Conference
2016 - Resources Kit
Investing is
supposed to be about the incremental replacement of human capital with
financial capital over the long term - that's the theory. But the
reality is that today's environment and our behavioural biases conspire
against such a pure case. Fuelled by the 24/7 news cycle and constant
churn of social media, the world operates on ever shorter cycles.
Politicians promise what will see them re-elected, instead of doing
what's best for multi-decade economic and social benefit. Companies
focus on looking their best for the next reporting season, often at the
expense of future growth. Public outrage flares, dissipates and moves on
to the next issue within hours with social media fanning the flames.
In short -
short-termism seems rife! We see the effect in the ever increasing
emphasis on fees and reporting of short-term returns for markets,
securities, funds and portfolios. Is the concept of long-term investing
increasingly irrelevant?
Conference 2016 facilitated
debate on the markets, strategies and investing, with particular focus
on the friction between short-term and long-term investing imperatives -
and the portfolio construction decisions that must be made.
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Quicklinks |
This online Resources Kit is a key feature of the Conference 2016 program (in fact, all our programs feature an online Resources Kit). It
enables all Members (whether or not they were part of the "studio
audience" at the live program) to "attend". It's an
invaluable set of continuing education material.
This Resources Kit includes all the presentations and papers for each
session.
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Session
titles
Faculty of speakers
Session
resources |
An overview list of all the sessions from the jam-packed program;
50+ leading international and local investment professionals;
Presentations (sync'd video/audio with slides), papers, podcasts, slides and
Faculty bios.
|
Sessions |
The jam-packed
two-day program delivered 50+ high
conviction ideas on how to manage the friction between
short-term and long-term investing imperatives - and the
portfolio construction decisions that must be made.
|
Faculty of speakers |
Conference featured a
stellar line up 50+ leading investment thinkers from around the
world, presenting their high conviction thesis around the
Conference theme - The long and short of it (is long-term
investing increasingly irrelevant?).
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Ron Bird, Professor, University of
Technology Sydney & Course Director, CIMA Investment
Management Analyst Program (Sydney)
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Geraldine Buckingham, MBBS, MD &
Global Head of Corporate Strategy, BlackRock (New York)
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Mark Burgess, Chair, Jamieson
Coote Bonds Advisory Board / Channel Capital(Melbourne)
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Libby Cantrill,
CFA, Executive Vice President & Executive Officer - Public
Policy, PIMCO (New York)
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Charles Carroll, Deputy
Chairman & Head of Global Marketing, Lazard Asset Management
(New York)
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Tony Crescenzi,
Executive Vice President, Market Strategist & Portfolio
Manager, PIMCO (Newport Beach)
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Luis Freitas de Oliveira,
Portfolio Manager, Capital Group (Geneva)
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Lukasz de Pourbaix, CIMA,
Chief Investment Officer, Lonsec Investment Solutions
(Sydney)
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Alva Devoy, PhD, Investment
Director, Fidelity International (Sydney)
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Mick Dodson, AM, PhD, Director of
the National Centre for Indigenous Studies, Australian
National University & Professor of Law, ANU College of Law
(Acton)
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Hamish Douglass, CEO, CIO &
Lead Portfolio Manager, Magellan Financial Group (Sydney)
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Olivia Engel, CFA, MD & Head
of Active Quantitative Equity Asia-Pacific, State Street
Global Advisors (Sydney)
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Rob Failla, CFA, Client
Portfolio Manager, Lazard Asset Management (New York)
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Tim Farrelly, Principal,
farrelly's Investment Strategy (Sydney)
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Sean Fenton, Director & Portfolio Manager, Tribeca
Investment Partners / Grant Samuel Funds Management
(Sydney)
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Martin Flanagan, CFA, CPA, President &
CEO, Invesco (Atlanta)
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Michael Furey, CFP, Managing
Director, Delta Research & Advisory (Brisbane)
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Carol Geremia, Co-Head of
Global Distribution, MFS Asset Management (Boston)
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Jack Gray,
PhD, Adjunct Professor of Economics, University of Technology
Sydney (Sydney)
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Jeff Grow, Senior
Portfolio Manager & Executive Director, UBS Asset Management
(Sydney)
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Don Hamson, PhD, Managing
Director, Plato Investment Management / Pinnacle Investment Management
(Sydney)
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Stephen Hayes, Head of
Global Property Securities, Colonial First State Global
Asset Management (Sydney)
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Troy Hendrickson, PhD, Duke CE (Perth)
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Doug Hodge, CEO & Managing
Director, PIMCO (Newport Beach)
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Charles Jamieson,
Executive Director, Jamieson Coote Bonds / Channel Capital
(Melbourne)
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Philippe Jordan,
President, CFM / Winston Capital Partners (London)
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Chris Joye, Co-CIO,
Smarter Money Investments & Contributing Editor, Australian
Financial Review (Sydney)
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Michael Kitces, CFP, CLU, Partner & Director of Wealth
Management, Pinnacle Advisory (Washington DC)
