WSIB edges towards standalone private credit, eyeing best GPs
The message for investment staff at a recent board meeting of the $211 billion Washington State Investment Board (WSIB), guardian of the state’s $172 billion pooled retirement assets, contemplating a standalone allocation to private credit was clear.
The success of the portfolio will hinge on investing with the very best GPs and the patience to wait for spaces in these funds, placing manager selection front and centre to the strategy.
Institutional investors have steadily increased their allocation to private credit since the GFC, when new restrictions limited banks’ ability to lend to companies. However, WSIB, famed for its 25 per cent allocation to private equity, still only invests in private credit via a small allocation in its innovation sleeve.
Ongoing discussions will come to a head this autumn when the board will decide on the extent of the new allocation.
Their role making the right decision was also underscored by staff. WSIB’s long-term returns are driven by allocation decisions that have allowed the investor to weather significant downturns and recover over the years. Previous important asset allocation decisions include the early adoption of private equity in 1992, integrating a global focus to equity over time, and shifting from fixed income into real estate and tangible assets.
Risk and returns
Investment officers DuWayne Belles and Julia Ferreira sketched out the shape of the new allocation in a detailed presentation.
Ferreira said losses are part of the course in credit investing, and are allowed in the underwriting. However, because credit sits at the top of the capital stack and investors have priority claims over assets, it is less risky than other types of investment.
Equity investors gain exposure to the upside and growth, but credit investors can control losses and are compensated for risk with a contractual return. In a downturn, there is a higher chance of recovery.
WSIB could expect a 6.6 per cent return over the course of 15 years.
Key risks for corporate credit investors include the borrower not repaying the loan in times of market stress or higher interest rates. Moreover, investors’ ability to derive forecasts from historical data is limited because private credit doesn’t go back as far as other assets and the sector hasn’t experienced a severe downturn.
Staff explained that it will be difficult for the investment team to know the specifics of the individual companies in which WSIB invests. They will have “a good sense” of the managers’ strategy and the sectors, but one portfolio could have hundreds of positions. Moreover, managers’ strategies are not clean cut. Some have crossovers between buckets with senior loans alongside a few subordinated deals, for example.
Mid-market firms make up a large proportion of the investable universe and are often backed by private equity firms. A key element of strategy would involve limiting the overlap with debt strategies in real estate and tangible assets to reduce aggregated risk, and the board heard how staff favour unlevered strategies.
Belles and Ferreira added that the overlap with private equity is limited because private credit is more diversified at a manager level and ticket sizes are smaller; the US and European mid-market is a large space and WSIB’s private equity allocation is more focused on large buyouts because of its size. Preventing the risk of overlap requires understanding the dynamics of the whole portfolio and its most concentrated holdings.
Shape of the strategy
Staff suggested an even split between core (direct lending) and satellite (opportunistic and distressed debt) strategies.
Direct lending allows investors to tap into recurring cash flows and is lower risk. They represent the core of today’s private credit market and loans are usually floating rate, providing an alternative to fixed-rate investment-grade bonds.
Opportunistic credit strategies in the satellite allocation would typically involve lending to a company that has gone through a period of underperformance or change of leadership but is on a path back to profit. Distressed investment involves lending to companies in need of capital where revenue streams have been impacted. In this case, investors can purchase investments at a discounted level and benefit from returns from a higher recovery value. Distressed investments are counter-cyclical, and are attractive in market dislocations.
WSIB would invest via SMA as the sole investor in customised vehicles, however satellite investments would remain in traditional drawdown vehicles.
The $23 billion Toronto-based Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology Pension Fund (CAAT), a scheme for employees in colleges across Canada, is increasing its allocation to real assets in line with a new asset liability study completed last year.
The investor is targeting a 25 per cent allocation (up from 20 per cent) to infrastructure and real estate in an iterative approach that has a global focus but has most recently comprised new assets in Canada’s transition economy.
