Description

Book Synopsis

Crucial methods, tactics and tools for successful pension fund management

Achieving Investment Excellence offers trustees and asset managers a comprehensive handbook for improving the quality of their investments. With a stated goal of substantially and sustainably improving annual returns, this book clarifies and demystifies important concepts surrounding trustee duties and responsibilities, investment strategies, analysis, evaluation and much more.

Low interest rates are making the high cost of future pension payouts fraught with tension, even as the time and knowledge required to manage these funds appropriately increases it is no wonder that pensions are increasingly seen as a financial liability. Now more than ever, it is critical that trustees understand exactly what contributes to investment success and what detracts from it. This book details the roles, the tools and the strategies that make pension funds pay off.

  • Understand the rol

    Table of Contents

    About the Authors xiii

    Acknowledgments xv

    Foreword xvii

    Introduction 1

    Levels of Excellence: Assessing and Improving Your Practice 6

    How to Use the Book 8

    Chapters of the Book 9

    Part One Pension Funds: Understanding the Role, Shaping the Mission

    Chapter 1 The Role of Pension Funds, and the Role of Boards 19

    The Role of Pension Funds 20

    The Pension Triangle 22

    Duties of Trustees 24

    Responsibility as a Fiduciary 26

    Delegation and Agency Relationships 27

    Responsibilities as a Board Member 30

    Responsibilities as a Shareholder 31

    Balancing the Three Roles 31

    Understanding and Managing Your Stakeholders 32

    Government 32

    Regulator 32

    Financial Markets 33

    Non-Governmental Organizations 34

    Endnotes 34

    Case Study—GEPF 36

    Chapter 2 Developing Purpose, Mission, Vision, and Goals 39

    The Functions of a Pension Fund 41

    Purpose 44

    Mission 45

    Values 46

    Vision 49

    Strategic Goals 50

    Endnotes 51

    Part Two Designing the Process

    Chapter 3 Grasping the Investment Essentials 55

    Investment Goals 56

    Understanding Return Concepts 57

    Return 57

    Expectations 57

    Understanding Risk Concepts 59

    Risk is not Volatility 60

    Risk Premium 61

    Getting Risk Measures Right 62

    Risk Is about Behavior 63

    Steering Your Portfolio 64

    Benchmarks 65

    Diversification 66

    Conventional vs. Alternative Assets 67

    Active vs. Passive Investing 68

    Better Beta: Styles and Factors 70

    Responsible Investing 70

    Motives or Mission 71

    Instruments 72

    Endnotes 72

    Case Study—PFZW 74

    Chapter 4 Investment Beliefs as Guiding Tools 77

    Why Investment Beliefs Matter 78

    Basics of an Investment Belief 81

    Developing a Set of Investment Beliefs 82

    When, If Ever, Is the Time to Change Investment Beliefs? 83

    How (Not) to Use Investment Beliefs 87

    Endnotes 88

    Case Study—New Zealand Superannuation Fund 90

    Chapter 5 Designing the Investment Management Process 93

    The Investment Process 94

    Setting Objectives: Aligning Goals and Risk Appetite 95

    Investment Objectives 99

    Formulating Expectations 100

    Portfolio Construction 101

    Implementation and Monitoring 103

    Implementation 103

    Monitoring 103

    The Investment Policy Statement 105

    Endnotes 108

    Chapter 6 Organizing the Investment Function 109

    Inventorizing Investment Models 110

    Model 1: Traditional Asset Allocation Model 112

    Model 2: Endowment Model 112

    Model 3: Factor Allocation Model 114

    Model 4: Opportunity Cost or Reference Portfolio Model 116

    Model 5: Dual Strategic/Operational Benchmark Model 119

    Model 6: Risk Parity Model 120

    Developing Your Own Investment Approach 122

    Endnotes 123

    Case Study – GPFG 124

    Part Three Implementing the Investments

    Chapter 7 Implementing the Investment Strategy 129

    Organizing the Implementation 130

    The Rationale for Managing Costs 132

    Selection of Managers 134

    Active vs. Passive Management 136

    Internal vs. External Management 138

    Relationship with Suppliers 139

    Bridging the Implementation Gap 141

    Endnotes 142

    Case Study—ATP 144

    Chapter 8 Building the Investment Portfolio 147

    Framework for the Investment Portfolio 148

    The Board’s Role in Portfolio Construction 151

    What Is a Good Investment Portfolio? 152

    Capital Market Assumptions 156

    Diversification 157

    Rebalancing 160

    Endnotes 160

    Case Study—OTPP 161

    Chapter 9 Monitoring and Evaluation 164

    Monitoring 165

    What to Monitor? 167

    Monitoring as a Multidimensional Process 168

    Monitoring the Policy 169

    The Position of Monitoring on the Investment Committee’s Agenda 170