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Hendrie Koster, Director of
Strategic Research Pacific, Mercer Investments
(Sydney)
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Andrew Kuper, PhD, Founder & CEO, LeapFrog
Investments (Sydney)
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Nick Langley, Founder,
Co-CEO & Co-CIO, RARE Infrastructure (Sydney)
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Dori Levanoni, Partner -
Investments, First Quadrant / Affiliated Managers Group (Los
Angeles)
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Sam Mann, MD & Head
of Investment Solutions APAC, Franklin Templeton Investments
& MD, K2 Advisors (Sydney)
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F. William McNabb III, Chairman
& CEO, Vanguard (Valley Forge)
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David Millar, Head of
Multi-Asset & Fund Manager, Invesco (Henley-on-Thames)
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Jan Sytze Mosselaar,
CFA, Senior Portfolio Manager Quantitative Equities, Robeco
(Amsterdam)
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Ron O'Hanley, President & CEO,
State Street Global Advisors (Boston)
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Marko Papic, Chief Geopolitical
Strategist, BCA Research (Montreal)
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Mitesh Patel, PhD, CFA, Vice
President & Researcher, Winton Capital Management / Macquarie Investment Management
(London)
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Ian Patrick, CFA, Chief
Investment Officer, Sunsuper (Sydney)
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Don Phillips, Director,
Morningstar (Chicago)
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Bill Priest, CFA, CEO, CO-CIO &
Portfolio Manager, Epoch Investment Partners (New York)
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Graham Rich, Managing
Partner & Dean, PortfolioConstruction Forum (Sydney)
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Jonathan Shead, Head of
Portfolio Strategists Asia Pacific, State Street Global
Advisors (Sydney)
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Daniel Silverman, PhD,
Rondthaler Professor of Economics, Arizona State University
& Head of Research, Capital Preferences (Arizona)
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Gerald Stack, Head of
Investments and Portfolio Manager (Infrastructure), Magellan
Asset Management (Sydney)Keith Suter, PhD,
Managing Director, Global Directions (Sydney)
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James Swanson, CFA, Chief
Investment Strategist, MFS Investment Management (Boston)
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Jason Teh, Senior
Portfolio Manager, Investors Mutual (Sydney)
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David Wanis, Senior
Analyst & Fund Manager - Multi-Asset, Schroders (Sydney)
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Geoff Warren, PhD, Research
Director, Centre for International Finance and Regulation
(Sydney)
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Stephen Weeple, Director
of Research - Equities & Global Equity Portfolio Manager,
Standard Life Investments (Boston)
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Andrew Windsor, The Wayside
Chapel (Sydney)
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David Wright, Managing
Partner, Zenith Investment Partners (Melbourne)
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Session Resources |
CRITICAL ISSUES FORUM 1 |
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The long and short of it
Investing is supposed to be about the incremental replacement of
human capital with financial capital over the long term - that's
the theory. But the reality is that today's environment and our
behavioural biases conspire against such a pure case. Fuelled by
the 24/7 news cycle and constant churn of social media, the
world operates on ever shorter cycles. Politicians promise what
will see them re-elected, instead of doing what's best for
multi-decade economic and social benefit. Companies focus on
looking their best for the next reporting season, often at the
expense of future growth. Public outrage flares, dissipates and
moves on to the next issue within hours with social media
fanning the flames. In short - short-termism seems rife! We see
the effect in the ever increasing emphasis on fees and reporting
of short-term returns for markets, securities, funds and
portfolios. Is the concept of long-term investing increasingly
irrelevant?
Graham Rich, Managing
Partner & Dean, PortfolioConstruction Forum (Sydney) |
Resources |
|
Engaging investors' long-term view is
our moral duty - part 1
The central moral question we have to address is: are we going
to appeal to investors’ short-term emotions, or take a
longer-term view and engage their reason? By encouraging
investors to control their emotions and by choosing the right
funds, we can help them meet their long-term needs.
Don Phillips, Director, Morningstar (Chicago) |
Insight |
|
Commitment brings the best out of
liquid alpha - part 1
It remains possible to generate alpha from liquid strategies but
investors must shift their focus away from short-term
performance, and towards longer-term measurements of success.
Commitment is one of the most powerful tools we can give people,
to help them grow their portfolios.
Carol Geremia, Co-Head of Global Distribution, MFS Asset
Management (Boston) |
Insight |
CRITICAL ISSUES FORUM 2 |
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Philosophy
Purpose-driven portfolios perform better
Two thousand years ago, Socrates said "It is rational to be
moral”. Yet today many assume a trade-off between investing for
financial returns and social impact. This assumption is false
and misleading. It underestimates the opportunities presented by
serving real human needs at vast scale, and how downside risks
are mitigated by 'backing the good guys'. There is a synergy
between profit and purpose.
Andrew
Kuper, PhD, Founder & CEO, LeapFrog Investments (Sydney) |
Resources |
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The past is passive, the future is
definitely active
Passive investment has flourished since the GFC but we are
entering a new environment where active management will thrive.
The opportunity for practitioners to add value has gone up
significantly, and clients need advice on asset allocation and
asset manager selection, now more than ever.
