Part 1: Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
The 10x10 report
Part 1: Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
When Russell Investments asked some of its largest asset owner clients about their key challenges, navigating diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) was near the top of the list. How is DEI success defined? How are firms and their peers achieving DEI success internally? And how are institutional investors evaluating asset managers for DEI?
The 10x10 Report—independently implemented by research consultant, Cerulli Associates—addresses these topics from the points of view of 10 of the world’s leading institutional investors. Those views are then contrasted with 10 of the world’s leading asset managers.
About the 10x10 report
In 3Q 2021, Russell Investments held its annual Partner Innovation Lab, a roundtable event where large asset owners from various geographies brainstorm their greatest concerns and areas of interest. We asked Cerulli Associates to interview participating organizations, as well as some of our asset management partners, to extract individual perspectives on topics discussed at the event.
The result is a three-part series:
Part 1: Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
(This report)
Participating institutional investors included the following corporate retirement plan sponsors, in alphabetical order: The Boeing Company, Fujitsu Global, Mazda Motor Corporation, Microsoft, Mitsubishi Electric, Nestlé, Roche and Unilever. It also included the following non-profit investors: The New York Presbyterian Hospital, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Thomas Jefferson University.
Participating alternative asset managers included: Brevan Howard, Hamilton Lane and Oaktree Capital Management. Participating fixed-income asset managers included: BlueBay Asset Management and Western Asset Management Company. And participating multi-asset-class managers included BlackRock, J.P. Morgan Asset Management, Morgan Stanley, Putnam Investments and Wellington Management.
What's driving DEI?
The general consensus among participants was that while external demand drives climate-change measures, DEI is often driven by internal pressure, as both asset owners and asset managers believe that diverse teams lead to better outcomes. That’s not to say there is no external pressure. For institutional investors, external demand comes from end-beneficiaries and, in the case of corporates, clients that their sponsoring organizations serve. For managers, external demand generally comes from institutional clients.
That said, internal pressure was seen as the greatest driving force for DEI. Most organizations say the need for additional diversity has generally arisen through company and team meetings. Several said their younger employees are particularly focused on diversity efforts.
While most asset owners and managers have some sort of grass-roots initiative, many also cite organizations’ leadership driving the push. This often takes the form of the CEO, board of directors, or an executive committee making diversity a firm-wide objective. Besides communicating to the firm that diversity is an important initiative, the top of the organization may incentivize diversity via executive compensation. One manager with whom Cerulli spoke explained that 5% of executives’ bonuses were tied to improvements in their teams’ diversity metrics. Another manager said that rather than tying specific employee bonuses to team diversity, the firm’s overall bonus pool was partially determined based on improvements in diversity. Another top-down measure that regularly surfaced in interviews was firms requiring diversity training for hiring managers to ensure the managers are aware of their own biases.
Comparing Perspectives on DEI: Asset Owners v. Asset Managers, 2021
Asset Owners
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Asset Managers
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Internal diversity efforts |
Size Characteristics | |
For small organizations, challenging to gain exposure to every demographic
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Large organizations can evaluate and promote diversity more granularly
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Small level of turnover has large impact on investment office diversity
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Small level of turnover has minor impact on firm diversity
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External diversity efforts |
Evaluating diversity at third parties relatively large resource constraint for small investment offices
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Evaluating diversity at third parties relatively minor resource constraint for large firms
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External Party Perspective | ||
Consider diversity at asset management partners and investment holdings
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Consider diversity at vendors and investment holdings
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Industry Perspective | ||
May promote diversity in financial industry, but are often focused on corporate sponsor's industry instead
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Promote diversity in their own industry
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From the experts:
Defining diversity
One of the key challenges stated by both asset owners and managers was simply defining DEI. They must define diversity before they can promote it, and they must also define what constitutes success. Most 10X10 participants define diversity in terms of gender, race, and ethnicity, and they generally set goals for diversity (or set aspirational benchmarks) based on the diversity metrics of the country in which the hiring office is located.
Nearly all participants also mentioned diversity of backgrounds, circumstances, age, and sexuality. No participants mentioned religious diversity as a measure they evaluate. When 10x10 participants mentioned the promotion of sexuality diversity, this was geared more toward inclusion measures than diversity.
Some asset managers described efforts to benchmark themselves against industry peers. Some asset owners and managers told Cerulli that they do not have specific diversity benchmarks or targets. These organizations are more directional, taking the approach, “We just need more.” While they are not necessarily behind in considering diversity measures, these organizations tend to be further behind in achieving results.
From the experts:
Implementing DEI
When it comes to the successful implementation of DEI, one asset manager with whom Cerulli spoke broke down the factors of into four buckets: hiring, developing, promoting, and retaining.
Both institutional investors and managers implement diversity measures via hiring and recruiting practices. Almost all 10x10 participants spoke of the need to search for untapped pools of talent, often recruiting from non-traditional channels. Some have addressed this by expanding their list of target schools. Others have implemented blind hiring processes, where they don’t target any specific universities. Some participants (both asset owners and managers) said that their companies have begun to broaden their focus on academic majors as well.
In addition to acquiring talent, asset owners and managers with whom Cerulli spoke described the necessity of measures meant to retain talent. Although promotions are a tool that organizations could use to retain diverse talent, no 10x10 participants mentioned diversity being a key input into promotion decisions. Rather, organizations seem to focus more on developing diverse talent so that they are later promoted on their own merits. Tools used for developing talent include mentorship programs, where entry-level employees are matched with an executive mentor.
Many organizations cite difficulty in retaining diverse talent in the middle of their hierarchical structures. One of the reasons for this is that firms are competing for the same limited pool of candidates for roles requiring experience in the asset management industry. While HR, marketing and operational departments tend to have greater diversity, for roles that strictly require investment management experience, organizations are subject to the pool that the industry feeds them—a pool that tends to exhibit limited diversity. In attempts to increase diversity at their own firms, managers find themselves recruiting talent from their peers (or “poaching diverse talent,” as one manager puts it), rather than building up diversity across the industry. Hence, several organizations have put efforts into growing the overall pool of candidates in the asset management space.
From the experts:
Evaluating diversity of external parties
While many asset owners traditionally evaluated the DEI of asset managers based on ownership, some are now broadening their focus to managers’ entire organizations. One asset owner initially assessed the DEI of managers in its public investment portfolio, then expanded to private investments. Notably, multiple asset owners mentioned that measuring diversity in the alternatives space is more difficult than it is for traditional managers due to the lack of reporting requirements. Finally, a select few asset owners have gone so far as to evaluate diversity at holdings/portfolio companies of funds.
Most organizations do not have formal policies for diversity—it is simply a consideration in the overall process. And some asset owners look for managers that are making progress on diversity initiatives rather than judging them on their level of diversity at a given point in time.
From the experts:
Leveraging strategic partners
Asset owners that didn’t have approaches to assessing DEI externally mentioned that they intended to start this initiative by talking to their investment consultants or OCIOs. Some of these asset owners are in the brainstorming stage, trying to discover ways to assess and implement diversity measures. They rely on these types of partners to educate them on initiatives of other clients. By using intermediaries, these investors can discover best practices.
A broad takeaway from this research is that promoting diversity requires proactive behavior. To take on a comprehensive approach, an organization must define diversity, set goals or objectives, implement measures to carry out those objectives, and employ systems to track progress. An organization must also maintain an inclusive environment for it to tap into diverse perspectives. Another takeaway is that diversity is not free – an organization must devote resources to acquire and maintain it or, alternatively, absorb a substantial opportunity cost.
This is just a snapshot. Get the full Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion report by registering at the top of the page.