“We are happy with the progress we are making, but we still have a lot more to do,” says chief investment officer Asif Haque in an interview with Top1000Funds.com from the fund’s Toronto office, home to the 23-person investment team.
“We are big enough to be a meaningful partner to private market GPs, but we are also still small enough to be able to allocate to newer managers with smaller fund sizes where return expectations can be more interesting.”
CAAT targets 25-30 per cent of the real assets portfolio in co-investment opportunities and nurturing the long-term relationships that open the door to co-investment opportunities is a key seam to strategy.
It’s not just real assets that are managed externally. Around three quarters of the portfolio is mandated to external managers in relationships that date back 10 and in some cases 20 years. Haque says CAAT believes in active investment and the ability to add value over what markets are providing.
The active management program contributed to the fund outperforming its policy benchmark by 1.5 per cent annually, net of fees. “Active management is a meaningful contributor to the overall health of the plan,” he says. “We take the big strategic decisions internally around asset mix and ranges, our investment policy and any tactical decision making. But day to day asset management is outsourced to a large group of external managers across public and private markets,” says Haque.
Selection and sizing are based on alignment of interest; the extent to which managers offer a differentiated and repeatable investment process, and how they respond to and are resilient to different market environments to deliver long-term value.
Characteristics that have been tested in recent months, particularly.
The sharp market moves triggered by the Trump administration’s ongoing tariff strategy is top of CAAT’s discussions with managers. The internal team have begun scenario planning and stress testing how new terms of trade might impact the global economy and investment going forward. They are trying to understand what recent market moves might mean longer term for the role of the dollar in the global financial system, and how this might impact capital market assumptions, geographical diversification and CAAT’s currency hedging strategy, for example.
“We are looking at the threats and opportunities that weren’t there but are now there,” he says. “We haven’t come to any conclusions, but we are thinking about world and talking to our external partners about issues with a long term focus.”
However, nothing will be done in the short term. Any changes to incorporate new investment expectations into CAAT’s asset mix will be integrated into the next round of asset liability modelling, which won’t happen for another two years.
Assets currently include private equity (17 per cent), credit (8 per cent), nominal bonds (12 per cent), inflation-linked bonds (5 per cent), real assets (25 per cent) and commodities (3 per cent).
Around 12 per cent of the portfolio is in interest rate-sensitive assets, 33 per cent in inflation-sensitive assets and 55 per cent in return-enhancing investments. Around a quarter of the portfolio is invested in Canada.
Passive investment is confined to part of the Canadian bond portfolio and a US S&P 500 equity exposure, with the beta from the US allocation underlying a portable alpha strategy.
In 1995, the plan spun out from the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, which acted as trustee, to assume a jointly-sponsored pension plan governance structure and invest on its own. Back then, CAAT had only $3 billion in assets under management.
This article was published in partnership with Blue Owl Capital.
This article was published in partnership with Blue Owl Capital.
After a formative, largely unsupervised childhood, private markets are finally adulting, which reflects the growing size and importance of the sector, writes James Clarke, senior managing director – global head of institutional capital at Blue Owl Capital.
Private asset managers are facing increased scrutiny and pressure from institutional clients to deliver value and it’s about time.
Those of us who grew up in public markets, and those who are still there, have had many nightmares about being hauled into a client’s office and fired over a dip in performance.
By comparison, private asset managers have enjoyed relative peace and harmony.
Finally, their sleep is being disturbed. As private market managers grow organically and through M&A, shed their boutique image, and morph into giant investment management platforms, they are being held to the same standards as their public market counterparts. No one is exempt from the firing line.
This is a positive development that reflects the size, scale and maturation of private markets, and the increasingly important role they play in portfolios.
They are no longer investment management’s poor cousin, accounting for around 30 of institutional portfolios. This compares to around 10 per cent a couple of decades ago.
Another positive development is that private asset managers are being judged not only against their peers but against other asset classes.