Charles Carroll, Deputy Chairman & Head of Global Marketing,
Lazard Asset Management (New York) |
Insight |
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Philosophy
We must change our legacy for the better
The financial system that we (banks, portfolio managers,
researchers, advisers...) bequeath is unstable, un-trusted and
built on inappropriate theory with mis-aligned incentives. Its
dysfunction damages society through excessive short-termism, mis-allocation
of resources, and abuse of power.
Jack Gray, PhD, Adjunct Professor of Economics, University
of Technology Sydney (Sydney) |
Resources |
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Short-termism obscures long-term vision
The long-term ambitions of investors and politicians are often
thwarted by short-term pressures. For individuals with long-term
investment goals, the solution may comprise a combination of
passive and high conviction alpha strategies, in areas such as
infrastructure, real estate and private credit.
Geraldine Buckingham, MBBS, MD & Global Head of Corporate
Strategy, BlackRock (New York) |
Insight |
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Engaging investors' long-term view is
our moral duty - part 2
The central moral question we have to address is: are we going
to appeal to investors’ short-term emotions, or take a
longer-term view and engage their reason? By encouraging
investors to control their emotions and by choosing the right
funds, we can help them meet their long-term needs.
Don Phillips, Director, Morningstar (Chicago) |
Insight |
CRITICAL ISSUES FORUM 3 |
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Client expectations are rising –
average is not an option
Only asset managers who are able to meet client requirements,
while navigating investment risk and responding to industry
challenges, will survive. Client solutions will require the use
of both smarter passive and high conviction active strategies,
allocated in a way to meet the needs of individuals.
Martin
Flanagan, CFA, CPA, President & CEO, Invesco (Atlanta) |
Insight |
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Markets
Global policy rates will stay low for the rest of the decade
Yellen and the market (EDZ8) agree – there is a New Neutral. The
result? Global policy rates will stay low for the rest of the
decade. Short-term gyrations, data dependencies, and our innate
need for immediacy create unwanted noise. Open the aperture to
the secular horizon and you will see only a handful of major
forces that could change this outlook.
Tony
Crescenzi, Executive Vice President, Market Strategist &
Portfolio Manager, PIMCO (Newport Beach)
Panel
Tony
Crescenzi, Executive Vice President, Market Strategist &
Portfolio Manager, PIMCO (Newport Beach)
Mark Burgess, Chair, Jamieson Coote Bonds Advisory Board /
Channel Capital (Melbourne)
Luis Freitas de Oliveira, Portfolio Manager, Capital Group
(Geneva)
James
Swanson, CFA, Chief Investment Strategist, MFS Investment
Management (Boston)
Stephen Weeple, Global Equity Portfolio Manager, Standard Life
Investments (Boston) |
Resources (Tony)
Resources (Panel) |
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Active managers require three
ingredients for success
Active fund groups with the right combination of culture,
technology and philosophy enable investors to protect and grow
their capital in a complex world. By focusing on companies which
generate free cash flow, fund managers can deliver positive
risk-adjusted returns over the long run.
Bill
Priest, CFA, CEO, CO-CIO & Portfolio Manager, Epoch Investment
Partners (New York) |
Insight |
DUE DILIGENCE FORUM 1 |
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Markets & Investing | Debt -
Specialty
Not all Australian income funds are fit for purpose
Driven by uncertain financial markets and changing demographics,
many investors have developed a preference for headline yields,
paying scant regard for what is under the hood. Declining
interest rates globally have made heroes of bond,
infrastructure, property and equity investors alike – but the
structural tailwinds favouring these asset classes are abating
and the return outlook is muted and far lower than recent
experiences and expectations. The structure of Australia’s
domestic bond market has evolved over time – for instance,
government debt issuance has grown enormously, along with
greater liquidity and continued overseas investor interest in
our market. However, many managers are hamstrung due to
sub-optimal product design and approaches to investment
management. As the Australian bond market grows and sub-sectors
emerge, investor must ask – is my defensive allocation
true-to-label?
Charles
Jamieson, Executive Director, Jamieson Coote Bonds / Channel
Capital (Melbourne) |
Resources
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Markets & Strategies | Equities - Global
Traditional asset allocation fails to capture long-term trends
Rapid technological innovation, near-instantaneous yet
affordable communication, and demographic shifts are reshaping
the world. These trends are long term in nature, influence
multiple markets and have the potential to continue to generate
powerful investment returns over the decades ahead. Already,
they have changed the business landscape and spawned a new breed
of companies – creative, nimble and networked. The traditional
country/regional approach to asset allocation is not optimal for
capturing these emerging new opportunities. Investors need to
think more globally and long term, and less regionally and
tactically.
Luis
Freitas de Oliveira, Portfolio Manager, Capital Group (Geneva) |
Resources
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Markets & Investing | Equities - Specialty
Long-term investing is a fool’s paradise
"Prediction is very difficult,
especially about the future." - Neils Bohr. Hindsight bias leads
most people to severely overestimate their ability to predict
the future. Finance principles tell investors to buy good
companies at attractive prices and they should perform over the
long term. The world is changing at an ever increasing pace,
though, and what worked last century won't necessarily stand
true this century. Adjusting to new information in a timely
fashion is essential to long-term investment success. Who will
do best in this 'new world' paradigm? Diversified strategies
with many different sources of alpha or those taking a broader
range of investment decisions will be able to deliver more
consistent returns.
