Conference Dailys TRADETech Daily 2019 - Wrap-Up Issue | Page 12

THETRADETECH DA I LY in-depth THE OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF TRADETECH 2019 Buy-side need to invest in alternative data to gain an informational edge THETRADETECH DAILY in-depth THE OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF TRADETECH 2019 ‘Get away from the index’ Mark Mobius tells active managers in emerging markets SPEAKERS AT THIS YEAR’S CONFERENCE LAID OUT HOW BUY-SIDE FIRMS CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF UNTAPPED ALTERNA- EMERGING MARKETS EXPERT SEES OPPORTUNITY IN ACTIVE MANAGEMENT AND SAYS NOW IS THE TIME TO MOVE AWAY FROM TIVE DATA, BUT WARNED AGAINST ANYONE LOOKING FOR A MAGIC BULLET. THE INDEX. B uy-side firms may be sitting on valuable amounts of alternative data from everyday client interactions, though investment is needed to turn it into an informational edge, according to experts. Alternative data, often categorised as big data or information obtained outside of traditional sources, is being utilised by hedge funds and as- set managers globally for investment decisions. With the form of data being a relatively newer concept in cpital markets and largely unstruc- tured, issues such as a lack of standardisation, regulation and analytical abilities are holding back widespread adoption and utilisation. Panelists highlighted how the buy-side holds proprietary data which can be ‘gold’ to them. “Sometimes unstructured or alternative data means not easily accessible,” said Anthony Tassone, founder and CEO of GreenKey Technol- ogies. “Sometimes people think acquiring this data set can be challenging, but you may have some of this data in house but you’re just not enhancing it.” “Most of you have tonnes of data you are not accessing or leveraging, so some of the greatest enhancements are allowing you to gain insights from that data. Everyday interactions with customers.” Information sources such as social media, blogs and the dark web have become alternative data sources for market participants to apply to their investment strategies, however one provider argued that ‘hard work’ and ‘invest- ment’ is needed for the information to be used to create alpha. “People are trying to present alternative as a magic bullet where you can buy it off the shelf,” said Olga Kokareva, head, data sourcing and strategy at Quantstellation. “Even though it sells and sounds like a good marketing pitch, it doesn’t work like that. “The truth is hard work and investment need to be put into this process. For firms who can manage to do that and put teams and people in place, alternative data works.” Kokareva added that in the future, she be- lieves every portfolio manager will need to have exposure to predictive analytics and big data to 12 THETRADETECH DAILY survive in the industry. Alternative data providers use automation and artificial intelligence to analyse trends, and through such services as Twitter, can identify relevant developments as they’re unfolding in real time. In March this year, Thinknum, an alternative data specialist based in New York raised more than $11 million in a funding round, in order to expand the use of its platform across the insti- tutional investment community. The company’s alternative data platform has been used by major financial institutions for equity research and analysis, including Barclays, Goldman Sachs, Cowen and Bank of America Merrill Lynch. The panel added that barriers to widespread utilisation of alternative data linger through a lack of global standardisation and regulation. Speakers also emphasised the importance of workflow integration. “People are trying to present alternative as a magic bullet where you can buy it off the shelf. Even though it sells and sounds like a good marketing pitch, it doesn’t work like that.” OLGA KOKAREVA, QUANTSTELLATION M ark Mobius has urged the buy-side to ‘get away from the index’ and take advantage of active management opportunities which await in emerging markets. The renowned emerging markets expert said the trend to follow the index was one of the reasons he left his famed role at Franklin Tem- pleton Investments. “The whole idea of us active investors now is to get away from the index, and one of the rea- sons why I decided to leave Franklin Templeton was that we were always being forced to lean towards the index,” said Mobius, while taking part on a keynote interview. “We say we’re active managers, but we go into a closet and track beta, now we can say ‘we’re not tracking the index at all, we can have 20% in Egypt if we want. “We’re looking at the Nigerians, Kenyans, smaller markets which the indices will not follow. The pool of money is growing, there’s no doubt about that, it’s about where the alloca- tion will be.” Despite a major uptick in passive management in emerging markets year-to-date coinciding with a downturn in active management, Mobius also predicted a change of fortunes, citing recent meetings with investors in the US. “The gap between flows of funds active and passive shows you that there is a tremendous opportunity in active,” he added. “This is what we are finding with our clients: I was amazed by the eagerness – I was in the US recently with various pension funds and fami- ly offices – because they said they’ve followed these ETFs and now need something specialised and active.” Speaking with Michael Fidance, head of CEEMEA sales trading at HSBC, the two discussed a range of emerging markets including India “One of the reasons why I decided to leave Franklin Templeton was that we were always being forced to lean towards the index.” MARK MOBIUS, MOBIUS CAPITAL PARTNERS and China, with Mobius having high hopes for the former. “The amount of IPO activity we expect in India will be equal to China,” Mobius added. “China is the big boy in this space mainly because of the index activity. Look at the ETF flows its going into China because it has a heavier weighting in the index. But that’s just temporary activity because India is coming up very quickly.” China has been the big focus for emerging markets given its market liberalisation, along with a higher weighting of inclusion within the MSCI index. China’s A-shares will increase to 20% of MS- CI’s Emerging Market Index; with total passive inflows into China to top $600 billion, while regulatory and market infrastructure changes are also increasing access to RMB- denominat- ed assets. The TRADE is set to publish a special emerg- ing markets supplement later this month, in association with HSBC, and part of the focus in the issue is on the variable liquidity in emerging markets. Index inclusion, along with market reforms, is something which can have a major impact, making effective liquidity management in emerging markets critical for investment firms, particularly those operating under regulated UCITS banners. “Liquidity is a major problem, which is why when we sign up a client we tell them to be ready to hang this money up for the next five years,” commented Mobius. “The interesting thing now is that a lot of the issues from emerging markets are finding their way into the London and New York mar- kets,” he added, referring to Alibaba’s listing on the New York Stock Exchange. Issue 2 TheTradeNews.com 13