Conversations with Institutional Investors
Conversations with Institutional Investors

Conversations with Institutional Investors

Investment Innovation Institute [i3]

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Episodes

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Conversations with Institutional Investors is your gateway to in-depth discussions with the masterminds behind leading global investment firms, including key figures from pension funds, insurance companies, and sovereign wealth funds. Our podcast explores the evolving landscape of asset allocation, portfolio construction, and investment strategy, offering you firsthand insights from industry experts to inspire smarter, more innovative investment approaches. For further insights go to i3-invest.com. You can also subscribe to our complimentary newsletter at: i3-invest.com/subscribe/

Recent Episodes

114: Bellmont Securities' Michael Block – The Michael Block Roadmap to Investing
JUN 30, 2025
114: Bellmont Securities' Michael Block – The Michael Block Roadmap to Investing
Michael Block is Chief Investment Officer of Bellmont Securities and Adjunct Industry Professor at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS), where he helped establish the UTS Anchor Fund. The UTS Anchor Fund is a live investment portfolio managed by students to give them hands on experience with managing portfolios. In this episode, we take a look at Michael's extensive career in investing, spanning roles with Future Plus, Nambawan Super, Australian Catholic Superannuation & Retirement Fund and now Bellmont Securities, and discuss the lessons learned during this time and how you can condense this experience in a course for students. We talk investment theory & philosophy, impact of regulations, meeting your investment heroes and the Michael Block Roadmap to investing. Enjoy the Show! Overview of podcast with Michael Block 02:00 I'm just a nerd with a PC, interested in investments 05:30 I once was an analyst working for the government looking at money laundering, where I saw the bust of a bikie gang and they confiscated a live alligator 08:00 The greatest accolade I can have is that the people I've [mentored] are now achieving in the outside world 09:00 Getting involved with the UTS Anchor fund 11:00 The UTS Anchor fund helps students 'from go to woah!' 13:00 The Graveyard of Good Ideas – There are many good ideas that super funds can't do 16:00 A super fund of the future will look massive and passive 17:00 Changes in the wealth space can be glacially slow 20:00 There will never be another super fund that fails the [YFYS] performance test again, because they will never take enough risk for that to occur 26:00 The Michael Block roadmap: 1 Set an age appropriate SAA 27:00 Funds that don't believe in lifecycle just want to put everybody into a balanced fund. That is lazy 28:30 The Michael Block roadmap: 2 Only move away from the SAA under extreme circumstances 30:00 The Michael Block roadmap: 3 Decide when to be active and when to be passive 35:00 Your time horizon is what matters; LTCM became insolvent but was ultimately proven right 40:00 Super funds are faced with an activity bias 42:00 I rather be vaguely right, then precisely wrong 44:00 I'm a purist so I believe there are only two asset classes: equities and bonds 48:00 Mean/variance optimisation is like driving in a car looking only in the rearview mirror 55:00 On Jeremy Grantham and other heroes __________ Follow the Investment Innovation Institute [i3] on Linkedin Subscribe to our Newsletter Explore our library of insights from leading institutional investors at [i3] Insights The [i3] podcast is available on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube Music, or your favourite podcast platform.
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59 MIN
113: FCLT's Eduard van Gelderen – Long Term Investing, Concentrated Portfolios and Decarbonisation
JUN 4, 2025
113: FCLT's Eduard van Gelderen – Long Term Investing, Concentrated Portfolios and Decarbonisation
Eduard van Gelderen is Head of Research for Focusing Capital on the Long Term (FCLT), an organisation that was established in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis, or Great Recession as it is known in the US, to move away from a so-called "quarterly capitalism", which arguably contributed to the crisis, and towards a true long-term mind-set. Van Gelderen joined FCLT in 2024, after spending over six years as the Chief Investment Officer of pension fund PSP in Montreal, Canada. He is also well-known for his role as CEO of APG Asset Management, the investment arm of pension behemoth APG, in the Netherlands. In episode 113 of "Conversations with Institutional Investors", Van Gelderen discusses whether private equity can be a model for long term investing, dealing with concentration in portfolios, decarbonisation and the rise of A.I. Enjoy the Show! Overview of podcast with Eduard van Gelderen, FCLT 03:00 In 2026, FCLT celebrates its 10 year anniversary 04:00 When I was CEO of APG AM, we became one of the first members of FCLT 05:00 Three things are important to me: innovation, strategic thinking and having an impact 07:00 Dominic Barton of McKenzie and Keith Ambachtsheer and long term investing 08:00 If corporates are too short-term focused, then they will not invest enough in truly value generating projects 11:30 I do like the private equity model, but they still look to exit in about five years. Is that really long-term investing? 