Financial institutions continue to be challenged by rising rates, thin net interest margins, and tricky pricing decisions. However, a well-thought-out investment philosophy and disciplined investment strategy can assist your bank or credit union in creating a portfolio that remains sound. Once the right strategy and framework are in place, making investment decisions becomes fairly independent of interest rate levels.

ALM First advises all of our financial institution clients to focus on process, rather than simply considering various bonds and securities to add to their portfolios. This steady approach makes sense in any rate environment. These four tips summarize the key elements we’ll discuss in this article:

  1. Be patient, even though long-run institutional investing can be a little boring and routine.
  2. Have a sound, research-oriented and well-defined investment philosophy.
  3. Remember, the decision-making methodology we utilize will contribute much more to long-term performance than the individual decisions themselves.
  4. Don’t make investment decisions solely based on what you are being shown by brokers. Brokers provide a necessary service but, in the end, they simply offer the ingredients to a recipe that has already been developed.

Creating a Framework for Sound Portfolio Decision-Making
A financial institution’s investment portfolio serves an important role within the overall balance sheet management process and regardless of the portfolio’s objective (liquidity, income, etc.), the ultimate goal should be to maximize return per unit of risk taken.

Over the years, investment managers can end up making hundreds of routine decisions. That’s why it is so important for a depository to have a well-defined investment process and decision-making framework to help ensure the portfolio generates reasonable risk-adjusted returns. Institutional fixed-income portfolio management is best thought of as a “rinse and repeat” process, in which portfolio riskiness is increased when compensation for risk is high and vice-versa. For example, if yield spreads and expected returns on corporate bonds or mortgage-backed securities (MBS) are low, portfolio weights and exposure to these assets would also be low.

As spreads widen relative to U.S. Treasuries or interest-rate swap rates, exposure is increased. A data- and research-oriented framework, combined with sound trading-level analytical models, arm today’s successful fixed-income managers to address portfolio management in a very controlled manner. Individual security selection can be thought of as the raw materials for portfolio returns. And, as a best practice, consider relative value analysis using robust trading-level analysis in an option and credit-adjusted framework.

The Exhibit above displays a portfolio management process that begins with an assessment of the overall balance-sheet risk profile. In particular, the securities portfolio should be managed within an ALM framework, which accounts for the balance sheet’s existing relationship between the asset and liability risk profiles. Arguably most important is interest-rate risk; managing the duration of the portfolio such that the duration of equity is either mitigated or targeted appropriately is very important. However, other considerations, such as liquidity risk, credit risk and earnings needs, also come into play. Depository investors don’t manage their investment portfolios in a vacuum, and the portfolio duration target should be developed in such a framework. Once portfolio objectives are established, it’s important to ensure the guidelines/policy allow for successful implementation of the strategy. If they aren’t aligned, the depository’s portfolio manager is limited in his/her ability to deliver long-term performance goals.

From here, top-down market themes lead the way through the investment process. Top-down themes communicate the current assessment of various market metrics and risk factors, which drive sector allocation decisions. Security selection, risk budgeting, and risk measurement bring us to the finish, with ex-post performance evaluation.

Actively managed fixed-income portfolios are at some stage of this feedback loop at all times. For example, we might see monthly top-down themes, combined with daily security selection, weekly risk analysis, and monthly performance reporting. Duration-targeting and interest-rate risk management take the guesswork off the table.

Notice there’s no discussion here on the direction of rates or when the Fed is going to move. Interest-rate forecasts, rate bets, and trades that are explicitly positioned for a specific interest-rate change have no place in this process and often can cause portfolio managers to rue the day. Instead, portfolio performance comes from good, old-fashioned risk measurement and management, as well as sector and security selection.

Why Financial Depositories Need Analytical Models
It’s vital for financial institutions to have analytical models to identify and measure risks and potential returns. In today’s dynamic fixed-income markets, the need for robust models increases with the complexity of the assets or asset classes being evaluated.

The Exhibit below shows this graphically. The line in the sand is clearly drawn between option and credit embedded assets and their other, simpler, cousins.

It’s best to evaluate callable bonds using a lattice approach while, given the path-dependent nature of the prepayment option, MBS are better evaluated using Monte-Carlo simulations. Interest-rate and option models should price observe market instruments accurately and be arbitrage free, and prepayment models should exhibit a “best data fit” approach. Without these tools, investors are unable to properly evaluate market pricing of such assets. Of course, we can’t forget the popular phrases “model users beware” and “use models at own risk.” There are plenty of historical examples of financial models leading investors to their early demise. Models are only as good as the assumptions that go into them, requiring an investment in the human capital needed to properly manage robust analytical systems. So, proceed cautiously; understand the inputs and assumptions; and absolutely, positively be critical of outputs. That’s why feedback loops are such an important component of the overall investment process. Models can help us make decisions, but they are not the end-all, be-all.

When to Consider Outsourcing
A growing number of banks and credit unions are turning to experienced external advisors, both for expert guidance and to outsource specialized functions like investment and balance-sheet advisory. An institutional asset manager can provide the tools and resources (both systems and human capital) needed to build and maintain high-performing bond portfolios at a fraction of what it may cost to attain those resources internally. When seeking outside counsel on investing, financial depositories must understand how that advisor is compensated (e.g., fee-based or commission), and performance must be measured relative to the stated portfolio objectives. That said, a thoughtful and disciplined investment process should lead to more consistent and predictable earnings from the fixed-income portfolio.

Robert Perry

Principal at ALM First

Jason Haley

Director, Invesment Management Group at ALM First