Until recently, they have largely managed to escape comparison, due to the disparity of strategies and returns, their lack of liquidity and transparency, and the absence of standardised reporting.
Ironically, this shift from absolute to relative performance creates a more even playing field, recognising that everything and everyone should be judged on their risk-return profile.
When it comes to performance, private assets are currently holding their own, and this is expected to continue, but greater scrutiny and comparison can only be a good thing for investors and members.
Arguably, the most telling signs that private markets are growing up is that investing in the sector has moved from being a tactical asset allocation decision to a strategic asset allocation decision, across all private asset types.
Furthermore, private assets are not just a capital appreciation play but a capital preservation and income generation strategy.
One example and where the shift from TAA to SAA is most evident is in direct lending, where global private credit assets under management have quadrupled to $2.1 trillion in the past decade.
With the banks retreating from segments of the lending market due to regulatory capital constraints and risk appetite changes, and more people entering retirement, demand for global private credit has led to an exponentially bigger opportunity set.
As a result, private credit has become a key part of most institutional investors’ defensive portfolios. Not only can it add resilience and diversification benefits, but it can also be a strong source of income.
This is a meaningful change, given that not that long ago allocations to private credit were small and funded by a portfolio’s alternatives bucket. At times, if credit spreads were tight or the market appeared distressed, funds could make tactical moves to adjust their allocation.
As more members start drawing a pension, and the amount of money leaving superannuation and pension funds begins to eclipse contributions, private credit and other private market asset classes will become more essential for delivering long-term income and stability.
All these shifts and changes point to an asset class that is growing and maturing. Taking a total portfolio approach, public and private markets both have a critical role to play in serving the needs of investors.
The backlash against diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) in America is a source of concern for US pension funds with diverse and emerging manager programs like the $284.27 billion New York City retirement systems. It has pledged to allocate 20 per cent of assets under management to diverse managers by 2029 in an increase from current levels of 13 per cent of the portfolio, equivalent to around $23 billion.
The NYC retirement systems’ strategy has firm support from NYC’s Comptroller and other state and city policymakers. However right now Taffi Ayodele, director of DEI and emerging manager strategy at the pension fund’s asset manager, the Bureau of Asset Management, believes pension funds’ ability to allocate to emerging managers is really a question of wait and see.
Ayodele believes the current climate is already damaging the outlook for emerging managers. She’s heard that emerging managers are struggling to get in front of enough LPs or employing a strategy of sending male colleagues to pitch to LPs in Red States.
Ayodele touts the performance and team expertise of some of these emerging managers to peer funds to try and get them in front of new audiences.
“Where we are overweight in certain sectors like private equity, we support firms’ work with other pension funds. It is about information sharing and helping managers fast track closure,” she says. “Many of these GPs simply won’t be able to come back in a year. It’s important to remember that these emerging managers start with less assets under management which limits their ability to sustain their firms through market downturns.”
Positively, diverse managers who successfully close funds in the current market will prove their resilience. However, Ayodele warns that some diverse managers won’t make it through. Moreover, policies that now make it hard for corporations and investment managers to hire more diverse talent, will shrink the pool of candidates that go on to become the diverse managers of the future.
Staying the course
NYC retirement systems’ target allocation to invest more with diverse and emerging managers is bolstered by a new, direct, evergreen program that seeks to invest 10 per cent of the Systems’ annual pacing in private equity to emerging and diverse managers in what Ayodele calls a “significant and huge achievement.”
She now hopes to gain Board approval to expand the program to three additional private market asset classes in a next step.
“These programs not only contribute positively to our portfolio’s returns but also drive tangible economic impact in historically underserved communities and help narrow the racial wealth gap within financial services,” she says.
NYC retirement systems’ set up its diverse and emerging manager program in the late 1990s and expanded it to include private markets in 2012-13.
