The OCIO checklist manifesto

As more organizations sharpen the focus on their core competencies, many are starting to question the cost-effectiveness of maintaining large in-house investment departments, and many firms are seeking the help of outside expertise in navigating today’s complex markets.

Key takeaways

  • The outsourced chief investment officer (OCIO) fiduciary model is gaining traction among pension plan sponsors and other institutional investors, as worldwide OCIO assets under management grew to over $1.5 trillion in 2017, up more than 14% from the prior year.¹
  • While pension plan sponsors are intrigued by the prospect of an external discretionary partner to serve as a co-fiduciary, many are bewildered by the different permutations of OCIO services available and uncertain about what, exactly, they really need.

6 outsourcing considerations for pension plan sponsors

With the increasing stringency of fiduciary standards and the growing complexity of financial markets, fewer institutions today are willing to go it alone when it comes to managing their own investments, whether the assets reside in a pension plan to support the organization’s employees or an endowment fund to support its operating budget. Consultants have long aided institutional investors in need of advice, but more OCIO providers are stepping forward with comprehensive fiduciary services combining advice, portfolio management, and plan administration—all through a single point of contact. OCIO assets under management in the United States alone are projected to reach nearly $1.7 trillion by 2023.¹ While the word is clearly getting out, many institutional investors still wrestle with the best ways to match their specific needs with the right combination of OCIO service options available from different providers in the marketplace. Fully funded or not, each pension plan is unique, requiring its own specific combination of OCIO service capabilities. Here, we offer a checklist of 6 items a plan sponsor can consider to maximize the odds of engaging an OCIO with the capabilities and expertise best suited to help bridge the gap.

1 Asset allocation credentials are essential

It’s not easy being a defined benefit plan sponsor these days. “The latest dive in interest rates pushed the global stock of negative-yielding debt above $15 trillion for the first time,” representing roughly a quarter of all outstanding bonds around the world—a development that “further complicates the life for pension funds,” according to Grant’s Interest Rate Observer.² Investments with expected rates of return sufficient to meet projected liabilities are becoming harder to find, which makes asset allocation that much more crucial. The average U.S. corporate pension plan now stands at less than 84% funded, down from 94% in September 2018.³ Pairing increasingly onerous legal and regulatory burdens against a macro backdrop rife with historical anomalies, it’s no wonder plan sponsors are growing uncomfortable going it alone.

While devoting greater resources toward core business capabilities has become a competitive imperative, many nonfinancial organizations lack in-house staff with the asset allocation expertise needed to navigate an upside-down investment world populated with subzero yields. Not surprisingly, the majority of institutional investors (51%), including 53% of corporate defined benefit plans, identified asset allocation as the most valued investment service provided by OCIOs.⁴ Asset allocation decisions should take into account a plan’s characteristics, its asset-liability mismatch, its current yields, and its most optimal path toward return expectations that meet its discount rate.

Even an organization backed by a strong investment committee that meets quarterly may benefit from the agility afforded by day-to-day external discretion. “Formerly, it was hard to react when an investment opportunity would present itself. By using an OCIO we are creating structural expertise that helps us with these one-off ideas,” notes one investment committee chair.⁴ Asset allocators have the potential to add alpha and control risk by dynamically seizing the opportunities that unexpected market dislocations provide. A seasoned multi-asset solutions team with an extensive active asset allocation record using in-house and third-party strategies across many different public and private asset classes may provide plan sponsors with an improved efficient frontier and a better hedge ratio over time.

While strong consulting credentials might be sufficient in the context of a limited advisory relationship some “OCIOs are consulting firms that have expanded into the field of outsourcing to increase their fees.”⁵ Full fiduciary responsibility is probably best left to OCIO firms designed with asset allocation in their DNA right from the start.

CHECKPOINT

  • Favor OCIOs with a history of asset allocation leadership and innovation.
Asset allocation and manager research top the list of client needs The table shows that manager due diligence is most important to nonprofit institutional investors and asset allocation is most important to corporate defined benefit plans.