    What Is the Optimal Frequency for Monitoring? 171

    Monitoring Should Be Based on a Sound Approach: It Should Never

    Be a Mechanical Exercise 171

    What to Look for in Monitoring 171

    When Does a Board Move from Monitoring to Evaluation? 175

    Evaluation 176

    Endnotes 178

    Part Four Organizing the Board

    Chapter 10 Becoming an Effective Board 181

    Responsibilities of the Board 181

    Board Composition 185

    What is Expected from Board Members? 187

    What is Expected of the Chair? 188

    Appointing New Board Members 189

    Governance Budget of the Board 191

    Board Decision-Making Culture 193

    Supporting the Board: Executive Office and Staff 194

    Ingredients of an Effective Board 197

    People and Board Composition 197

    Process 198

    Perspective 198

    The Right Altitude, Horizon and Distance 198

    Power and Delegation 198

    Learning 199

    Endnotes 199

    Case Study—CalPERS 200

    Chapter 11 Establishing the Investment Committee 203

    Roles and Responsibilities 204

    Advise the Board on an Investment Policy Statement 205

    Evaluate the Managers’ Performance and Take Appropriate Actions 205

    Document the Investment Process and Decisions Made 205

    Members of the Investment Committee 207

    Forming an Effective Investment Committee 208

    The Role of the Chairman of the Investment Committee 210

    A Model for an Effective Investment Committee Meeting 210

    The Investment Committee Agenda 211

    Committee Preparation: Quality, Clarity and Timeliness and Extent of Materials 212

    Roles 213

    The Results of the Meeting 214

    Evaluation and Learning 214

    Endnotes 215

    Chapter 12 Managing the Investment Management Organization 216

    The Roles of the Investment Management Organization 217

    Functions and Typical Evolution of the IMO 219

    Outsourcing 222

    Subsidiaries: Majority or Fully Owned by the Pension Fund 223

    Pros and Cons of a Proprietary IMO 225

    Issues in Dealing with an Investment Organization 225

    The Service Level Agreement 227

    Monitoring and Evaluating the Investment Management Organization 228

    Endnotes 228

    Case Study—Future Fund 229

    Part Five Learning, Adapting and Improving

    Chapter 13 Learning to Decide and to Take Advice 235

    Psychology of Decision-Making: Biases, Preferences, and Habits 236

    Group Processes on the Right Track 241

    Learning to Make Complex Decisions 243

    Using Expert Opinions 245

    The Investment Consultant 247

    Challenges and Dilemmas in Taking Advice 249

    Decision-Making under Pressure 251

    Endnotes 254

    Chapter 14 Achieving Investment Excellence 255

    The Five Activities Driving Towards Excellence 256

    Activity 1: Setting the Strategy (Chapters 1–2) 257

    Activity 2: Designing the Investment Process (Chapters 3–6) 257

    Activity 3: Implementing the Investments (Chapters 7–9) 259

    Activity 4: Organizing the Board (Chapters 10–12) 259

    Activity 5: Learning to Adapt (Chapter 13) 261

    The Learning Board and the Characteristics of the Levels of Excellence 261

    Leadership 262

    Resources 262

    Mind-Set and Culture 262

    Measures and Scorecards 263

    Maintenance and Education 264

    Levels of Excellence and the Board Learning Perspective 264

    The Board’s Journey towards Achieving Excellence 264

    Step 1: Determine Where You Are Now 264

    Step 2: Define Your Long-Term Ambition 266

    Step 3: Define the Roadmap 266

    Step 4: Execute the Roadmap 267

    Enduring Investment Excellence 267

    Endnotes 269

    Self-Reflection Questions 270

    Appendix A 282

    Appendix B 284

    References 293

    Index 301

Achieving Investment Excellence

    Product form

    £61.75

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £65.00 – you save £3.25 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Tue 23 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Kees Koedijk, Alfred Slager, Jaap van Dam

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      View other formats and editions of Achieving Investment Excellence by Kees Koedijk

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 22/03/2019
      ISBN13: 9781119437659, 978-1119437659
      ISBN10: 1119437652
      Also in:
      Banking

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Crucial methods, tactics and tools for successful pension fund management

      Achieving Investment Excellence offers trustees and asset managers a comprehensive handbook for improving the quality of their investments. With a stated goal of substantially and sustainably improving annual returns, this book clarifies and demystifies important concepts surrounding trustee duties and responsibilities, investment strategies, analysis, evaluation and much more.

