
1997 Conference on Globalization
April 24, 1997, Olympia, London, England
Globalization: An Institutional Investor's Perspective
Presented by: Ronald Alvarado
Board of Administration
California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS)
Good afternoon. It is a pleasure to be with you this afternoon to share
with you one institutional investor's perspective on globalization.
I would like to thank those involved in coordinating this first international
forum on globalization for including CalPERS and inviting me to speak here
today. It's important to gather like this to share ideas and generate dialogue,
such as I hope we will engage in this afternoon.
I would like to take this time to address the rapid globalization of
the capital markets, and in particular, I want to provide one institutional
investor's perspective on the creation of a global marketplace -- a single,
physical, 24-hour international trading market.
But first, let me give you a brief overview of the California Public
Employees' Retirement System -- CalPERS.
CalPERS is America's largest public pension fund, and we're the third
largest in the world. Our mission is to provide for the financial and health
security of over one million public employees and their families by providing
for their retirement and health benefits.
One third of our members are state employees and their families. Another
third come from the ranks of classified school employees. And the remainder
are local government employees.
We were established in 1932 as a defined benefit plan. CalPERS is a prefunded
system, and one of the few that is nearly fully funded.
We manage assets of more than $110 billion. Our earnings from investments
contribute the lion's share of funding needed to pay out 4.5 billion dollars
in benefits yearly. Nearly 70 cents on every dollar in our fund comes from
investments, with the remaining 30 cents equally from two sources: the taxpayers
and the contributing members.
Our pension trust fund is managed by a 13-member Board of Administration,
consisting of elected and appointed members including the State Treasurer
and Controller. I am appointed by the State Personnel Board which is an
independent constitutional agency whose mission is to create, and guide
a civil service system for California.
The CalPERS Board is assisted by 1,000 staff, and numerous external advisors,
consultants, and investment managers.
Over the last decade, we have witnessed a change in capital markets worldwide.
Continually, we see a move away from traditional forms of financing and
a collapse of barriers to globalization of the capital markets.
The end result is that corporations from around the world are beginning
to compete with each other in every market. This competition is forcing
corporations to reduce labor and capital costs, improve productivity and
change the way they do business in order to sustain viability. In doing
so corporations are tapping international markets.
There has also been a dramatic increase in levels of institutional investment
in the international markets as well. By one estimate, ownership of foreign
shares by the largest 200 U.S. pension funds grew roughly 34 percent to
more than $225 billion dollars over the last two years.
CalPERS entered the international security markets in the late 1980s
for all the usual good reasons: to seek better returns and achieve diversification.
In December 1994, the CalPERS Board decided to increase the System's
asset allocation to international equities from 12 to 20 percent of the
Fund's total portfolio. Today, CalPERS exposure to the international markets
is among the largest of any major U.S. pension fund with -- over $24 billion
invested outside the United States in equity and fixed income.
This increase in international ownership combined with the rapid globalization
of markets has had a number of important consequences for CalPERS over time.
CalPERS has long been at the forefront of shareholder activism in the
United States. We are recognized as a standard-bearer for the corporate
governance movement.
As a large institutional investor, we have become long-term shareholders
of major corporations. In most cases, high transaction costs associated
with selling equities, larger portfolios, and more money to invest have
all created incentives for us to buy and hold. As a result, we have used
corporate governance activism to improve performance in the United States.
As the size of international holdings began to grow, we asked ourselves
-- if we are going to exercise our ownership rights to increase returns
to our trust fund, should these efforts stop just because investments are
outside the United States? Given our fiduciary responsibilities, are we
even free to ignore international corporate governance?
At the same time, we recognized that globalization was largely causing
countries to reassess and adapt their corporate governance systems to a
more competitive environment. The realization that economic and capital
markets were quickly breaking down barriers to globalization presented a
significant opportunity for us to share our domestic corporate governance
experiences. We felt we could ultimately influence the discussion as to
what form corporate governance should take in a global market.
As a first step in understanding the unique differences of the global
markets, we conducted a study on the role of international corporate governance
and increased performance monitoring of our international stock holdings.