Sean
Fenton, Director & Portfolio Manager, Tribeca Investment
Partners / Grant Samuel Funds Management (Sydney) |
Resources
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Markets & Investing | Equities - Specialty
Demographics does not mean dull
Layering the investment decision – incorporating long-term with
short term considerations by anchoring the investment decision
in companies where earnings are driven by slowly emerging
demographic trends, then incorporating participation in high
growth, disruptive emerging industries – facilitates investor
access to long-term structural growth. Demographic trends are
long-term in nature, slowly emerging over time and as such are
highly predictable. Equity markets on the other hand, are
myopic, driven by companies focused on quarterly earnings and
sell side analysts focused on one to two years earnings
forecasts, at most. This represents an inefficiency available to
the active equity manager to exploit, by focusing resources on
forecasting outer year earnings. Demographic trends give a solid
basis from which to forecast beyond the usual two-year time
horizon. But demographics does not mean dull. Instead, it means
a safer anchor from which to participate in newer disruptive
industries, thus reducing investor risk in highly volatile
markets. Demographic layering of equity investment decisions can
be a powerful structural growth tool as well as a strong risk
mitigator.
Alva Devoy,
PhD, Investment Director, Fidelity International (Sydney) |
Resources
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Markets & Strategies | Multi-asset
Headlines battle facts, but fundamentals will prevail
As an investor, allowing yourself to be distracted by quick
interpretation of market dynamics will lead to poor allocation
decisions. Instead, we need to separate good information from
distracting/immaterial information. The misunderstood business
cycle is a perfect example. News flow has been focused on
immaterial factors such as no/slow growth, higher/unjustifiable
valuations and geopolitical risk. But long-term drivers persist
– corporate profitability drives stock prices. Look to the facts
that underlie superficial observations to see the true
sustainability of returns within asset classes to make optimal
allocation decisions. Ultimately, fundamentals will win out for
long-term investors.
James
Swanson, CFA, Chief Investment Strategist, MFS Investment Management
(Boston) |
Resources
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DUE DILIGENCE FORUM 2 |
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Investing | Equities - Global
Smart-beta managers can't replicate idiosyncratic stock
selection
The active versus passive debate is being displaced by ‘active
versus smart beta’ as investors increasingly diverge into these
two groups. This trend is driving greater scrutiny of the
drivers of active managers’ returns and if the drivers are
sustainable over the longer term or if smart beta strategies
perform just as well. Active managers need to demonstrate that
their investment philosophy is designed to exploit
inefficiencies that are sustainable over time, and are not
overly-reliant on factors that can be replicated by a smart-beta
approach.
Stephen
Weeple, Director of Research - Equities & Global Equity
Portfolio Manager, Standard Life Investments (Boston) |
Resources
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Strategies & Investing | Equities - Specialty
Prudently managed, equities are an excellent income generator
Catering to the rising demographic of baby boomers in retirement
is proving ever more cumbersome, given traditional income
producing strategies are no longer viable with interest rates at
record lows the world over. Maintaining a solid level of income
for the retiree must remain at the forefront of our thinking and
a move up the risk spectrum into equities provides a solution.
When managed prudently and focusing on income and capital
stability, increasing equity exposure for the retiree does not
have to be a daunting move. Breaking down the index shows that
income and not capital has been doing the heavy lifting over the
longer term. Companies that have through-the-cycle recurring
earnings have proven over the long term to have both a stable
and growing capital base – and have been excellent income
generators.
Jason
Teh, Senior Portfolio Manager, Investors Mutual (Sydney) |
Resources
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Strategies & Investing | Equities - Specialty
Investor time horizons impact infrastructure returns
The genesis of listed infrastructure was to allow investors to
access large direct infrastructure assets via a portfolio of
listed securities providing liquidity for both investor
requirements and portfolio management flexibility. Over an
investment cycle, asset level returns between infrastructure
businesses with common regulatory or contractual frameworks
should be similar, and listed and unlisted infrastructure
investment are complimentary ways to access the same underlying
cash flows. Varying investor time horizons, however, lead to
different valuation techniques, differing views of risk and,
ultimately, the hurdle rates used for investment which all
impact the investment returns both targeted and achieved.
Understanding these differences is crucial to matching
investment outcomes to client portfolio objectives.
Nick
Langley, Founder, Co-CEO & Co-CIO, RARE Infrastructure (Sydney) |
Resources
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Markets & Investing | Alternatives
Data has and will continue to revolutionise financial markets
There has been a revolution in the growth of data – and,
subsequently, attempts to use data to understand and predict the
future. Finding patterns in data that predict futures prices in
markets is now a reliable and tested approach to superior
investment returns. The approach relies on an empirical,
skeptical, scientific mindset - what does the data tells us is
true - rather than a theoretical approach that believes in a set
of economic axioms (the efficient market hypothesis being
perhaps the most relevant and dangerous) – to identify signals
to enable portfolios to make money in falling or rising markets.
