Treasurers have been faced with dim prospects for managing cash for years. Doing nothing is safe, but it’s not effective.
One suggestion was to use coming money market fund reform to revisit cash investment strategy. It was noted during the discussion that one can lose sight of how many corporates have been content to use money-market funds as their primary cash investment vehicle. The prospect of gates and fees coming to a prime fund near your as well as the availability of government paper for government funds has more firms looking to emulate cash-rich tech firms with separately managed accounts (SMAs) and establishing longer-term cash buckets to expand the range of asset classes and instrument types available to invest in. Like a large number of cash-rich corporates, one member uses SMAs for longer-duration and short-duration cash investment portfolios alongside money market funds and cash deposits.
Benchmarking external managers with the same mandate can shed light on performance. Another consideration is how to benchmark the external managers to your company’s policy mandate. Should the managers be given the same mandate to make it easy to measure? Often times yes is the answer, as you can measure them against each other and trim back on a manager who is underperforming.
Of course, given the “lean meme” of corporate treasury, members should ask themselves whether they have the staffing to pursue the desired cash management approach. This was the consideration one member noted; and for him, he had the resources and the ability to pursue the changes he wanted to implement with current staffing.
This is where policy restrictions on credit, allocation to other asset classes and concentration limits hinder the decision to execute on this. Plus, to manage the additional mandates and risk requires more staff and other resources. Thus the bias to continue with the status quo or even move to a US Treasuries-only approach (since there is rarely a concentration limit on them) remains strong.