Based on this study, we adopted a formal International Corporate Governance
Program in March 1996 focusing on the four countries with the System's highest
equity exposure: Japan, France, Germany and here, in the United Kingdom,
where we have roughly $3.7 billion invested.
We soon followed the study with the adoption of a set of global governance
principles. The principles focus on the six basic concepts that are fundamental
to free and fair markets throughout the world, without impinging upon the
legal, economic and cultural traditions of each country. Moreover, the principles
reflect the core of the corporate/shareholder relationship. The principles
address the following:
- director accountability to shareholders;
- transparent markets;
- equitable treatment for all shareholders;
- easy and efficient voting methods;
- codes of best practices that define the director shareholder-relationship;
and
- long-term corporate vision which at its core emphasizes sustained
shareholder value.
Last month, we adopted market-specific principles for the United Kingdom
and France. These principles are designed to complement the governance work
already performed by investors within these countries -- the Cadbury Code
and Greenbury Report in Britain, and the Vienot Report in France.
The principles embody the growth and changes inherent in the corporate
governance systems in the United Kingdom and France. Ultimately, they will
serve as a tool to assist us in monitoring our investments in these countries
while pursuing better corporate governance for the companies in which the
Fund invests.
Clearly, the phenomenon of globalization has already had significant
impact on the way we invest and monitor our holdings abroad. Moreover, it
appears that there is a convergence today toward a continuous market structure.
The most important and difficult question to address concerns the future
of world-wide exchanges. Is there a need to create a global marketplace
for financial products, be they fixed income, equity, derivative or commodity
on a single 24-hour international market? And if so, what are the requirements
for that type of market from an investor's point of view like CalPERS?
First, it is important to distinguish between a global market
and a global marketplace. From CalPERS perspective, a 24-hour global
market exists today for what has become one of the most important
financial instruments in the world -- U.S. Treasury securities.
Major Wall Street firms have long passed the Treasury "order book" around
the globe from New York to Tokyo to London and back to New York chasing
the daily operating hours of local trading communities. Likewise, foreign
currency trades can be accomplished at any point of time somewhere in the
world as evidenced by the fact that the daily capital flow through world
money markets is currently $1.3 trillion, which is about 50 times more than
is needed to finance all the world's trade and investments.
Equity transactions are a bit more problematic, but the combination of
cross exchange listings, and off-exchange trades certainly provides a good
measure of world-wide liquidity -- that is near 24-hour liquidity.
So, there is a global market today. But, what does not exist at
this point is a single, physical, global marketplace.
It is easy to get caught up in the excitement of global trading, particularly
with the cutting-edge technology and flow of mass information.
As one Wall Street bond trader so precisely stated it -- "With the growing
use of e-mail, voice mail, CNN and other innovations of technology, professionals
are on call 24-hours a day."
To best understand the global markets from an investor's point of view,
it is helpful to step back and take a more fundamental look at why markets
exist.
Historians tell us that what we now call "exchanges" began as informal
gatherings of local investors where news could be disseminated. If advantageous,
two investors would "trade" some part of their financial holdings between
themselves on the spot.
Since these gatherings were all local, investors would physically represent
themselves and no intermediary was necessary. These early exchanges were
a very basic form of what economists refer to as a "call market."
As these informal exchanges grew and became more popular, it was no longer
possible for all investors to be physically present because of travel distances,
so a new group of locals became "agents" for those investors who were unable
to attend. The market which developed from the introduction of intermediaries
into the former call market is what we now call an "auction market."
As some of those local agents gained more wealth from agency fees, they
began acting as principals in transactions to provide liquidity for anxious
sellers, and earned a financial reward for the expanded functions. The principal
market which developed both within and outside the auction market is called
a "dealer market."
Interestingly, as the local agents began to outnumber investors at the
gatherings, they decided to band together to create an "exchange" where
only agents could buy and sell. Investors were no longer allowed to trade
with other investors at the gatherings. Investors had lost control of the
marketplace that they had created; rules and restrictions were now set by
agents.
This brief look in the rear view mirror is important because it focuses
our attention on the types of markets which exist today and the way rules
now dictate trading.
It is not at all clear to our investment professionals that there is
a compelling reason for a physical marketplace to be created given the substantial
legal, cultural, and sovereignty barriers which oppose any such supranational
marketplace.
