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The complexity of investments continues to grow, and institutional pools of capital from endowments to pension funds are suffering from too much risk and not enough return. Yet managing these investments and creating and implementing governance structures are seldom an integral part of the organization's core mission or its operations. "That's the way it has always been," say many directors and executives. As a result, a board of directors or investment committee often believes it needs to make all the decisions--or outsource money management and hope for the best.
As Winning the Institutional Investing Race: A Guide for Directors and Executives makes clear, that sentiment is a big mistake that can lead to poor returns, reduced capital to employ on behalf of the organizational mission, and even charges of malfeasance on the part of directors. Authors Michael Bunn and Zack Campbell, who advise companies and institutions on best practices in institutional investment, are determined to help institutions and companies learn to manage their capital funds like the real businesses they are. This hands-on book will show you:
Winning the Institutional Investing Race: A Guide for Directors and Executives offers a healthy rethinking of investment management and governance for any organization or board that oversees institutional investments and manages those making investment decisions. Most important, it shows how directors and managers can maintain their fiduciary responsibilities to the organizations they serve while maximizing investment returns.
Auteur
Michael Bunn has over 30 years of investment experience in the financial services industry. As President and CIO of The Endowment Office in Denver Colorado, he provides a contract investment office and staff for foundations and hospitals and has delivered returns for them that put them into the top percentile of their peers. He has worked with public pension funds, Indian tribes, hospitals, unions, universities and foundations in a career that included leading Arthur Anderson's investment office outsourcing practice in Houston. He established and taught at the Institute for Pension Funds at both Baylor University and George Washington University. Currently The Endowment Office manages about $1 billion in assets.
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