2 Multimanager diversification requires robust manager research

When it comes to managing an institutional portfolio, asset allocation might be among the most important things, but it’s not the only important thing. In fact, 51% of all institutional investors identified manager due diligence, selection, and termination as the most valued investment service provided by OCIOs, an acknowledgment that diversification should extend beyond asset classes and include multiple investment styles form multiple investment firms.⁴ As capital markets have become increasingly complex and more institutions have come to embrace private investments and other alternative assets, no single organization today can reasonably expect to achieve proficiency in every investment discipline needed to help build a truly diversified portfolio.

Devoting all assets to a single underlying manager entails risks

In addition to potentially forfeiting niche market opportunities, pension funds that consolidate their assets with only one asset management firm for all of their underlying investments may introduce an unintended degree of manager concentration risk. An academic study on management structure at investment firms suggests a strong link between hierarchy and herding, the tendency of portfolio managers to follow the trading behavior of their colleagues.⁶ In particular, a firm with a vertical structure, where house views are mandated from the top down, can impair a portfolio manger’s discretion and sense of empowerment, weakening the incentive to cultivate original insight. And when all of a firm’s portfolio managers rely on the same central research group, it’s fair to question how they guard against groupthink. An OCIO provider offering a robust open-architecture platform featuring third-party managers sends a strong signal to prospective clients about its commitment to minimizing conflicts of interest, maintaining high fiduciary standards, and creating a broad range of investment opportunities—all while reducing manager concentration risk.

Not all OCIOs are resourced for global investment manager research

But aspiration isn’t execution. Implementing multimanager diversification in practice requires substantial research and oversight resources, including a dedicated staff specializing in investment manager due diligence and oversight, and advanced analytics and performance attribution systems. Despite their good intentions, some OCIO providers just don’t have the scale to maintain manager research coverage spanning scores of talented investment teams and the hundreds of different strategies that they run. Only some providers routinely engage third-party specialized “managers with expertise outside their own, particularly in alternative assets and private market investments.”¹ An OCIO is only as good as the asset manager network it’s able to bring to bear on behalf of its client accounts.

CHECKPOINT

  • Favor OCIOs that bring together some of the best investment teams from around the world.
Open-architecture fund construction helps mute manager concentration risk The infographic shows a representative sample of three layers of diversification—by asset class, by investment style, and by asset manager—embedded within an oversight program monitoring each portfolio team for the repeatability of its investment process and management of risk.

3 Private-market assets can pair well with long-duration obligations

Over 60% of alternative asset holders believe we’re near the peak of the equity market cycle.⁷ Still, the average corporate defined benefit plan remains less than 84% funded.³ What’s the game plan to close the gap? Most mainstream asset classes probably won’t do the trick; “with the bond market offering microscopic yields (at best) and the S&P 500 trading at a substantial premium to its five-year average on a price-to-earnings basis, pension funds look primarily to the private markets to make up the shortfall.”² In fact, 70% of U.S. corporate defined benefit plans expect to increase their allocation to real estate, infrastructure, private debt, and other private investments over the next year; meanwhile, 78% plan to decrease their allocations to public equity markets over the same period.¹

Private investments span diverse asset classes across the capital spectrum, yet they all share a common feature—they’re not publicly traded. As a result, private assets can offer an opportunity to pursue an illiquidity premium over stocks, with lower day-to-day price volatility along the way. Increases in allocations to “defensive positions that are less correlated with public market investments” are anticipated across a variety of “client types with longer-term investment horizons that are willing to trade liquidity for higher returns than are available in public markets.”¹ Across the endowment and foundation world, too, the allure of private assets remains as strong as the aversion toward public equities. Over the next year 6 of every 10 U.S. endowment funds expect to increase allocations to real estate, infrastructure, private debt, and other private investments while decreasing allocations to public equities.¹ Nearly a third (31%) of nonprofits report a greater need for opportunities to allocate capital to private-market strategies as a co-investor alongside their OCIO provider.⁴ Candidates affiliated with insurance companies often have a leg up in this regard since they can frequently offer clients the same private-market strategies the insurer deploys on its balance sheet to meet its own financial obligations.

CHECKPOINT

  • Favor OCIOs armed with an arsenal of alternatives, fortified by private-market expertise.
Real estate, infrastructure, and other private investments are on the rise The chart shows Canadian institutions’ expected allocation shifts over the next three years. The most significant increases include infrastructure, real estate fund of funds, and direct private equity. The most significant decreases include active Canadian equities, active Canadian bonds, and active global equity.

