From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: Europe’s most sophisticated pensions are taking power back from their asset managers. By the end of the decade, will this be the exception—or the rule? Elizabeth Pfeuti reports.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: Norway’s sovereign fund is pioneering a new investment model based on transparency and ethics. Worthy, but is it working? Elizabeth Pfeuti reports.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: David Blanchflower—the Bruce V. Rauner Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College—lets policymakers on both sides of the Atlantic have it.
Pension experts in the United Kingdom and United States have called for regulatory changes to lower the exploding liabilities of pension plans caused by rock-bottom interest rates.
Critics have assailed the Pew Center on the States’ report that the total US public pension funding deficit had reached $1.38 trillion for its perceived shortcomings.
Investors should allocate to emerging markets by focusing on macroeconomic variables as the principal driver in the long-run, according to Credit Suisse.
Institutional investors should be called upon to support growth in the UK economy, experts say, as Moody’s downgrades banks that should be providing financial backing.
A household insurer in the United Kingdom has appointed a seasoned pensions professional to oversee its investment strategy after farming out its asset management function last year.
A global trend of transfers in pension risk have accelerated as plan sponsors offload risk to third parties, says Mercer, which is positioning itself to profit from the demand.