The investor says private markets minority- and women-owned asset management firms have outperformed their respective benchmarks with an average public markets equivalent (PME) spread of 5 per cent, contributing to the funds’ strong overall performance. Last year, the System’s five pension funds achieved a combined net return of 10 per cent, surpassing their actuarial target rate of 7 per cent.
Ayodele links the outperformance to these managers’ ability to invest in niche markets and exploit inefficiencies in the lower to mid-market space where large managers struggle to invest. “There are both non-diverse and diverse managers that don’t outperform, but when we look at the data, in aggregate, diverse managers are helping drive outperformance in the portfolio,” she says.
Getting in the door
Ayodele believes NYC retirement systems’ emerging and diverse manager programme stands out because of its open-door policy. Any external manager will be able to access a first meeting with BAM if they can demonstrate a portfolio fit, strong performance and a compelling investment thesis. Moreover, if they don’t get in the portfolio on their first attempt, Ayodele says they will be invited back in a few years to apply again.
According to data from Fairview Capital Partners, the number of diverse-owned alternative investment firms grew last year. The firm’s annual “Women and Minority-Owned Private Equity and Venture Capital Firms” report found that the number of diverse managers in the market increased to over 1,000 in 2024, from 907 in 2023.
Organisations running diversity programs that seek to expand recruitment practices to underrepresented demographics, hold anti-discrimination training, or even roll out accessibility measures to people with disabilities, are in the firing line for not being inclusive or open to all.
Although existing or settled law hasn’t changed, US President Trump’s sweeping executive orders to scrap diversity equity and inclusion have introduced risk to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs, ushering in a new level of uncertainty on what constitutes an illegal DEI policy and raised the spectre of enforcement by the federal government. The situation is most visibly affecting universities, but private companies are increasingly in view. Meanwhile, investment organisations from BlackRock to Citigroup have rolled back DEI to comply with the new regulatory landscape, scrapping workforce representation goals and the need to interview a diverse slate of candidates for open positions.
Some asset owners interviewed by Top1000funds.com welcome the axe-wielding. They say DEI has grown into an industry (estimated at $9.4 billion) of advisors and trainers which, like ESG, is in danger of breaching fiduciary duty in its quest to use other people’s money to engineer social change. Moreover, DEI in its current guise isn’t working because diversity in the investment industry remains poor.
Others worry that scrapping DEI initiatives will impact their ability to hire and retain the diverse talent that they believe is essential for financial outperformance. They say it is already endangering successful emerging manager programs and jeopardising their ability to engage with corporates on diversity – and other issues – that impact returns.
Angela Miller-May
Undaunted by the new political landscape, the chief investment officer of the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund (IMRF), Angela Miller-May, has little patience for asset managers that have rushed to review their internal diversity programs or external commitment to the cause because they are worried about compliance with the President’s executive orders.
“For us, this raises the question of whether an asset manager is going to continue to attract talent and have diverse teams, and if we want to continue to invest with them going forward. Most asset managers know this is something we care about but there is a subset that have always wanted to say they cannot think about DEI, or ESG, because they are fiduciaries. They’ve just never equated the two yet having diverse teams that lead to better decision making and positive financial outcomes is being a good fiduciary.”
Still, as IMRF puts pressure on its external managers to maintain their DEI programs, asset owners like the Missouri State Treasury are dragging their managers in the opposite direction.
In February, State Treasurer Vivek Malek who oversees an $18 billion portfolio of state assets mostly invested in fixed income – and whose Indian heritage makes him a less obvious advocate for dismantling DEI among his fellow red-state treasurers – led opposition to a slate of nominees to Vanguard’s board of trustees due to concerns about their approach to DEI and ESG.
“We’ve made it clear to our investment partners that our office will not support practices that prioritise DEI or ESG criteria over fiduciary duty,” he says. “Encouragingly, we’ve seen firms begin pulling back from such strategies as public scrutiny grows and states like Missouri push for a return to core investment principles.”
