The core of the paper is this stylized history of US pension fund investments.
At every turn, pension funds pushed the envelope: From public to private securities, from direct investment to delegation to asset managers, from mutual funds to predatory hedge and PE funds.
I made three charts to illustrate this. The first shows the evolution of the asset side of pension fund balance sheets since 1945. This story is well known.
This one's more interesting. The growth of mutual funds – and thus of the asset management sector as we know it – is largely a function of the growth of pension fund assets, and especially of IRAs and DC plans since the 1990s. (@its_mccarthy, you had asked about this.)
The grimmest picture is this one. US public pension funds, big or small, have roughly tripled their alternatives share, from under 10 percent in 2001 to 30 percent in 2020.
Labor's capital *made* the hedge/PE/VC fund billionaire class, and it's own expense.
To sum up: In a liberalized financial system, "pro-labor financial capital" is an oxymoron – a meso-level dream turned into a nightmare by macro constraints.
FT visual on VIEs. To deal with this, Coppola et al. match "the universe of traded securities issued by firms in tax havens with their issuer’s ultimate parent" to restate bilateral investment positions.
The issue: So far, data on bilateral positions has been residency-based.
Residency-based: US Treasury International Capital (TIC) & IMF Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey (CPIS) -> red columns
Coppola et al. use firm-level securities data to restate this as nationality-based positions -> purple
What is asset manager capitalism? (How) does index fund dominance change the political economy of corporate governance?
This has taken me forever. It's a first working paper, focused on the United States. Brief summary below. 1/ osf.io/preprints/soca…
The #CorpGov literature remains in thrall to what I call the Berle-Means-Jensen-Meckling ontology: Shareholders, while dispersed and weak, are the owners and principals of the corporation.
The rise of asset managers has pulled the empirical rug from under the BM-JM ontology. 2/
The table summarizes
- the evolution of the US investment chain
- the hallmarks of historical corporate governance regimes
It shows the similarities (green) and differences (red) btw Hilferding’s late 19th century ‘finance capitalism’ and what I call asset manager capitalism. 3/