Influential Investors Forum

| Harvard Club

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    Registration and Buffet Lunch (Cambridge Room 2nd Floor)

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    Welcome Remarks (Harvard Hall main level)
    Vishesh Kumar, Editor-in-Chief, Chief Investment Officer

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    Passive Management: The Perfect Oxymoron
    Investors may turn away from active management under the belief they are avoiding making difficult decisions. But they may be unaware of many risks they are exposing themselves to – and the contradiction that other investment choices entail. And other options like ‘passive management’ are filled with contradictions and risks. Those avoiding active management may feel they are sidestepping forecasting, for example.   But they are in fact embracing a dangerous forecast by default: the assumption that what has worked in the past will work in the future. The implicit bias and implication of passive management frameworks like cap weighted strategies, meanwhile, can introduce substantial risk exposure. The huge concentration in US markets – in often very expensive tech stocks – as a result is a prime example.
    Contrary to what many investors believe, passive is not neutral and in fact introduces dangerous biases by default. Instead, if investors want to truly avoid forecasting it is crucial that they aim for diversification instead.
    PresenterYves Choueifaty, President and CIO, TOBAM

    Moderator: Leslie Lenzo, Senior Vice President, Investments, Advocate Aurora Health 
    Panelists:
    Holland TimminsChief Investment Officer, Texas Permanent School Fund
    Jonathan Grabel, Chief Investment Officer, LACERA
    Rob Roy, Chief Investment Officer, Adventist Health System

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    Emerging Markets: Where to from Here?
    While the long-term promise of Emerging Markets shined as bright as ever, the last year also brought into focus the brutal risks of this generational opportunity. Rising rates saw severe pressure on many high growth EM currencies. Dollar-denominated debt amid plummeting currencies took major tolls on capital markets and the real economies of some EMs, despite promising underlying demographics and long-term economic trends. How asset owners can manage risks while accessing this opportunity – and the most important items to prepare for in the year ahead.
    Moderator: Rich Nuzum, President, Wealth, Mercer
    Panelists:
    Raphael Arndt,
    Chief Investment Officer, Future Fund of Australia 
    Robert “Vince” SmithChief Investment Officer & Deputy State Investment Officer, New Mexico State Investment Council
    Fred Nieuwland, Chief Investment Officer, Mars, Inc.

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    Coffee Break

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    New Frontiers in ESG
    Poised for further explosive growth, ESG has already recently leapt in recent years from a “box to check” to a central analytical framework in evaluating investment decisions for asset owners. Issues like sustainability and equity now inform investment decisions in a central way never seen before. But ESG is poised to have an even deeper impact, and the social consequences of investments are being pioneered in new directions by the most innovative allocators. Case in point: Increased scrutiny of the technology sector over the last year, where juggernauts like Facebook and Apple faced deep questions from their shareholders. So what are then next frontiers for ESG? Leading allocators and innovators discuss what’s around the corner for ESG.
    ModeratorTim O’Donnell, Senior Vice President, FEG
    Panelists:
    Chris Ailman
    , Chief Investment Officer, CalSTRS
    Gail Greenwald, Sierra Club Foundation Board and Investment Committee Chair, Sierra Club Foundation
    David J Holmgren, Chief Investment Officer, Hartford HealthCare

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    Private Equity: From Alternative Asset to Center of the Economy?
    Private equity – long pigeonholed as an alternative asset – is increasingly becoming core to US economic activity and mainstream investing, according to leading CIOs. Propelling the trend: the shrinking public markets, where de-listings have now whittled the amount of publicly traded companies to 7,000, half the number compared to 1996. Moreover, studies show that the remaining companies tend to be older and slower growing than in the past. And that compares to 8,000 companies currently operated by private equity firms, where a more entrepreneurial environment allows for more dynamism. Private equity also enjoys access to companies through their full life cycle. Innovative CIOs have been upping their allocations to private equity and seeing it driving returns, with benchmarks for the asset class on the rise in future years. The success has created major challenges – extremely high valuations for assets chief among them – expanding traditional concerns like liquidity and leverage that have plagued private equity. The most innovative allocators in private equity dissect the future potential and pitfalls, and key points like manager selection.
    Moderator: Mohamed Elkordy, PhD, SPM: Opportunistic & Special Situations, Texas Trust 
    Panelists:
    Courtney E. Villalta, Senior Investment Manager, Private Markets, Teacher Retirement System of Texas
    Mansco Perry
    , Executive Director and Chief Investment Officer, Minnesota State Board of Investment
    TJ Carlson, Chief Investment Officer, Texas Municipal Retirement System

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    The Next Generation Award: Title Round
    Moderator: 
    David J Holmgren
    , Chief Investment Officer, Hartford HealthCare
    Finalists:
    Nicolas T. H. Dang,
    Manager – Absolute Return, CN Investment Division
    Kristina Koutrakos, Director of Portfolio Strategy, Virginia Retirement System
    Susan Yun Lee,
    Managing Director of Investments,
    The Eli and Edyth Broad Foundation
    Carrie Lo,
    Portfolio Manager, 
    CalSTRS
    Chad Myhre, Portfolio Manager, Missouri Teachers Retirement System
    Susan Oh, Senior Portfolio Manager, Pennsylvania Public School Employees’ Retirement System
    Chris Schelling, Director, Private Equity, Texas Municipal Retirement System

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    Cocktail Reception (Harvard Hall)

  10. Walk to Dinner at New York Public Library

Industry Innovation Awards

December 13, 2018
New York Public Library

Contact Information

Sponsorship Information

Rob Reif (212) 217-6906

General Information

Carol Popkins (203) 461-0985