Diversity within asset owner organisations helps attract talent
Practising what it preaches, IMFR has nurtured diversity internally to the extent that seven of the 16-person investment team are women. Other asset owners have also made it a priority. CalSTRS boasts 50/50 gender diversity within the investment branch and hiring practices at MassPRIM, which is a signatory of the CFA’s DEI Inclusion Code, include “a focus on intentional diversity in each step of [the] recruitment process”, partnerships with “affinity groups” and “regular pay equity studies,” according to its website.
Sociologist Frank Dobbin, the Henry Ford II Professor at Harvard University, is convinced asset owners will struggle to attract skilled and talented staff in today’s competitive market if they drop these supportive initiatives and policies.
“We know from research that when employers send a signal that they are open to diverse candidates, they get more people applying and more people stay on,” he says. Moreover, he believes the threat of the Trump administration prosecuting reverse discrimination cases will have a long-term and chilling effect on all kinds of policies from parental leave to disability support which have helped investors recruit and retain talent.
“Trump is not just telling agencies not to enforce these regulations and employers that the regulations won’t exist. He’s telling employers that he will use government agencies to prosecute them for discriminating against white people, particularly men,” Dobbin says.
Again, it’s an outlook Missouri Treasurer Malek is quick to rebuff. He argues that the American system successfully rewards talent and determination, regardless of race or background, without the need for DEI policies: his rise to become the first person of colour to head Missouri’s State Treasury is testimony to the fact.
The notion that success is only possible with DEI policies is both patronising and false
“The notion that success is only possible with DEI policies is both patronising and false. Across this country, including in my own life story, there are countless examples of people from all backgrounds succeeding through hard work, education, and perseverance. We should be encouraging individuals to see their identity not as a barrier but as a source of strength. Victimhood mentalities limit potential; merit-based systems unleash it.”
Does diversity pay?
CFA Institute argues that data from firms that have committed to its DEI Inclusion Code – which champions positive systemic change in the investment industry by addressing challenges that come with demographic, cultural, and societal variations across markets – shows they are more successful at hiring and retaining the diverse talent that supports better outcomes.
“DEI policies help companies attract and retain the best talent and create an environment to achieve optimised outcomes,” says Sarah Maynard, global senior head, inclusion at the CFA.
Other investors espouse the value of cognitive diversity in their own investment teams.
John Skjervem
John D. Skjervem, chief investment officer at Utah Retirement Systems, argues the productive power of cognitive diversity was well documented almost two decades ago by University of Michigan professor Scott E. Page in his landmark book, The Difference. Page’s endorsement of the value of collective wisdom particularly struck a chord when Skjervem joined the $140 billion Oregon State Treasury as investment division director and CIO in 2012 and found the investment staff exhibited no meaningful diversity and suffered, in his opinion, from latent unconscious bias.
“It was a very real phenomenon,” he recalls, “where the ‘right fit’ would often manifest as an outdoorsy, middle-aged white guy who enjoyed fishing and hunting.”
With support from the administration of then-Treasurer Ted Wheeler, Skjervem says Oregon began the intentional and at times forceful pursuit of better cognitive diversity after which “the dam burst, and our physical diversity profile started to improve significantly.”
Some are convinced that DEI actively harms the investment process.
“DEI prioritises social engineering over fiduciary duty, undermining the responsibility to maximise returns and manage risk for taxpayers,” says South Carolina’s State Treasurer Loftis Curtis who oversees the state’s $75 billion of public funds. “President Trump is right to dismantle DEI because it injects politics into investing, weakens accountability, and shifts focus from performance to ideology. This threatens sound governance and risks long-term financial harm.”
DEI prioritises social engineering over fiduciary duty, undermining the responsibility to maximise returns
In truth, there is little hard data on either the extent to which a diverse investment team outperforms its benchmarks and peers or the return premium earned from investing in companies with diverse managements and boards.