Mitesh
Patel, PhD, CFA, Vice President & Researcher, Winton Capital Management
/ Macquarie Investment Management
(London) |
Resources
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Strategies | Multi-Asset
SMSF portfolios need an asset allocation rethink
SMSFs have a clear bias towards Australian equities
(often direct and concentrated), property, and cash which can
lead to poor investment outcomes. Increased diversification is a
worthwhile goal for SMSF funds but this doesn’t necessarily mean
locking into the longer term strategic asset allocation model
favoured by so many other investors. In constructing a
diversified portfolio, SMSF investors should adopt an asset
allocation approach that considers both prevailing asset
valuations and their own investment return and risk objectives.
Current portfolios are inefficient - creating an opportunity for
investors to either increase returns for the current level of
risk or reduce risk to achieve existing returns over the shorter
term.
David
Wanis, Senior Analyst & Fund Manager - Multi-Asset, Schroders
(Sydney) |
Resources
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CRITICAL ISSUES FORUM 4 |
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Embracing low cost is an important
principle
Cost structure will continue to evolve rapidly, as more firms
and individuals realise that cost is the one component than
investors can control, to improve their outcomes. Fee
compression will challenge certain business models, requiring
asset managers to demonstrate their value to clients.
F.
William McNabb III, Chairman & CEO, Vanguard (Valley Forge) |
Insight |
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Markets & Strategies
High returns with low risk is possible in a low/negative yield
world
Is it now impossible to produce high fixed-income returns with
low risk in the near-zero/negative cash rate world that prevails
in the short- and possibly long-run without loading up on
interest rate duration, credit or liquidity risk? Are cash/bonds
dead as a result? No. It is possible to generate high returns
with low risk irrespective of where short-term cash rates or
long-term government bond yields may be. Distortions induced by
unprecedented government interventions in asset pricing are
creating tremendous opportunities for true “alpha” generation
through active valuation models that find mispriced fixed-income
securities that can bequeath substantial future capital gains.
Chris
Joye, Co-CIO, Smarter Money Investments & Contributing Editor,
Australian Financial Review (Sydney) |
Resources
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Markets & Strategies
It is time to go long Australian banks
Australian banks face a number of headwinds:
- Low growth in their lending books after many years of stellar
growth;
- Dividends are under pressure and may not be sustainable;
- APRA will force them to raise more capital, diluting earnings;
- Provisions for credit losses on their commercial lending book
will rise; and,
- The residential property boom could burst increasing credit
losses on the banks home loan book.
These headwinds are real, but could better be described as
zephyrs. The market knows all of this and has overreacted. Buy
the banks.
Tim
Farrelly, Principal, farrelly's Investment Strategy (Sydney) |
Resources |
CRITICAL ISSUES FORUM 5 |
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Asset managers must adapt to serve
their clients
Capital preservation and income are becoming more important, as
cheap money inflates asset prices and growing numbers of baby
boomers shift into retirement. Client needs are changing. And
these changes will challenge asset managers, especially as the
industry goes through consolidation.
Doug
Hodge, CEO & Managing Director, PIMCO (Newport Beach) |
Insight |
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Markets & Strategies
This time is not different, we’re just predisposed to think so
We live in uncertain times. Markets are volatile and events are
unprecedented – or at least that’s what we’re told and have been
conditioned to believe. The truth is a bit different. It’s true
that we live in uncertain times and markets are volatile, but
they always have been and they always will be. Investors should
build their portfolios based on facts and without bias, not on
conventional wisdom derived through sentiment, so as to navigate
financial markets over the long-term based on knowledge of data,
not conjecture.
Philippe Jordan, President, CFM / Winston Capital Partners (London) |
Resources |
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Finology
Lead for impact and with pride
We live in a time where leadership is often over-glorified.
Politicians and high profile leaders with impressive titles get
all of the attention in most media outlets, so it is easy to
assume that leadership (or a lack thereof) only occurs in upper
level, high status positions. The long and short of this premise
needs to be scrutinised to question where the major impact
really takes place, and how influential leadership moments are
actually achieved, who achieves them, and the manner in which
they are achieved. We must recalibrate our thinking.
Troy
Hendrickson, PhD, Duke CE (Perth) |
Resources |
CRITICAL ISSUES FORUM 6 |
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Self-determination is the first step to
achieving redress
Improving the relationship between governments and indigenous
peoples in Australia is fraught with difficulty, and
historically we have been unable to overcome entrenched
problems. Greater self-determination and social justice for
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, combined with
meaningful constitutional reform, offer a path to progress.
Mick
Dodson, AM, PhD, Director of the National Centre for Indigenous
Studies, Australian National University & Professor of Law, ANU
College of Law (Acton) |
Insight |
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Markets & Strategies
Unfavourable candidates can be favourable for the US economy
There has never been a more divisive US election season than the
one we are witnessing right now. While the rhetoric and opinion
polls are captivating on a weekly basis, the long game is what
matters. The hysterical cries to build walls and curtail
immigration will not materialise under a Trump White House and
when it comes to the economy., there are too many known
unknowns. For Hillary Clinton, the market is underestimating
what her White House would represent. Hers would not simply be a
third term of the Obama Administration, but one that would see
compromise on issues that would be supportive to economic growth
and animal spirits.
