Five myths and why we should challenge them
For plans that do not have in-house investment capabilities, the delegated investment model, or outsourced chief investment officer (OCIO), is a means of filling the gap between the resources required to run efficient investment strategies and the typically constrained governance budget of a pension plan.
The concept is fairly simple, but the implementation can be less easy to visualize. For this reason, a number of myths have arisen around this model.
This brief and engaging discussion explores the most common myths, and why pension plan sponsors should challenge them and push toward a greater understanding of OCIO relationships.
Title | File Type | File Size |
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Outsourced chief investment officers: challenging five common myths | 4.4 MB |