Surveys
Over Half Of Global Investors Expect Rise In Alternatives Allocation - Survey

The survey was commissioned by BNY Mellon, and was designed to unveil the alternative investments allocation strategies of senior executives from institutional investment firms around the world.
New data from BNY
Mellon shows a 14 per cent jump in institutional investment
executives who expect allocations to alternatives to
increase over the next 12 months. It is up to 53 per cent from 39
per cent reported in the previous iteration of the survey
published in 2016.
BNY Mellon commissioned FT Remark to interview senior executives
from 450 large institutional investment firms to understand
their strategy for allocating funds to alternative investments
(defined as private equity, hedge funds, real estate,
infrastructure and private debt/loans).
A minority of survey respondents, 12 per cent, predict
alternative asset allocations will fall next year. The bank
said that alternative assets under management will surpass
the current level of $7.7 trillion in 2017.
According to the survey's findings, significant change in
alternatives is looming as demand for high-performing asset
classes reshapes how assets are structured and securitized on the
one hand, and how they are managed and serviced on the
other.
Those surveyed predict that the two most significant trends in
the alternatives space over the next 12 months are increased
indexing – cited by 52 per cent – and increased asset flows from
financial advisors and high net worth individuals, cited by 38
per cent.
Other key findings from the study included that the balance
between asset classes is expected to remain stable, with private
equity having the highest share (26 per cent) of institutions'
alternative assets – and the highest levels of outperformance
versus expectations – followed by real estate (25 per cent),
private debt and loans (23 per cent), infrastructure (19 per
cent) and hedge funds (7 per cent).
"Alternatives have been generating strong returns at a time when
traditional investment classes have underperformed," said
Chandresh Iyer, chief executive, alternative investment Services,
BNY Mellon. "No sector is immune from technology's transformative
effects and fund managers need to become disrupters if they are
going to thrive. In the hunt for value in alternatives, investors
are pushing for greater control and transparency while continuing
to press on fees. Fund managers have to get creative to
respond.”
Peter Salvage, global head of hedge fund services, alternative
investment services, BNY Mellon, commented: "With new demand, the
bar for seamless operational support in alternatives will get
even higher. Alternative investment managers need a full and
integrated range of services, including custody, cash management,
accounting and administration, and investor services so they can
focus on their investments rather than the details of fund
operations."
The respondents of the survey were situated across the
world; Americas (38 per cent), Europe, Middle East, and
Africa (38 per cent), and Asia-Pacific (24 per cent).