13:00 One of the nice things to see when I moved to Canada is the difference in board composition 17:00 Is passive investing leading to fragmented ownership and therefore less stakeholder engagement? 18:00 If you really understand the business models of the companies you invest in, then you can be much more concentrated and still be diversified 20:00 Diversification is possible, not with a small number [of assets], but definitely with a more limited number of names than the index 23:30 Sectors that are carbon intensive will need to do something or they will be punished, weather it is by governments, or regulators. For investors this means there is a financial reality here 24:00 But at this point the carbon price is too low for investors to make a decision 25:00 If I diversify over different sectors, then I need to use the less intensive sectors to hedge what I do in the carbon intensive sectors. That is a portfolio construction question 26:00 Stranded business models: It has happened before. The ones that reacted to all the opportunities that the internet offered became the winners, but there were certainly companies that completely missed the boat. I'm convinced that we are going through the same cycle again. 29:00 I don't think A.I. is just a toy; I think it is going to disrupt a lot of things that we take for granted 31:30 How will A.I. impact the business model of an investment manager? There will be operational efficiencies, but where managers are not yet very advanced is about 'How can we do advanced analytics?' And it is not just about alpha generation, it is also about portfolio construction, risk management and trading 35:30 I do think we need to rethink diversification in the current uncertain environment 39:00 Upcoming research projects: future fit boards and proxy voting 43:00 I truly believe that public and private markets will merge at some point; it is really a data issue Follow the Investment Innovation Institute [i3] on Linkedin Subscribe to our Newsletter Explore our library of insights from leading institutional investors at [i3] Insights
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44 MIN
112: Fulcrum's Suhail Shaikh – Absolute Return Investing, Market Timing and The Role of Luck
APR 29, 2025
112: Fulcrum's Suhail Shaikh – Absolute Return Investing, Market Timing and The Role of Luck
Suhail Shaikh is Chief Investment Officer of Fulcrum Asset Management and is the portfolio manager of Fulcrum's Discretionary Macro and Diversified Absolute Return strategies. In today's incredibly volatile environment of tariff wars and deglobalisation, investors tend to be more sensitive about the level of their absolute returns, than their performance against the benchmark. In this episode, we delve into the philosophy of absolute return investing, we talk about the role of skill versus luck, the use of Nowcasting, learnings from the COVID-19 pandemic and the ever controversial topic of market timing. Enjoy the show! 02:00 Started off working on the intranet and taught myself HTML 02:30 Internship at Goldman Sachs 03:30 A lot of well-known global macro traders made their money during equity market crashes 05:00 If you are constantly looking for the next accident, then 90 per cent of the time you are wrong. It is important to make money while the sun is still shining 10:00 Crisis risk offset and momentum during COVID 13:30 Leaving the model aside 15:00 Using Nowcasting for analysis 18:30 AI has been more useful to us in portfolio construction, risk management, scenario analysis and stress testing. I'm more sceptical about AI being helpful in alpha generation. 22:30 Behavioural finance and Fulcrum paper: 'Don't Bet the Ranch' 23:30 To determine whether someone is skilled or lucky, look at the number of views they take over time 31:30 Sizing [trades] is a complex topic 33:00 The role of dynamic asset allocation 34:00 "The biggest accidents in asset management happen when, in a draw-down, people don't know whether they are benchmarked or absolute return" 35:00 "Dynamic asset allocation is market timing" 40:00 Global Macro and the Magnificent Seven 42:00 Bitcoin and momentum strategies 44:30 Some clients explicitly prohibit us from investing in Bitcoin The paper "Don't Bet The Ranch: Hit ratios, asymmetry and breadth" can be found at: https://fulcrumasset.com/insights/investment-insights/dont-bet-the-ranch-hit-ratios-asymmetry-and-breadth/ Follow the Investment Innovation Institute [i3] on Linkedin Subscribe to our Newsletter Explore our library of insights from leading institutional investors at [i3] Insights
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46 MIN