Chad Rakvin, head
of U.S. Index Funds at Legal &
General Investment Management America Inc. (LGIMA), has been promoted to
global head of index funds.
In his expanded role Rakvin will oversee the global index
business, which encompasses the Chicago, London and Hong Kong teams, managing more
than $470 billion of index assets. Rakvin will report to Aaron Meder, head of Investment, Legal & General Investment
Management (LGIM), and will be based in London. Rakvin joined LGIMA in 2013
from Northern Trust Global Investments, where he was global equity index
director. Since joining LGIMA, he has led the U.S. index fund management
business, and has performed a pivotal role in establishing the foundation for
growth of this business.
Shaun Murphy,
director of Index Funds, has been promoted to head of U.S. Index Funds. Murphy
joined LGIMA in 2013 from Northern Trust Global Investments, where he was head
of international index equities. He has worked alongside Rakvin for 11 years, helping
build LGIMA’s index business. He was instrumental in constructing and launching
the Legal & General Collective Investment Trust. The LGIMA index team now
manages $64 billion in index assets.
Robert Moore, chief
executive of LGIMA, cited Rakvin’s leadership and industry expertise as
instrumental in developing and growing the firm’s index business; and Murphy’s
expertise and enthusiasm for the business as key elements in a smooth
transition.
LGIMA is a Chicago-based investment adviser
specializing in index, fixed-income and liability driven investment (LDI)
strategies for the U.S. institutional market.
By using this site you agree to our network wide Privacy Policy.
This week’s new investment products and services include an absolute return fund from Goldman Sachs; a book about stable value investing from Stable Value Consultants; and the launch of Tideline, a consulting firm designed to provide tailored advice about institutional impact investing.
Goldman Sachs Asset
Management Launches GS Absolute Return Multi-Asset Fund
Goldman Sachs Asset Management says the new Absolute Return
Multi-Asset Fund seeks to generate “consistent, attractive returns that are less
dependent on the direction of traditional markets.” The fund invests across
multiple asset classes accessing investment ideas from across GSAM, with a
dynamic asset allocation approach to navigate changing markets.
“In a period of increased market volatility and uncertainty,
investors are looking for ways to generate differentiated returns while
managing portfolio losses,” explains Jim McNamara, head of global third-party distribution.
“Our Absolute Return Multi-Asset Fund seeks to provide investors with a
powerful tool for navigating a changing market environment.”
Neill Nutall, the fund’s co-portfolio manager, says the goal
is to achieve consistent returns in all market conditions, within an accessible
mutual fund format.
“We are focused on offering investors the opportunity to
diversify into alternative sources of return while remaining nimble to capture
investment opportunities,” Nutall explains.
The Fund is managed by Goldman Sachs’ Global Portfolio
Solutions Group, the dedicated multi-asset investing team within the Asset
Management division. The fund is being offered in a variety of share classes,
including Institutional, Class R, Class IR and Class R6 Shares.
NEXT: Comprehensive
Look at Stable Value
New Stable Value
Publication from Stable Value Consultants
The author of a new book, “Consultants & Plan Sponsor's
Guide to Stable Value,” says the publication is the “first book published on
the topic since 1998.”
The book was penned by Chris Tobe, a CFA at Stable Value
Consultants. He notes stable value remains one of the largest investments in
401(k) plans, with more than $700 billion in assets.
“The Consultants and Plan Sponsors Guide to Stable Value is
the first book published on the topic since 1998 by Fabozzi,” he says. “Over
the last 17 years and especially after the 2008 financial crisis the entire
investment market including stable value has changed drastically. This book is
designed for investment professionals and attorneys and CPA's working in the
401(k) market as well corporate and public plan sponsors.”
Unlike the earlier book by Fabozzi et al, which was published from an industry provider point of view,
this book comes from the client and consultant view, he adds. The 14 chapters
in the book are designed to be “stand alone on very detailed subtopics.”
In response to accelerating institutional demand, three experienced professionals in financial services and impact investing announced
the launch of Tideline, a consulting firm designed to provide “tailored advice
to clients developing impact investment strategies and solutions.”
Christina Leijonhufvud, creator and former head of J.P.
Morgan's social finance business; Ben Thornley, former head of the global
research and consulting practice at Pacific Community Ventures; and Kim
Wright-Violich, former CEO of Schwab Charitable, are the brains behind
Tideline.
The group says they “joined forces to help institutional
clients take advantage of new opportunities in program and product development.”
“We have witnessed a significant shift in institutional
interest in impact investing over the past few years, as managers have
established track records of success and more investment options have become
available,” notes Wright-Violich. “Non-conflicted, actionable advice on impact
investing is needed now more than ever.”
According to the new Tideline leadership, the broad category
of “impact investing” grew 76% in just two years, from $3.74 trillion at the
beginning of 2012 to $6.57 trillion at the start of 2014. Impact investing is often used as another term for SRI or ESG—short for socially responsible investing (SRI) and
environment, social and governance (ESG) investing.
NEXT: Coming Together on CITs
A New CIT from Swan
and Gordon
Swan Global Investments and Gordon Asset Management introduced
a new collective investment trust (CIT) offering tailored for qualified
retirement plans.
Swan Global Investments, an independent investment advisory
firm, announced that it will be the co-investment manager to the Swan Defined
Risk Collective Investment Trust series, along with Gordon Asset Management,
LLC. The Alta Trust Company will serve
as trustee.
The Swan Defined Risk Collective Investment Trust is made up
of a series of five target-risk funds designed to meet the requirements to be
qualified default investment alternatives (“QDIA”) under Department of Labor
regulations under ERISA 404(c)(5).
According to the firms, the CIT series “uses an innovative,
equity stair-stepdown methodology as participants age and approach retirement.”
The Swan Defined Risk CIT’s five funds are based on the Swan
Defined Risk Strategy, which was first introduced in 1997 through
separate accounts and is also available via mutual funds. It is an actively
managed, hedged equity, rules-based process designed to hedge against large
stock market declines.
According to the firms, the strategy “has proven highly
successful, having consistently outperformed the S&P 500 Index over full
market cycles, defined as including a bull and a bear market.”