Discussing Asset Allocation, Active Vs. Passive And Japan


Last week on our podcast, I had the opportunity to speak with Bill Stone, the global chief investment strategist for PNC Asset Management, and Jesper Koll, CEO of WisdomTree Japan. Our discussion focused on markets, Fed policy and building global portfolios, with a particular focus on Japan in the second half of the conversation with Jesper.

  • With Stone, we talked about how his asset allocation strategy at PNC Asset Management is to carve up active/passive/factor portfolios using a roughly one-third allocation to each as a way of targeting equity exposure. Within the active group, he’s looking for high-conviction managers who can add value and pairing them with factor approaches and pure beta in a way that minimizes tracking error from benchmarks. His factor approach tries to tilt to rewarded factors such as value investing and quality investing.
  • In today’s market environment, Stone’s team is favoring value-oriented strategies, in part due to a belief the financial sector run-up has room to go with a steep yield curve.
  • Stone’s team has even been looking at factor strategies applied to the alternatives market. We discussed various alternatives such as commodities and managed futures, and why Stone’s team is moving from pure commodities exposures to managed futures that incorporate a trend element for commodities. 
  • On Japan, Jesper discussed:

  • For monetary policy, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) has been sticking with its zero interest rate cap all the way down to the 10-year maturity on its yield curve, and the BOJ is going to remain steadfast in this policy. We saw this divergence in policies recently with a global yield pickup led out of Europe, but 10-year Japanese bond yields stayed at just 10 basis points (bps). 
  • Jesper believes the policy is working. He sees bank credit growth accelerating. Last year bank lending growth was running at 2% to 2.25%, while this year Jesper sees it growing at 3.25% to 3.5%. He sees the banks as strong, well-capitalized and ready to lend with a pickup in demand for credit. 
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