4 Liability-driven investing is indispensable for pension risk management

Given where we are in the market cycle, many corporate defined benefit plans see now as the time to upgrade their risk management capabilities through dynamic glide paths, completion mandates, derivative overlays, and other liability-driven investment (LDI) strategies. Whereas the absolute asset price volatility often represents the most prominent definition of risk for total return investors, asset price volatility relative to the liability stream remains the risk most likely to instill insomnia for pension plan sponsors. Here again, OCIOs affiliated with insurance companies have a clear edge over candidates that aren’t so well versed with the liability side of a balance sheet.

Long duration government bonds have historically served as the bread and butter of pension fund LDI, and debt remains in demand—over two-thirds of defined benefit plans anticipate increasing their fixed-income allocations over the next year.¹ Still, abnormally low and even negative sovereign bond yields have left plan sponsors “forced into increasingly ‘creative’ measures to maintain rates of return sufficient to meet their obligations.”² Insurers have been facing the same type of asset-liability matching challenge for years. An OCIO with a heritage of risk management, deep actuarial expertise, and a wide range of derisking and return-enhancing tailored solutions may be better equipped to help a plan sponsor achieve its target objectives, even as they change over the pension fund’s lifecycle.

Pension fund asset allocation can’t exist in in a vacuum. Dynamic glide path management is an active derisking approach whereby the asset mix is adjusted gradually, based on client-specific fund characteristics, in an effort to narrow the gap between the present value of a plan’s assets and its liabilities over time. Over half of all U.S. OCIO-managed corporate defined benefit plan asset are on a glide path of some sort.¹

For plan sponsors lacking such sufficient skills internally, finding an OCIO capable of tailoring and implementing an LDI approach can increase the odds of better outcomes over the long run. A good LDI process requires an integration of quantitative and actuarial insight with client-specific considerations concerning objectives and constraints. By maintaining a collaborative LDI program throughout the life of the plan, a joint client-OCIO partnership can explore enhancements and make adjustments to meet the changing needs of the plan over its lifecycle.

CHECKPOINT

  • Favor OCIOs that recognize a plan’s investment strategy starts with its liability profile.
Liability management is among the top three concerns among Canadian corporate plans The chart shows the proportion of Canadian corporations facing three key issues—asset allocation, funding issues, and liability management—in 2017, and in 2018. Liability management increased from 31% in 2017 to 34% in 2018.

5 Administrative acumen is central to comprehensive plan management

A truly comprehensive OCIO-plan sponsor relationship doesn’t end with investment policy advice, asset allocation implementation, manager selection, or customized portfolio solutions. While plan sponsors often overlook the capability to conduct administration services in the search for the right OCIO, such an omission can prove immensely inconvenient—and costly—in the long run, especially for pension plans with a large number of participants. Administrative offerings run the gamut in the OCIO marketplace. Some providers offer virtually none while others can combine integrated front-, middle-, and back-office functions ranging from foreign exchange and securities trading, actuarial and defined benefit recordkeeping services, transition management, custodial services oversight, transactional and financial reporting, securities lending, and equitization of cash. Only insurers can provide comprehensive pension administration services in Canada, and a strong OCIO can provide its clients with an advantage in coordinating communications with the custodian and handling all activities associated with pension payments on the plan’s behalf.

Clients value custody, recordkeeping, and trading relationships and other ancillary support services, such as reporting and technology—especially if they can be accessed through a single point of contact. An executive at a $1.3 billion corporate defined benefit plan observed that “our fee structure is better than it was pre-OCIO, and when you add on top of that the fact that you get the portfolio expertise and administrative support, it just makes a lot of sense.”⁴ Some OCIOs may be able to serve on or more facets of a plan’s management, but relatively few can bring together all the essentials of operational excellence into a holistic solution that includes administrative services. Still, if they make the effort to find the right partner, plan sponsors can benefit from complete OCIO plan management bolstered by administrative efficiencies, cost controls, and economies of scale that only come with significant consolidations in pension plan services purchasing power.

CHECKPOINT

  • Favor OCIOs offering complete plan management—down to the last administrative detail.
Institutions desire more than investing from their OCIO providers The chart shows that 60% of survey respondents are very satisfied with the operational support they’re receiving from their OCIO providers and 36% are satisfied.

