Gulf News

Funds focus on quality amid research price war

There are growing fears that New MiFID II rules will lead to job losses and poor research

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As a price war causes the cost of analyst research in Europe to plunge toward zero, one corner of the investment market says quality is still worth paying for: sovereignw­ealth funds.

The Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority said the best researcher­s could even get paid more under the new MiFID II rules, which come into force in just over three months.

New Zealand’s superannua­tion fund hopes the regulatory overhaul will improve returns across the market.

“I will pay more for quality research if it’s going to give me the alpha that I need,” Uche Orji, chief executive officer of the Nigeria fund and a former analyst, said in an interview in Astana, Kazakhstan. “There’s a tendency sometimes for customers to focus on the cost Another reason EU regulators are unbundling execution and research costs is to boost returns for investors. Most money managers have so far chosen to absorb the cost of paying for research rather than pass the charges onto their clients.

Yet Andrew Orr, CEO of the New Zealand Super Fund, is sceptical that clients will end up benefiting. “With most regulation, the costs will end up on the end consumer so asset managers will have to pay,” said Orr, who oversees almost $26 billion (Dh95.5 billion).

Orr’s fund is overweight on European equities and sees an “enormous opportunit­y” in credit and distressed credit in the region, he said. He added that, generally speaking, it’s preferable for a set of rules like MiFID II to become the norm worldwide. of something rather than the quality of what’s delivered.”

The European Union’s revised Markets in Financial Instrument­s Directive (MiFID) requires money managers to pay for research separately from broking services starting from January. There’s growing concern this will lead to hundreds of job losses among analysts, and that the quality of research will decline.

Orji, who oversees about $2 billion (Dh7.34 billion), warned that the new rule book could have negative consequenc­es for the research industry by reducing the amount available spending on analysis.

“A good analyst can deliver you a lot of value, but if you want to commoditis­e it and fight about cost more than quality,” firms might lose sight of that, Orji said during the Internatio­nal Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds meeting in the Kazakh capital.

An increasing number of research providers are reducing the amount they plan to charge for basic research to gain market share, and are relying on additional services such as analyst calls to generate revenue. The for top 10 sell-side banks currently spend about $4 billion a year on research, but this will drop 30 per cent after the rules come into force, consultant McKinsey & Co estimates.

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (Adia) said it “began work last year on a comprehens­ive internal exercise to fully assess the impact of MiFID II, particular­ly in relation to research and the research market.”

It’s “confident that it will be prepared for the January deadline,” according to a statement.

Adia already pays for research and expects to see an increased emphasis on research quality over cost or quantity, according to a person familiar with the fund’s operations.

The wealth fund expects that the increased transparen­cy under MiFID II will be positive and likely be demanded by investors globally and not just in Europe, the person said, asking not to be identified.

Adia managed about $828 billion in June, the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute estimates.

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