P&I: Asset Owner CIOs See Uncertainty in 2025

By: Russ Kamp, Managing Director, Ryan ALM, Inc.

P&I is out with a story today about asset owner CIOs “forecasting” uncertainty for 2025. The capital markets are always uncertain. It only takes a “surprise” to disrupt even the most obvious trend. Given a new regime in Washington, stubborn inflation, geopolitical risks throughout the globe, and equity valuations that are stretched (that’s putting it mildly), CIOs have reason to be uncertain, especially over a short timeframe, such as a calendar year or two.

The lack of certainty can be destabilizing to individuals and investment strategies. I covered the psychology of uncertainty in a post earlier this year. Here were a few highlights:

  • When facing ongoing uncertainty, our bodies stay at a high level of physiological arousal, exerting considerable wear and tear.
  • Uncertainty exerts a strong pull on our thoughts and inhibits our ability to act, leaving us in a suspended waiting game.
  • We can manage uncertainty by figuring out what we can control, distracting ourselves from negative thoughts, and reaching out to others.

The last point is particularly important. We can manage “uncertainty” by figuring out what we can control. As a plan sponsor, we can utilize an investment strategy (cash flow matching or CFM) that creates certainty for the portion of the portfolio that uses CFM. In the following post, I question the significant use of equity and equity-like product in public pension systems that are accompanied by tremendous annual volatility. Again, this produces great uncertainty.

Adopting the use of greater fixed income exposure also doesn’t ensure less uncertainty, as changes in US interest rates can play havoc on fixed income strategies. ONLY with a CFM strategy do you bring certainty of cash flows (absent any defaults) to the management of pension plans. Traditional fixed income strategies benefited from a nearly 4-decade move down in rates, but there is currently great uncertainty as to the future direction of inflation and as a result, rates. With CFM one knows what the performance will look like a decade from now. With a fixed income strategy focused on a generic index, such as the BB Aggregate, one has no idea how that portfolio will perform 10 or more years from now.

Lastly, there is no reason to live with the uncertainty that many CIOs currently foresee. I wrote a piece just recently on achieving “peace of mind“. Uncertainty won’t help you in your quest for a good night’s sleep, but achieving peace of mind is very much achievable once you adopt a CFM strategy and secure the promised benefits (or grants) for some period of time. Call us. We want to remove as much uncertainty from your professional life as possible.

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