An easier place to unearth hard numbers linking returns and DEI lies in emerging manager programs where many US pension funds including the $209 billion Teacher Retirement System of Texas, the $109 billion MassPRIM and the $533 billion CalPERS purposefully mandate to diverse and emerging external managers in search of higher returns.
The $284.27 billion NYC retirement systems has a $23 billion allocation to diverse managers which has grown $6.3 billion since 2022. Private market mandates to women and minority-owned firms have outperformed their respective benchmarks by an average public markets equivalent (PME) spread of 5 per cent. In public markets, emerging managers are expected to outperform standard benchmarks (Barclays Aggregate, Russell 2000 and MSCI EAFE) net of fees.
Last year, New York’s five pension funds achieved a combined net return of 10 per cent surpassing their actuarial target rate of 7 per cent. Taffi Ayodele, director of DEI and emerging manager strategy at the New York Bureau of Asset Management, which manages assets for the city, says diverse managers contributed to that success.
“When we look at the data, in aggregate, diverse managers are helping drive outperformance in the portfolio,” she says.
It’s a similar story at IMRF where diverse managers currently invest around $14 billion of the $55 billion portfolio backed by an aspirational target to invest 20 per cent of AUM with minority managers enshrined in the Illinois Pension Code.
IMRF doesn’t distinguish diverse manager returns from the returns of its wider manager cohort, but CIO Miller-May says these managers are central to IMRF consistently hitting its target return of 7.25 per cent. They add value, mitigate the risk of group think, and demonstrate alignment by allowing IMRF to tap fee benefits in exchange for providing seed capital.
In private markets IMRF also expects mid-market diverse managers to see more exits and distributions than others in the current environment because they can exit to larger GPs.
The worrying outlook for diverse managers
But these programs face jeopardy. Top1000funds.com interviewees say it’s possible that allocating to emerging manager programs could face legal challenges if the issue reaches the Supreme Court. The June 2023 ruling that barred race-based affirmative action in college admissions shows the potential for broader legal shifts.
Taffi Ayodele
The NYC retirement systems’ strategy has firm support from NYC’s Comptroller and other state and city policymakers. However right now, Ayodele believes the pension fund’s ability to allocate to emerging managers is really a question of “wait and see” and says the current climate is already damaging the outlook for emerging managers. She’s heard that emerging managers are struggling to get in front of enough LPs, and other stories like female founders sending male colleagues to pitch to LPs in red states.
Ayodele now touts the performance and team expertise of some of these emerging managers to peer funds to help them find new audiences.
“Where we are overweight in certain sectors, like private equity, we support a firm’s work with other pension funds. It is about information sharing and helping managers fast track closure,” she says. “Many of these GPs simply won’t be able to come back in a year. It’s important to remember that these emerging managers start with less assets under management which limits their ability to sustain their firms through market downturns.”
Policies that make it harder for the investment industry to hire, promote and retain diverse talent may also shrink the pool of diverse founders and professionals spinning out in the future. “You don’t just wake up one morning and think ‘I’m going to run my own hedge fund or private equity firm’,” says Miller-May. “It takes years to build up experience and a track record of investing.”
It’s one of many reasons why DEI in the majority-owned asset management community is a key focus of stewardship at IMRF.
Proxy voting under attack
It’s not just the asset owners’ ability to nurture diversity internally or engage with their asset managers on DEI that has got more complicated.
A climate of uncertainty has settled over investors’ ability to exert influence on board diversity, gender pay gaps and wider ESG issues, in the companies they own. In a sign of the times, State Street’s asset management unit has dropped proxy voting policies that required company board nomination slates feature a certain percentage of women directors. Elsewhere, US communications group Verizon recently abandoned its DEI program for approval from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on an acquisition.
Doubts about the reach of active ownership is also starting to wash-up on European shores. The US administration has asked European firms to comply with DEI or risk disqualification from US federal contracts potentially impacting sectors like defence, aviation and infrastructure.