      Low interest rates are making the high cost of future pension payouts fraught with tension, even as the time and knowledge required to manage these funds appropriately increases it is no wonder that pensions are increasingly seen as a financial liability. Now more than ever, it is critical that trustees understand exactly what contributes to investment success and what detracts from it. This book details the roles, the tools and the strategies that make pension funds pay off.

      • Understand the rol

        Table of Contents

        About the Authors xiii

        Acknowledgments xv

        Foreword xvii

        Introduction 1

        Levels of Excellence: Assessing and Improving Your Practice 6

        How to Use the Book 8

        Chapters of the Book 9

        Part One Pension Funds: Understanding the Role, Shaping the Mission

        Chapter 1 The Role of Pension Funds, and the Role of Boards 19

        The Role of Pension Funds 20

        The Pension Triangle 22

        Duties of Trustees 24

        Responsibility as a Fiduciary 26

        Delegation and Agency Relationships 27

        Responsibilities as a Board Member 30

        Responsibilities as a Shareholder 31

        Balancing the Three Roles 31

        Understanding and Managing Your Stakeholders 32

        Government 32

        Regulator 32

        Financial Markets 33

        Non-Governmental Organizations 34

        Endnotes 34

        Case Study—GEPF 36

        Chapter 2 Developing Purpose, Mission, Vision, and Goals 39

        The Functions of a Pension Fund 41

        Purpose 44

        Mission 45

        Values 46

        Vision 49

        Strategic Goals 50

        Endnotes 51

        Part Two Designing the Process

        Chapter 3 Grasping the Investment Essentials 55

        Investment Goals 56

        Understanding Return Concepts 57

        Return 57

        Expectations 57

        Understanding Risk Concepts 59

        Risk is not Volatility 60

        Risk Premium 61

        Getting Risk Measures Right 62

        Risk Is about Behavior 63

        Steering Your Portfolio 64

        Benchmarks 65

        Diversification 66

        Conventional vs. Alternative Assets 67

        Active vs. Passive Investing 68

        Better Beta: Styles and Factors 70

        Responsible Investing 70

        Motives or Mission 71

        Instruments 72

        Endnotes 72

        Case Study—PFZW 74

        Chapter 4 Investment Beliefs as Guiding Tools 77

        Why Investment Beliefs Matter 78

        Basics of an Investment Belief 81

        Developing a Set of Investment Beliefs 82

        When, If Ever, Is the Time to Change Investment Beliefs? 83

        How (Not) to Use Investment Beliefs 87

        Endnotes 88

        Case Study—New Zealand Superannuation Fund 90

        Chapter 5 Designing the Investment Management Process 93

        The Investment Process 94

        Setting Objectives: Aligning Goals and Risk Appetite 95

        Investment Objectives 99

        Formulating Expectations 100

        Portfolio Construction 101

        Implementation and Monitoring 103

        Implementation 103

        Monitoring 103

        The Investment Policy Statement 105

        Endnotes 108

        Chapter 6 Organizing the Investment Function 109

        Inventorizing Investment Models 110

        Model 1: Traditional Asset Allocation Model 112

        Model 2: Endowment Model 112

        Model 3: Factor Allocation Model 114

        Model 4: Opportunity Cost or Reference Portfolio Model 116

        Model 5: Dual Strategic/Operational Benchmark Model 119

        Model 6: Risk Parity Model 120

        Developing Your Own Investment Approach 122

        Endnotes 123

        Case Study – GPFG 124

        Part Three Implementing the Investments

        Chapter 7 Implementing the Investment Strategy 129

        Organizing the Implementation 130

        The Rationale for Managing Costs 132

        Selection of Managers 134

        Active vs. Passive Management 136

        Internal vs. External Management 138

        Relationship with Suppliers 139

        Bridging the Implementation Gap 141

        Endnotes 142

        Case Study—ATP 144

        Chapter 8 Building the Investment Portfolio 147

        Framework for the Investment Portfolio 148

        The Board’s Role in Portfolio Construction 151

        What Is a Good Investment Portfolio? 152

        Capital Market Assumptions 156