Libby Cantrill, CFA, Executive Vice President & Executive Officer -
Public Policy, PIMCO (New York) |
Resources
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Markets & Strategies
Geopolitical risk? Ignore terrorism, focus on East Asia
The media is focused on the terrifying prospects of more
terrorist attacks, as well as the ongoing conflicts in the
Middle East. Fueled by social media and society's focus on the
short-term, the Islamic State continues to grip investors,
despite losing 20% of its territory in Iraq and Syria.
Meanwhile, geopolitical tensions between China, the US, and
countries of South East Asia are growing. Most investors dismiss
the region as a risk, since "much money is to be lost" if
policymakers engaged in aggression. But we are today at a
precipice of a left-tail risk event due to increasingly
aggressive posture of all the countries involved.
Marko
Papic, Chief Geopolitical Strategist, BCA Research (Montreal) |
Resources
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|
Panel
Libby Cantrill, CFA, Executive Vice President & Executive Officer -
Public Policy, PIMCO (New York)
Marko
Papic, Chief Geopolitical Strategist, BCA Research (Montreal)
Keith
Suter, PhD, Managing Director, Global Directions (Sydney)
David Millar, Head Multi-Asset & Fund
Manager, Invesco (Henley-on-Thames) |
Resources |
CRITICAL ISSUES FORUM 7 |
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Patience is the hallmark of long-term
investment
Long-term investment demands a patient mindset but it cannot be
defined by holding period alone. Rather than adopting a
set-and-forget approach, long-term investors should be engaged
asset owners and take a broader perspective on risk, in order to
achieve sustainable investment returns.
Hendrie
Koster, Director of Strategic Research Pacific, Mercer
Investments (Sydney) |
Insight
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|
Strategies
Long-term investing pays... if you can handle the pressure
The benefits of long-term investing extend beyond just being
able to invest in illiquid assets. Patience can pay its own
dividend. Short-sighted markets occasionally throw up great
opportunities for those able to stay the course. The challenge
is holding at bay the relentless pressures to respond and
deliver over the short term. Doing this requires: an investment
approach that cuts through the short-term noise; strategies for
dealing with the fact that the long-term is distant and
uncertain; and, managing agency issues, in particular having
devices that shift the focus of evaluation away from short-term
performance.
Geoff
Warren, PhD, Research Director, Centre for International Finance and
Regulation (Sydney) |
Resources
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Strategies
Manager benchmarking is a pox on both investors and markets
It seems sensible to make investment managers accountable by
requiring them to perform relative to a benchmark. But this kind
of motivation has a perverse effect, contributing to
short-termism, market mispricing, risk-return inversion and
booms and busts. Further, benchmarking is to the detriment of
investment returns as it undermines the performance of those
managers that do have skill. The ultimate in benchmark
constrained portfolios are index funds which similarly fail both
investors and markets. There is very little that appears
sensible in investment markets that work for the investor.
Ron
Bird, Professor, University of Technology Sydney
& Course Director CIMA Investment Management Analyst Program (Sydney) |
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Strategies
Capital allocation is a (mostly) long-term game
Longer-term assessments of risk and potential returns will
always underpin the construction of multi-asset or diversified
portfolios, particularly where assets are less liquid, and will
inevitably be held for the long-term. However, context matters:
valuations matter, risk and opportunities posed by current and
prospective macroeconomic environments matter, fees matter, as
does the need to deliver competitive performance over time
periods that end investors identify with. In reality,
constructing multi-asset portfolios has to balance all these
concerns in pursuit of the longer run real returns investors
need.
Ian
Patrick, CFA, Chief Investment Officer, Sunsuper (Sydney) |
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DUE DILIGENCE FORUM 3 |
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Markets & Strategies | Equities - Global
Use centuries of investment wisdom in portfolios today
With all the wisdom of four centuries of investing, not much has
changed in financial markets. Boom and bust cycles still exist
and speculation is higher than ever. It seems animal spirits are
still hard to tame, just as they were in 1720. Our human nature
will not change quickly. What is constant over time is the cycle
in the investment culture, driven by human behavior. Agency
problems are being not solved and regulators have not created
incentives for fund managers to decrease risk.
Jan
Sytze Mosselaar, CFA, Senior Portfolio Manager Quantitative Equities, Robeco (Amsterdam) |
Resources
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Investing | Equities - Specialty
Tracking error causes short termism
What is tracking error? How is it measured? What are the
goal-posts that active managers aim for? Tracking error
constraints on active management focus on short-term outcomes
and don’t align with most investor goals, which are longer term.
So how else can portfolios be designed? The long and short of it
is that a benchmark unaware approach gives the portfolio the
opportunity to invest or indeed NOT invest across the entire
benchmark universe. But investors don’t want to be exposed to
just a few companies, they need diversity to manage risk in an
increasingly uncertain environment.