Tim Manuel, head of responsible investment at the United Kingdom’s £64 billion Border to Coast which engages on DEI with portfolio companies both internally and via its external managers articulates the new uncertainty.
“Asset managers tasked with engagement are in a difficult situation because a lot of the change that is happening has legal ramifications. We don’t want to rush into a situation and pump our fist in a way that is not feasible because of the environment they are working in.”
“Depending on where you are coming from or what sector you’re in, making public statements about ideas related to ESG has got more difficult, but I haven’t seen any changes yet in the way investors engage via the boardroom about the things they find important. Climate problems are not gone, and companies are aware of that,” reflects Ronald Wuijster, chief executive of APG Asset Management which invests on behalf of €552 billion Stichting Pensioenfonds ABP.
“For us, investments are made according to four elements comprising return, risk, cost and sustainability, and that hasn’t changed.”
Ronald Wuijster
Others are also determined to press ahead with corporate engagement. Back in January during a presentation to the CalSTRS’ board, portfolio manager Lynn Paquin said the team will continue to engage with corporates regarding diverse director representation on boards and disclosure of basic workforce metrics.
“The goal of our outreach is simple: to have an open dialogue to better understand why companies have made this decision and to reiterate our conviction that robust DEI programs and disclosures can be a positive indicator of an inclusive workplace culture to attract and retain staff, drive productivity, and reduce reputational risk.”
Paquin observed that “the vast majority” of companies pushing back on DEI are not dropping their training and inclusion programs, or workforce reporting. Instead, most of the roll back is focused on public facing programs and changing the language around social policies.
Time for a reset
Other themes are emerging amid the confusion and disruption of dismantling DEI.
Even diversity advocates see the current situation as a chance to reframe the issue and articulate what DEI means in the same way sustainable investors have been challenged on ESG.
It’s an opportunity to re-evaluate if mandatory diversity training, job tests, and grievance procedures really work and Harvard’s Dobbin, for one, doubts they do.
“Targeted internships for minorities don’t affect the workforce very much and diversity training is not a substitute for changing behaviour. It also often backfires because it seeks to convince people they are biased and guilty of sexism and racism which typically angers them,” he reflects, arguing high performance management practices like mentorship are more effective at moving the diversity needle, as well as employee work/life benefits.
John Skjervem, now chief investment officer of the Utah Retirement Systems, goes further still.
“Despite good intentions, DEI programs are exacerbating the problem by subordinating the holy grail of cognitive diversity to quota-based goals” prioritising gender, race, ethnicity and sexual orientation. The result, he says, “is ever greater divisiveness and a further balkanisation of society, not the world I want to live in.”
“DEI and other preference-based approaches are simply the other side of the discrimination coin, violating the civil rights of those who don’t enjoy politically defined preference,” he continues. “My mother taught me at an early age that two wrongs cannot make a right so instead of DEI, we should keep our focus and aspirations on improved cognitive diversity from which a more representative and better integrated meritocracy will emerge.”
DEI and other preference-based approaches are simply the other side of the discrimination coin
In an uncertain environment, heightened by the risk of litigation, the CFA’s common-sense messaging like the importance of shaping a recruitment program with broad selection criteria because programs that don’t target an identity are more successful is a useful guide.
Although the value of diversity – and by extension cognitive diversity – is engrained in investment more than other professions, the industry remains divided and now thwarted on the means to get there.
“It’s going to be a long four years,” concludes Illinois’ CIO Miller-May.
This article was produced by Capital Group without involvement from the Top1000funds.com editorial team.
Asset allocators are facing heightened uncertainty in almost every conceivable direction.
President Trump’s tariff agenda looks to be here to stay in some form, but in reality, its longevity is difficult to predict – as is its precise impact on economic resilience across global regions.
Now tariffs have increased the threat of a slowdown or even a recession, bond futures markets reflect expectations of faster and further rate cuts from the US Federal Reserve and European Central Bank. However, the likelihood that tariffs will exacerbate already sticky inflation in the short term creates a difficult balancing act for central bankers.