6 OCIO search consultants can help if you get stuck

Finding the right OCIO partner isn’t easy for pension plans and other institutional investors. Rather than a perfect science, striking the right match is more of an iterative art. And it’s not only prospective clients that get confused: 84% of U.S. OCIO providers also view the “lack of a developed process for searching, evaluating, and selecting OCIO services” as a challenge.¹ That may change as the OCIO market matures and as its professional matchmakers continue to gain momentum and establish a more prominent role in the shaping of OCIO search best practices. Across the universe of OCIO providers, 45% report seeing only a small sliver of prospective client searches—less than one-quarter—tied to OCIO search consultants, while 42% estimate that one-quarter to one-half of the searches they encounter come from consultants. The remaining 13% of the OCIO providers see a majority of searches led by consultants.¹ These numbers are expected to shift. We expect search consultants to fare well as the volume of informal market checks, rebids, and formal replacement searches grows along with the maturity of the OCIO marketplace. Many OCIO clients that didn’t initially use a search consultant report plans to do so in the future because they believe it will help them save time, review a larger number of providers, and conduct a more efficient search.¹

CHECKPOINT

  • When in doubt, seek out an OCIO search consultant to help you strike the right match. 

Conclusion

In theory, finding the right OCIO seems like a fairly straightforward exercise. But challenges arise in the practice of identifying service providers with the right mix of expertise, judgment, and technical skills. Each pension fund is unique, requiring its own specific combination of OCIO service capabilities. Here, we briefly recap our checklist of key items a plan sponsor can consider when seeking out the right OCIO for the job. Favor OCIOs that:

  1. Demonstrate an extensive track record of asset allocation leadership and innovation
  2. Bring together some of the best investment teams from around the world
  3. Arm clients with an arsenal of alternative investments, fortified by private-market expertise
  4. Recognize a plan’s investment strategy should be developed in light of its liability profile
  5. Offer comprehensive plan management—right down to the last administrative detail
  6. Earn the respect of the OCIO search consultant community as the investment outsourcing market matures, with search consultants playing a more prominent role in it

 

Note: A plan sponsor cannot abdicate its responsibility to act solely in the interest of plan participants and their beneficiaries. While a plan sponsor may delegate certain fiduciary services to an OCIO provider—including the exercise of discretion over the plan’s assets and its administration—fiduciary duty cannot be fully outsourced. The plan sponsor retains ultimate responsibility for carrying out its duties prudently, which may include the hiring, overseeing, and firing of an OCIO provider.

1  “U.S.  Outsourced  Chief  Investment  Officer,”  Cerulli,  2018.  2  Almost  Daily  Comment,  Grant’s  Interest  Rate  Observer,  August 6, 2019. 3  milliman.com/pfi/,  September 18, 2019.  4  “OCIO  at  an  Inflection  Point:  Strong  Growth  Ahead,  but  Institutions  Are  Demanding More,” Cerulli, 2019. 5 “OCIO RFPs: Are you asking these key questions?” Strategic Investment Group, 2014. 6 “The Role of Organizational Structure: Between Hierarchy and Specialization,” Massimo Massa and Lei Zhang, 2010. 7 Preqin investor survey, November 2018.

A widespread health crisis such as a global pandemic could cause substantial market volatility, exchange trading suspensions and closures, and affect portfolio performance. For example, the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has resulted in significant disruptions to global business activity. The impact of a health crisis and other epidemics and pandemics that may arise in the future, could affect the global economy in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time. A health crisis may exacerbate other preexisting political, social, and economic risks. Any such impact could adversely affect the portfolio’s performance, resulting in losses to your investment

Investing involves risks, including the potential loss of principal. Financial markets are volatile and can fluctuate significantly in response to company, industry, political, regulatory, market, or economic developments. These risks are magnified for investments made in emerging markets. Currency risk is the risk that fluctuations in exchange rates may adversely affect the value of a portfolio’s investments.

The information provided does not take into account the suitability, investment objectives, financial situation, or particular needs of any specific person. You should consider the suitability of any type of investment for your circumstances and, if necessary, seek professional advice.

