Investing Blind: The Sorry State of Portfolio Data

If you don’t know what you have, you can’t know what you need.

(March 12, 2013) — More than half of all European pension fund managers do not have adequate access to portfolio data to enable them to jump on investment opportunities as they arise, a study has revealed.

Just 44% of respondents to a survey by State Street said they felt the data they had available helped them to identify investment opportunities and act upon them.

Almost two thirds – 61% – admitted that they did not fully understand their risk exposure by using the data they had available. Perhaps more worryingly, only 60% of respondents felt the data they received on their investment portfolio was accurate.

Ian Hamilton, head of asset owner sales for State Street Global Services, said: “At a country level, local regulators increasingly require more frequent and more detailed reporting. In addition, the prospect of overarching regulatory initiatives affecting pension funds at a European level, such as the potential for Solvency II-style reporting of asset data, could create a significant additional burden.”

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State Street’s research revealed that nearly 73% of European pension funds cited demands from internal governance and risk management functions as a challenge – with 87% believing the pressure from these demands would escalate over the next five years.

Hamilton at State Street said external support and solutions would play a growing role. The company’s survey interviewed 150 pensions across the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, the UK, and Nordics.

In January, aiCIO talked with the Alberta Investment Management Corporation about its cutting edge system that allows real-time access to accurate date.

Read our report:Big Dreams? Big Data

Where Did the Assets Flow in 2012?

One asset class outshone them all last year in Europe, but where did the money flow?

(March 12, 2013) — Emerging market bonds were European investors’ sweethearts last year, with an estimated €27.6 billion in net sales flowing to the asset class, research has found.

The asset class rose to the top spot from fortieth position at the end of 2011 and beat the second place investment option by almost €3 billion in estimated net sales, according to data monitor Lipper’s annual report on the industry.

Second place went to US dollar-denominated corporate high-yield bonds, which gathered an estimated net €24.7 billion over the 12 months, taking the asset class from twentieth place in 2011.

In January, M&G Investments’ specialist bloggers the Bond Vigilantes said an index of this asset class produced just under a 30% return for investors.

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Corporate paper bumped down last year’s second place finisher—asset allocation funds—to third place with €24.1 billion in estimated net sales, while last year’s winner, sterling denominated money market funds, slumped to fourteenth place with just €8.8 billion in estimated net sales.

The highest riser among top-gathering asset classes last year was euro-denominated investment grade corporate bonds. In 2011, this asset class finished in 213th place, last year—with €12.7 billion in estimated net sales, it finished thirteenth.

Also rising quickly were funds of bond funds, which rose from 190th place at the end of 2011, to fifteenth at the end of last year.

The five asset classes that saw the largest outflows were euro-denominated money market funds, UK equities, funds of hedge funds, guaranteed funds, and short-term European bonds.

Related magazine article:Is Emerging Market Debt This Year’s Junk Bond?

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