Olivia
Engel, CFA, MD & Head of Active Quantitative Equity Asia-Pacific,
State Street Global Advisors (Sydney) |
Resources
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Markets & Investing | Equities - Specialty
Infrastructure provides reliable earnings irrespective of crises
The infrastructure asset class, when defined in a disciplined
manner, generates reliable earnings from the provision of
essential services to communities. Earnings are reliable because
demand for infrastructure services is underpinned by long-term
structural forces and this demand is highly price inelastic. The
key risks to the earnings derived by infrastructure assets are
either changes to the structural forces that underpin demand or
changes to the pricing. While pricing could be affected by
changes to regulation, demand could arguably be affected by
terrorism, epidemics and technology disruption. History suggests
that these risks are immaterial and, for the foreseeable future,
earnings of infrastructure assets will continue to be reliable.
Hence, provided investors define infrastructure in a disciplined
manner, investment in infrastructure will continue to deliver
investors reliable earnings over time.
Gerald
Stack, Head of Investments and Portfolio Manager
(Infrastructure), Magellan Asset Management (Sydney) |
Resources
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Investing | Alternatives
It's time to turn to liquid alternatives
Liquid alternatives have the potential to provide significant
short- and long-term benefits for investors, helping reduce
anxiety-inducing volatility and providing a return stream that
exhibits low correlations to traditional asset classes. Such
characteristics may be useful adjuncts to a typical stock and
bond portfolio with the added benefit of liquidity. Critics have
charged that liquid alternative funds have weaker returns due to
their inability to invest in illiquid holdings, may not provide
exposure to quality hedge fund managers, and exhibit lower
performance potential due to restrictions on leverage. However
it is important to not let common misconceptions about liquid
alternatives undermine their potential benefits.
Sam
Mann, MD & Head of Investment Solutions APAC, Franklin Templeton
Investments & MD, K2 Advisors (Sydney) |
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Markets & Strategies | Multi-asset
Mind the Gap: 2-3 years is the most fertile hunting ground
Framing the appropriate investment horizon, with a comprehensive
view of economic and market dynamics, is critical to generating
returns and managing risks within a multi-asset portfolio. In
this context, good investment ideas are revealed by adhering to
a two- to three-year timeframe that dissects the conflict
between short-term “cyclical” drivers and long-term “structural”
trends. Furthermore, with most market participants distracted by
short-term noise or focussed on mean reversion of long-term
valuations, the gap in the middle is an under-researched and
fertile hunting ground.
David Millar, Head Multi-Asset & Fund
Manager, Invesco (Henley-on-Thames) |
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DUE DILIGENCE FORUM 4 |
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Markets & Investing | Global - Debt
Spurn the supernova and fight the fear of fixed income
Fixed income has delivered positive absolute returns to
investors for the past 25 years. With global yields at record
lows, bond market Cassandras proclaim the formation of a
supernova, warning of the investment perils. Such proclamations
focus exclusively upon duration, and neglect the other sources
of total return that are available within fixed income markets.
Deeper analysis into each driver of total return reveals a far
less ominous outlook, and one where positive outcomes are still
more likely than negative ones. It's time to spurn the supernova
talk, and stick with the core, defensive anchor provided by
global fixed income.
Jeff
Grow, Senior Portfolio Manager & Executive Director, UBS Asset
Management (Sydney) |
Resources
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Markets & Investing | Property
Over inflated long duration assets will lose you money
Real assets including real estate have overinflated
valuations due to extraordinary low interest rates and a myriad
of potential global exogenous risks. Current global real estate
valuation are a cause of serious concern in the context of risk
and returns with a focus on current fundamentals and an
uncertain future. The frame work that is necessary to manage the
trade-off between shorter term returns and longer term risks
needs to be understood if investors are going to preserve and
grow their capital.
Stephen
Hayes, Head of Global Property Securities, Colonial First State
Global Asset Management (Sydney) |
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Markets & Investing | Equities - Global
Global Equity Income - it's timing not time in that counts
We live in an uncharted world with cash and bond yields
at or near historic lows and 40% of the world developed
government bonds trading with negative yields. The returns and
income expectations on long term buy and hold strategies have
never been lower. Generating meaningful income and return in
this environment calls for innovative thinking and an active
mindset. While not traditionally known for income, there are
literally thousands of dividend income opportunities amongst
global companies offering short-term income and return
generating opportunities which can provide income levels similar
to Australian shares.
Don
Hamson, PhD, Managing Director, Plato Investment Management /
Pinnacle Investment Management (Sydney) |
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Markets, Strategies & Investing | Equities - Specialty
You don't own enough global small caps
In periods of heightened uncertainty, investors often prioritise
avoiding short-term risks at the expense of long-term returns.
Yet a satellite allocation to global small caps can increase
portfolio efficiency over the long term as lower correlations
can reduce overall risk and the small cap premium contributes to
excess returns. Investors can harness the long-run benefits of
active satellites like global small caps to drive better
portfolio outcomes despite volatile markets.
Rob
Failla, CFA, Client Portfolio Manager, Lazard Asset Management (New
York) |
Resources
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Strategies | Alternatives
All portfolios must have an active currency policy
Going global is a fundamental step to improve portfolio outcomes
through diversification. The long-term benefits of creating a
well-diversified portfolio are well documented, however
investing offshore requires currency exposure. Currency impacts
can wash out over time, but its tidal forces are strong and
independent of a client's retirement time frame. In a low return
environment, these currency forces need to be understood,
managed and captured. Currency is both a risk and an investment
opportunity: A portfolio’s long-term currency settings are
continuously being challenged by short-term market forces.
