When constructing MySuper and choice portfolios, all funds will need to assess the priority they attach to not failing the Your Future Your Super performance test.
Our analysis shows that, based on existing strategic asset allocations, even funds that are currently well positioned against their YFYS benchmark are likely to be confronted with the possibility of failure at some stage.
This risk can be reduced through more closely hugging the underlying indices used for the performance test, but this will have broader implications for portfolio quality. As such, funds will need a very strong governance framework and clear beliefs on the weight they give the YFYS test in order to ‘stay the course’ when performance falls below expectations, and the risk of failure escalates.
The YFYS performance test effectively creates another lens through which portfolios can be viewed. We believe that the best way of incorporating it into the portfolio construction process is by adding it to the broader framework used to assess overall portfolio quality.
To do so, funds will need to first address:
Funds should also consider second order impacts of the performance test on other portfolio quality aspects. For instance, if there is a meaningful probability of failing, what implications does the potential impact on member cashflows have on the level of liquidity required?
The use of reverse stress testing (or ‘pre-mortems’) is also likely to be helpful – i.e., thinking through the circumstances in which the fund actually fails the test and identifying the actions that could have been taken in order to prevent this. In short, funds should have a ‘game plan’ for how to deal with underperformance as it unfolds in real time.
Avoiding test failure will be a high priority for funds, but this will not override the obligation to act in members’ best financial interests, nor will it remove the need to manage a variety of other objectives and risks in constructing portfolios.
To help with these different (and at times competing) objectives, we suggest trustees use a framework that assesses their portfolios across a range of factors, such as expected return, risk (e.g., frequency of negative returns and tail risk), liquidity, fees, sustainability, along with the risk of failing the YFYS test. It is impossible to optimise for all of these and so trade-offs must be made. Establishing the importance of each factor, as well as the metrics available to assess each one, is crucial to managing portfolios in a consistent and coherent way.
Using a total portfolio approach can enable funds to more effectively weigh up the competing objectives and constraints, rather than a siloed approach in which asset class buckets are considered in isolation.
In our view, some asset classes do offer a higher reward-risk ratio for taking on active risk – assuming that they are implemented using high quality managers and at reasonable fee levels. Examples include:
However, every fund will need to assess where it has the best chance of outperformance, based on the make-up of their portfolio and their own beliefs.
It will also be important to assess portfolio-level impacts and interactions between active positions, noting that ‘active’ in a YFYS performance test context means both traditional active management, and investments that simply differ from the benchmark against which they are measured. Using a total portfolio lens will help to avoid two potential pitfalls:
To develop a framework that will incorporate the YFYS performance test into the portfolio construction process, we suggest that super funds determine:
The next article in this series will explore the potential impact of stapling and the increasing importance for funds to have strong brand recognition and a compelling direct to member proposition.