SI predicts their growth rates will remain both positive and stronger than that of the U.S. market for some time to come. PEI researchers predict that, by 2025, emerging markets will capture about half of global GDP, with China being the largest economy in the world.

To benefit from these long-term macroeconomic trends, individual portfolio exposures must be shifted to include more (and more sensibly weighted) geographies. Researchers at PEI suggest asset-allocation strategies focused on global growth opportunities to add alpha are best positioned to outperform in the years ahead. SI researchers say another way to steer global investments is to pay attention not just to the location of a company’s corporate headquarters, but also to where the company’s revenues are coming from.

Today many individual investors fail to consider that even companies headquartered in the U.S. or developed European markets generate significant portions of their revenues outside of their country of domicile. This leads many investors to maintain an asset allocation based on a traditional boundaries approach, PEI says, which may misrepresent risks within the overall portfolio.

Both SI and PEI warn investors that fundamental research should start taking a greater focus on different company metrics beyond location and capitalization—including revenue, profits and assets. Questions to ask include: “Where does a company generate its revenue and profits? What is the geographical breakdown of a company’s assets and activities? These factors are becoming increasingly important because a large number of companies are global and driven by performance across multiple markets, PEI says.

All of this makes the current case for emerging market investments particularly compelling, researchers from both firms explain. As the PEI report suggests, “It is notable that about half of the revenues of companies in the MSCI All Country World Index are now generated outside of the U.S. and developed Europe. Those revenues are largely generated in emerging markets, despite those markets only representing 11% of the world’s investment opportunity based on market cap.”

The implication is that, with decreasing importance of sovereign boundaries, global investing has changed over the last decade, leading to increased correlations among stocks. As a result, PEI suggests, due diligence in selecting managers that focus on the best in class companies—regardless of where they are headquartered—has become increasingly important.

The prevailing view among asset managers PEI has met with, the research suggests, is that global investing should include broadly developed markets, some emerging markets, and some foreign small cap stocks. Furthermore, global investing is not only about equities, but should also include global fixed income, such as emerging market debt and global high-yield debt—as their real yields are currently above those of the Barclay’s U.S. Aggregate Bond Index. Similar to stocks, PEI says, the composition of the global bond market has shifted and is currently 35% U.S. and 65% rest-of-world.

The PEI report is available here. To obtain a copy of the SI report, contact DCResearch@sionline.com.

American College of Financial Services Redesigns Designation

The American College of Financial Services launched a redesigned chartered financial consultant (ChFC) designation program featuring new courses and content that better reflects today's financial planning challenges.

The relaunched ChFC designation builds on a foundation of core financial planning education by adding applied lessons on topical issues such as client divorces, retirement income planning and behavioral finance. A module on how to provide quality guidance for families with special needs children has been added to the designation program, the firm explains, along with a module on societal issues impacting the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community.

“Families and financial situations are more diverse and complex than ever, and there is clearly no one formula for financial advisers to follow when providing guidance,” explains Craig Lemoine, chartered financial consultant program director at The American College. 

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The ChFC designation requires nine college-level courses, with seven of the courses focused on fundamental financial planning curriculum and two new required courses titled “Applications in Financial Planning I” and “Applications in Financial Planning II.”

The first applications course looks at the challenges that are involved with business planning, which include divorce, special needs and issues that impact the LGBT community. The second applications course looks at issues impacting retirement income portfolios, behavioral finance, ethics, and estate planning.

Advisers can learn more about the ChFC program by visiting www.ChFCDesignation.com, while consumers can learn about this credential and others at www.DesignationCheck.com.

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