Meanwhile, global equities have experienced extreme levels of volatility and credit spreads have widened amid concerns of a tariff war.
Against this backdrop, our global Fixed Income Horizons Survey (with research done over February, March and April 2025) finds that asset owners are, on a net basis, increasing allocations across fixed income sectors, seeking geographical diversification – particularly those in Asia-Pacific and EMEA – and trusting bonds to provide ballast against equity risk in portfolios. They are also taking a more active stance in portfolios, as rebalancing and risk management become a bigger priority.
Our headline findings
Asset owners’ 12-month outlook points to heightened uncertainty
Amid an increasingly uncertain economic backdrop, the vast majority of asset owners (72%) say they will be highly selective and cautious in their approach to credit risk over the next 12 months. Most plan to keep credit risk exposure unchanged (54%), and slightly more are adding (25%) than reducing (21%) their exposure.
Portfolio positioning indicates upweighting fixed income and leaning into duration as asset owners hedge risks
In aggregate, more asset owners plan to increase than decrease allocations across all fixed income sectors – including public and private – with high-quality credit favored. This may partly be in response to heightened volatility in equity markets, as 49% think stock-bond correlation will weaken over the next 12 months, meaning fixed income will provide more effective diversification. And more than twice as many asset owners are extending (38%) as shortening (17%) the duration of fixed income portfolios, enabling them to lock in income while potentially helping to preserve capital in the event of a market shock.
Asset owners are rethinking the regional balance of bond portfolios – with those in Asia Pacific and EMEA particularly focused on diversifying internationally
Overall, 44% of asset owners are planning significant regional rebalancing of bond portfolios over the next 12 months, rising to 51% among Asia-Pacific respondents and 47% of those in EMEA. This internationalisation is reflected within investment grade credit, with 47% of EMEA asset owners increasing allocations to the US as well as within Europe (38%), and 34% of Asia-Pacific asset owners increasing allocations to the US and 42% within their home region. It is reflected within high yield credit too, where allocators in Asia-Pacific and EMEA are prioritising global and US high yield alongside their home region. North American asset owners are maintaining their typical home bias, but it is notable that 26% plan to grow their European high yield allocations.
Traditional portfolio buckets are being reassessed as the private credit market continues to evolve
Private credit is playing an increasingly important strategic role in asset owners’ portfolios, with 72% saying it should play a complementary role alongside public credit. However, there are still knowledge gaps in terms of optimising the blend of public and private credit in portfolios, with only 54% confident they know how best to achieve this, dropping to 44% among DC pensions. Further, more asset owners agree (39%) than disagree (28%) that public and private credit will ultimately be treated as a unified credit bucket in portfolios.
Emerging market debt is seen as a source of diversification – with appetite for hard and local currency assets
Those asset owners increasing or adjusting emerging market debt allocations over the next 12 months say diversification benefits (52%) are a key driver, alongside attractive yields (62%). There is significantly stronger appetite for investment grade than sub-investment grade assets, possibly due to concerns about the vulnerability of sub-investment grade credits if global growth were to weaken. Asset owners are clearly looking at a balanced mix of exposures within investment grade, with 61% increasing allocations to sovereign hard currency debt, 53% to corporate and 49% to sovereign local currency debt.
Active management will play a more dominant role in portfolios as rebalancing and risk management come to the fore
As they seek to navigate deeper and more varied sources of risk, 49% of asset owners plan to increase the share of active strategies in their fixed income portfolios, versus just 5% decreasing this. A majority of investors think active strategies will add value over passive across all public fixed income sectors over the next 12 months. This view is strongest in relation to high yield credit (87%), emerging market debt (86%) and investment grade credit (81%). When asked an open question about the future role of active management in fixed income, 74% of respondents indicated it will be central to their portfolios, for a combination of reasons, including enhanced returns, risk management, the changing market environment and ability to customise strategies.
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