        Diversification 157

        Rebalancing 160

        Endnotes 160

        Case Study—OTPP 161

        Chapter 9 Monitoring and Evaluation 164

        Monitoring 165

        What to Monitor? 167

        Monitoring as a Multidimensional Process 168

        Monitoring the Policy 169

        The Position of Monitoring on the Investment Committee’s Agenda 170

        What Is the Optimal Frequency for Monitoring? 171

        Monitoring Should Be Based on a Sound Approach: It Should Never

        Be a Mechanical Exercise 171

        What to Look for in Monitoring 171

        When Does a Board Move from Monitoring to Evaluation? 175

        Evaluation 176

        Endnotes 178

        Part Four Organizing the Board

        Chapter 10 Becoming an Effective Board 181

        Responsibilities of the Board 181

        Board Composition 185

        What is Expected from Board Members? 187

        What is Expected of the Chair? 188

        Appointing New Board Members 189

        Governance Budget of the Board 191

        Board Decision-Making Culture 193

        Supporting the Board: Executive Office and Staff 194

        Ingredients of an Effective Board 197

        People and Board Composition 197

        Process 198

        Perspective 198

        The Right Altitude, Horizon and Distance 198

        Power and Delegation 198

        Learning 199

        Endnotes 199

        Case Study—CalPERS 200

        Chapter 11 Establishing the Investment Committee 203

        Roles and Responsibilities 204

        Advise the Board on an Investment Policy Statement 205

        Evaluate the Managers’ Performance and Take Appropriate Actions 205

        Document the Investment Process and Decisions Made 205

        Members of the Investment Committee 207

        Forming an Effective Investment Committee 208

        The Role of the Chairman of the Investment Committee 210

        A Model for an Effective Investment Committee Meeting 210

        The Investment Committee Agenda 211

        Committee Preparation: Quality, Clarity and Timeliness and Extent of Materials 212

        Roles 213

        The Results of the Meeting 214

        Evaluation and Learning 214

        Endnotes 215

        Chapter 12 Managing the Investment Management Organization 216

        The Roles of the Investment Management Organization 217

        Functions and Typical Evolution of the IMO 219

        Outsourcing 222

        Subsidiaries: Majority or Fully Owned by the Pension Fund 223

        Pros and Cons of a Proprietary IMO 225

        Issues in Dealing with an Investment Organization 225

        The Service Level Agreement 227

        Monitoring and Evaluating the Investment Management Organization 228

        Endnotes 228

        Case Study—Future Fund 229

        Part Five Learning, Adapting and Improving

        Chapter 13 Learning to Decide and to Take Advice 235

        Psychology of Decision-Making: Biases, Preferences, and Habits 236

        Group Processes on the Right Track 241

        Learning to Make Complex Decisions 243

        Using Expert Opinions 245

        The Investment Consultant 247

        Challenges and Dilemmas in Taking Advice 249

        Decision-Making under Pressure 251

        Endnotes 254

        Chapter 14 Achieving Investment Excellence 255

        The Five Activities Driving Towards Excellence 256

        Activity 1: Setting the Strategy (Chapters 1–2) 257

        Activity 2: Designing the Investment Process (Chapters 3–6) 257

        Activity 3: Implementing the Investments (Chapters 7–9) 259

        Activity 4: Organizing the Board (Chapters 10–12) 259

        Activity 5: Learning to Adapt (Chapter 13) 261

        The Learning Board and the Characteristics of the Levels of Excellence 261

        Leadership 262

        Resources 262

        Mind-Set and Culture 262

        Measures and Scorecards 263

        Maintenance and Education 264

        Levels of Excellence and the Board Learning Perspective 264

        The Board’s Journey towards Achieving Excellence 264

        Step 1: Determine Where You Are Now 264

        Step 2: Define Your Long-Term Ambition 266

        Step 3: Define the Roadmap 266

        Step 4: Execute the Roadmap 267

        Enduring Investment Excellence 267

        Endnotes 269

        Self-Reflection Questions 270

        Appendix A 282

        Appendix B 284

        References 293

        Index 301

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