As a large institutional investor, we are faced with the daunting task
of managing a very substantial pool of assets. As long-term investors, we
trade relatively infrequently. Many of our trades are passive, or information-less
trades. When we trade, we want readily available liquidity and a fair price.
We rarely make frenetic trades based on a current news item. Therefore,
our particular purposes are best served by a market place with dynamics
close to what I have referred to as a "call market."
Many economists look with great disdain on continuous auction markets.
Maurice Allais, Nobel Prize winning economist, has stated that "...the continuous
trading market is an aberration from an economic viewpoint and generates
a potentially permanent instability favoring fraud and manipulation of the
market." He adds, "... [markets could be improved] by eliminating the continuous
market and replacing it everywhere with a single daily trading price for
each market..." While this position may be a bit extreme, it does seem that
the continuous market environment is not necessarily the best environment
for very large investor like CalPERS.
The best explanation of why call markets might be best for CalPERS is
that we need a large amount of liquidity at a point in time to make transactions
in the size appropriate for our funds. If a market has a finite amount of
liquidity, it is best for CalPERS that the available liquidity be focused
at a point in time, rather than dissipated throughout the trading day. We
would rather compete with other investors for liquidity at a point in time
rather than surrender our assets to the spikes in prices and potential manipulation
which could occur throughout the time period it sometimes takes to trade
a large position.
While I should note that it may be true that continuous markets stimulate
liquidity, it is not clear that the net benefit of a dispersed amount of
increased liquidity is a net positive for large investors.
So the ideal form of a market for a large, relatively infrequent trader
and long-term investor such as CalPERS is something close to a call market.
Of course, such markets now exist for equities in the United States as crossing
networks. Essentially, these are marketplaces where investors have regained
control of the marketplace from the agents and dealers. We expect this type
of trading to continue to grow, and there is some very interesting new technology
on the horizon.
An especially interesting example of the new technology being developed
in the United States is by a company called OptiMark. OptiMark uses very
sophisticated quantitative optimization models to match orders for securities.
Here's how it works. Each investor submits a bid or offer indicating
both price and volume parameters for individual securities. These indicators
are completely blind to everyone except the computer which matches trades
in such a way as to optimize the "mutual satisfaction" or all market participants
in each stock. These matches are done as pre-specified intervals throughout
the trading day. Trades will actually be posted on the Pacific Stock Exchange
through member firms.
The sophisticated financial modeling and computer power necessary for
this new technology has become available only within the last 2 to 3 years.
We are very excited about the possibilities of use of this new technology
in several markets.
One possible construct of the global marketplace is a supranational exchange
for financial instruments. However, the obvious sovereignty, legal, and
political risks to the development of a trading exchange like this ruled
by an entity that is above governmental regulation would clearly not be
in the best interests of CalPERS given our fiduciary responsibilities as
a public pension fund.
Now, some would argue that such markets currently exist such as foreign
currency, and we would expect these markets to continue. However, what does
not exist, is a centralized marketplace on which global assets are
traded and ruled by an entity which does not answer to the regulations of
any country.
In the absence of a supranational exchange, our investment professionals
believe that the economic, political, and technological trends are moving
us inexorably toward around-the-globe trading within more efficiently constructed
local marketplaces. And the cost of entry for local markets to the evolving
global marketplace will be less local regulation in some cases, increased
financial disclosure in most cases, and the adoption of something akin to
United States standards for settlement and administration of trades.
As CalPERS presence grows in the international markets, our desire is
for the continued globalization of markets and the introduction of new technology,
which will result in some markets taking the form of call markets capable
of meeting the focused liquidity needs of organizations like CalPERS.
I hope I've been successful today in sharing our System's perspectives
on our role in international investments, corporate governance, and globalization.
It is, of course, the perspectives of one institutional investor.
Nevertheless, we remain most interested in these issues, and the trends
and challenges that are likely to continue to develop with the globalization
of the capital markets. On so many fronts, both the risks and the opportunities
have been born simultaneously.
We are indeed at a critical, and exciting, place in the development of
our capital markets -- one I'm sure we will be discussing for many years
to come.
Thank you.
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