Dori
Levanoni, Partner - Investments, First Quadrant / Affiliated
Managers Group (Los Angeles) |
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CRITICAL ISSUES FORUM 8 |
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Commitment brings the best out of
liquid alpha - part 2
It remains possible to generate alpha from liquid strategies but
investors must shift their focus away from short-term
performance, and towards longer-term measurements of success.
Commitment is one of the most powerful tools we can give people,
to help them grow their portfolios.
Carol Geremia, Co-Head of Global Distribution, MFS Asset
Management (Boston) |
Insight |
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Finology
Impatience is very real but it can be managed
People vary tremendously in their degree of impatience, and for
many it is a real struggle to take the long view. For them, it
is a great challenge to stick to a budget, accumulate savings,
and resist the urge to sell in a downturn. Practitioners must
identify, early, their truly impatient clients and help those
clients manage impatience. Recently, researchers have developed
new methods for determining who is impatient and managing the
tendency to seize immediate gratification at the cost of
long-term goals. This frontier research shows us how to identify
and manage financial impatience.
Daniel
Silverman, PhD, Rondthaler Professor of Economics, Arizona State
University & Head of Research, Capital Preferences
(Arizona) |
Resources |
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Finology
It's a whole new world out there and it's time to change
The last decade has brought dramatic change, leading to a quiet
revolution in financial services. On the one hand, a perfect
storm of low yields, low expected returns, and increasing
longevity have placed enormous pressure on investors. On the
other, the tools available to investors have multiplied to
include ETFs, Smart Beta and Robo-advice. Investment managers
need to change, offering outcome-focused solutions or genuine
alpha. Practitioners need to change, moving away from a focus on
simple performance towards holistic client management. The
industry needs to change, rebuilding trust with better diversity
and transparency.
Ron
O'Hanley, President & CEO, State Street Global Advisors (Boston)
Jonathan
Shead, Head of Portfolio Strategists Asia Pacific, State Street
Global Advisors (Sydney) |
Insight
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CRITICAL ISSUES FORUM 9 |
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Flexibility is key to goals-based
strategies
Individuals underestimate the degree to which their lives will
change over the long-term, so how can practitioners build
portfolios which are likely to meet their clients’ future needs?
A barbell approach may be prudent, combining both low-risk
investments and higher-risk, longer-term allocations.
Michael
Kitces, CFP, CLU, Partner & Director of Wealth Management,
Pinnacle Advisory (Washington DC) |
Insight |
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Philosophy
Let your philosophy be your rudder
Making investment decisions based on short-term market issues is
akin to a casino - the outcomes are usually binary and almost
impossible to predict. Be firm in your convictions, have a clear
investment philosophy as this will be your rock in times when
short-term noise plays havoc with your portfolios. All portfolio
decisions should tie back to your investment philosophy.
Lukasz
de Pourbaix, CIMA, Chief Investment Officer, Lonsec Investment
Solutions (Sydney) |
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Investing
Look for the signal amongst the noise
When analysing investments, we too often only look at pure
performance over too short a timeframe. For better
investment analysis we should seek to understand investment
performance behaviour. To do that properly means we must
lengthen the timeframe, adjust for risks, before we can begin to
know whether value has truly been added.
Michael
Furey, CFP, Managing Director, Delta Research & Advisory (Brisbane) |
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Finology
Hold your nerve to avoid the herd
Most investors don’t experience the same returns of the
portfolio or fund they are invested in - and it's little wonder.
If you start with a map to arrive at a specific destination but
then change direction mid-journey, you end up in a different
place. That's what most investors do. Investment discipline is
the key - not emotion, not market noise - to ensuring you arrive
at your planned investment destination.
David
Wright, Managing Partner, Zenith Investment Partners (Melbourne) |
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This is not the time to stop thinking
While parts of the asset management industry appear to be
dumbing down, we must continue to educate individuals on the
differences between investment and speculation. It’s our duty to
encourage investors to focus on the long-term direction of
businesses and economies, rather than where share prices are
going in the next 6-12 months, and they will be considerably
better off in the long run.
Hamish
Douglass, CEO, CIO & Lead Portfolio Manager, Magellan Financial
Group (Sydney) |
Insight |
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Andrew's story – The Wayside Chapel
Andrew, a baker at Sydney’s Wayside Café, has risen from rags to
riches. Andrew’s story epitomises how disadvantaged people may,
can and do re-engage with society and contribute positively,
when given a hand up by the rest of us.
Andrew Windsor, The Wayside Chapel |
Insight |
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Philosophy
There is a long-term impact to short-term thinking
Short-term thinking in finance is nothing new. However, improved
technology and new political factors have transformed an old
impulse into new opportunities. But where will it end? Paradigms
don’t necessarily suddenly burst upon the world. A new paradigm
may emerge slowly and without much publicity (much as economic
rationalism itself emerged as a political idea in the 1970s, ).
Listen for weak signals - ideas may emerge in some
unconventional ways.
Keith
Suter, PhD, Managing Director, Global Directions (Sydney) |
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