This material, intended for the exclusive use by the recipients who are allowable to receive this document under the applicable laws and regulations of the relevant jurisdictions, was produced by, and the opinions expressed are those of, Manulife Investment Management as of the date of this publication and are subject to change based on market and other conditions. The information and/or analysis contained in this material has been compiled or arrived at from sources believed to be reliable, but Manulife Investment Management does not make any representation as to their accuracy, correctness, usefulness, or completeness and does not accept liability for any loss arising from the use of the information and/or analysis contained. The information in this material may contain projections or other forward-looking statements regarding future events, targets, management discipline, or other expectations, and is only as current as of the date indicated. The information in this document, including statements concerning financial market trends, are based on current market conditions, which will fluctuate and may be superseded by subsequent market events or for other reasons. Manulife Investment Management disclaims any responsibility to update such information.

Neither Manulife Investment Management or its affiliates, nor any of their directors, officers, or employees shall assume any liability or responsibility for any direct or indirect loss or damage or any other consequence of any person acting or not acting in reliance on the information contained herein. All overviews and commentary are intended to be general in nature and for current interest. While helpful, these overviews are no substitute for professional tax, investment, or legal advice. Clients should seek professional advice for their particular situation. Neither Manulife, Manulife Investment Management, nor any of their affiliates or representatives is providing tax, investment, or legal advice. This material was prepared solely for informational purposes, does not constitute a recommendation, professional advice, an offer, or an invitation by or on behalf of Manulife Investment Management to any person to buy or sell any security or adopt any investment strategy, and is no indication of trading intent in any fund or account managed by Manulife Investment Management. No investment strategy or risk management technique can guarantee returns or eliminate risk in any market environment. Diversification or asset allocation does not guarantee a profit or protect against a loss in any market. Unless otherwise specified, all data is sourced from Manulife Investment Management. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Manulife Investment Management

Manulife Investment Management is the global wealth and asset management segment of Manulife Financial Corporation. We draw on more than 150 years of financial stewardship to partner with clients across our institutional, retail, and retirement businesses globally. Our specialist approach to money management includes the highly differentiated strategies of our fixed-income, specialized equity, multi-asset solutions, and private markets teams, along with access to specialized, unaffiliated asset managers from around the world through our multimanager model. 

These materials have not been reviewed by and are not registered with any securities or other regulatory authority, and may, where appropriate, be distributed by the following Manulife entities in their respective jurisdictions. Additional information about Manulife Investment Management may be found at  manulifeim.com/institutional.

Australia: Hancock Natural Resource Group Australasia Pty Limited, Manulife Investment Management (Hong Kong) Limited. Brazil: Hancock Asset Management Brasil Ltda. Canada: Manulife Investment Management Limited, Manulife Investment Management Distributors Inc., Manulife Investment Management (North America) Limited, Manulife Investment Management Private Markets (Canada) Corp. China: Manulife Overseas Investment Fund Management (Shanghai) Limited Company. European Economic Area and United Kingdom: Manulife Investment Management (Europe) Ltd.which is authorized and regulated by the Financial Conduct AuthorityManulife Investment Management (Ireland) Ltd., which is authorized and regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland Hong Kong: Manulife Investment Management (Hong Kong) Limited. Indonesia: PT Manulife Aset Manajemen Indonesia. Japan: Manulife Investment Management (Japan) Limited. Malaysia: Manulife Investment Management (M) Berhad (formerly known as Manulife Asset Management Services Berhad) 200801033087 (834424-U). Philippines: Manulife Asset Management and Trust Corporation. Singapore: Manulife Investment Management (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. (Company Registration No. 200709952G). South Korea: Manulife Investment Management (Hong Kong) Limited. Switzerland: Manulife IM (Switzerland) LLC. Taiwan: Manulife Investment Management (Taiwan) Co. Ltd. United States: John Hancock Investment Management LLC, Manulife Investment Management (US) LLC, Manulife Investment Management Private Markets (US) LLC, and Hancock Natural Resource Group, Inc. Vietnam: Manulife Investment Fund Management (Vietnam) Company Limited.

Manulife Investment Management, the Stylized M Design, and Manulife Investment Management & Stylized M Design are trademarks of The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company and are used by it, and by its affiliates, under license.

509469

Eric Menzer, CFA, CAIA, AIF

Eric Menzer, CFA, CAIA, AIF , 

Head of Advisory Solutions, Multi-Asset Solutions Team

Manulife Investment Management

Read bio