Many investors struggle to gain an accurate, comprehensive view of "who they are" in terms of their organizational capabilities, and the inherent constraints on those capabilities; yet it's those same capabilities and constraints that are the foundational ingredients of their identities.
It's hard to overstate the severity of this identity crisis. As a casual proof, consider one of the most central questions in institutional investing: What's the key driver of long-term investment returns? Many claim it's the act of portfolio construction (that is, the choice of which asset classes to invest in, and the selection of particular assets within those classes). Others say it's the act of portfolio management (i.e., the choice of when to buy and sell specific assets). Still others argue that risk management is most important. While all of these activities do indeed matter for long-run performance, our multidecade exploration into the behavior of institutional investors finds a different explanation: An investor's long-run performance is dictated by the extent to which its approach to portfolio construction, portfolio management and risk management (in industry parlance, its "model") matches its organizational identity. Put slightly differently, it's the business model — the combination of all of these factors — that drives the investment performance of a fund. And yet, most investors struggle to understand their models and whether they are even appropriate.
Many investors try to adopt models that other funds have famously used to achieve long-term outperformance. Examples of these "role models" include the Yale model, the Norway model and the Canadian model, among others. Sadly, these attempted adoptions frequently fail for the simple fact that institutional investors are all snowflakes: no two are identical in terms of their capabilities and constraints, and so copying a business model from a peer is unlikely to produce the same outcomes. The model that made Canadian pension funds a household name can readily fail under a slightly different set of circumstances. This isn't to say that an existing model can't be adapted to fit a particular investor's identity; in many cases that's very much possible. The problem lies in identifying what needs to be adapted to achieve a good fit. Historically, that identification has been challenging because institutional investors have lacked a mirror with which to inspect their own identities.
In a recently released paper ("The Investor Identity': The Ultimate Driver of Returns") we've attempted to build the missing mirror, by way of a framework for investors to analyze their own capabilities and constraints in order to clarify how those characteristics map to suitable models. Our framework rests on a straightforward (and, we think, poetic) observation that's arisen from many years of closely studying institutional investors worldwide: All investors are snowflakes, but all snowflakes are made of water. Said differently, all investors share the same "production function" for creating investment returns because all returns generation boils down to the nature of four "inputs" and how they're combined:
- Capital: Unsurprisingly, investors need capital to produce any returns at all. But not all capital is the same. Pension fund capital, for instance, comes with an obligation to pay retiree benefits at prescribed future dates, whereas the capital of many sovereign wealth funds comes with an obligation to invest some fraction of it domestically to promote economic development.
- People: Despite rapid improvements in artificial intelligence, there's still a need for many investment decisions to be made by humans, and the quality of those decisions is a direct result of collective expertise, fastidiousness and personal networks.
- Process: To stave off chaos, decision-making in organizations requires infrastructure to allow it to be coordinated, coherent and consistent. This infrastructure involves things like organizational structure, due-diligence checklists, prescribed valuation methods and rules for benchmarking performance, risk budgets and more. We refer to this infrastructure and how it works as an investor's process for decision-making.
- Information: In financial markets, sound decision-making relies on fresh and accurate information. But there are other characteristics of information that also affect decision quality, including the granularity, novelty and accessibility of information by others.