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MSCI Leans Into Wealth Sector With New Indices
Tom Burroughes
3 December 2024
When , which provides investment indices, launched MSCI Private Capital Indexes in July this year, the move highlighted how this organisation says it relentlessly captures themes that wealth managers want to tap into. The recently-launched MSCI private market indexes are constructed from private capital funds with over $11 trillion in capitalisation. bringing out is an important addition to its work in the wealth management space – not a satellite add-on. This is about how advisors can tell the right story to investors. We are having more engaged conversations with our wealth management clients,” he said. (An earlier version of this interview appeared initially on Family Wealth Report, sister news service to this one.)
Private market investing – venture capital, private credit and equity, among others – are hot topics for those advising high net worth clients. The secular shift from listed equities to unquoted businesses in the past 25 years has fuelled demand for data showing how well these often opaque areas perform and compare with listed stocks and bonds.
And MSCI’s move – launching 130 indices in all – shows that the institution wants to put tools in the hands of wealth management decision-makers who are hungry for information, argues Alex Kokolis (pictured), global head of wealth at MSCI. He has worked at MSCI for five years, and before this, at UBS, Wilmington Trust and Merrill Lynch.
“An important driver behind the launch of the MSCI Private Capital Indexes is building a new ‘common language’ around private assets across the investment ecosystem, and understanding the factors that run through a variety of companies regardless of whether they are publicly listed or not,” Kokolis told this publication. “When stress-testing a firm’s financial and business prospects, having such a common language helps to make meaningful comparisons.”
Alex Kokolis
The need for more information on private assets has been a theme across the wealth management industry, and the investment industry at large, he said.
“Institutional investors are increasingly looking to private assets to help meet their investment mandates. In the wealth space, this trend underscores the need for education and democratisation of private assets. The overall growth in investors’ private asset allocations increases demand for transparency, insights and analytics,” he said.
Considering how inclusion in an MSCI index, such as the flagship World and Emerging Market indices, can have a material impact on share prices and asset allocations, the move into the private markets area is significant. Just as ESG investing has spawned a raft of new indices, now it’s the turn of private markets. As soon as new indices spring up, they can then be used as building blocks for entities such as exchange-traded funds, for example.
Comparisons
Comparing returns from listed equities, which can be traded in seconds on electronic exchanges, with those from venture capital, where time horizons tend to be measured, carries difficulties. Plenty of caveats are needed when comparing stocks’ returns with the internal rates of return (IRR) measures that go with private assets. That said, some yardsticks are better than none, and the sophistication of the investment world is evolving fast. Firms such as (now owned by BlackRock) also issue indices for private markets.
(Preqin Private Capital Indices are time-weighted return indices that capture returns worth over $11.3 trillion in market capitalisation and are updated every three months.) S&P has a listed private equity index; funds tracker Morningstar examines the performance of private startups with a value of $1 billion or more via its Morningstar PitchBook Global Unicorn Indexes.
Kokolis said that MSCI’s client base of wealth managers, asset owners, asset managers, banks, hedge funds, insurance firms and others have growing needs for private asset insights, standards, and decision tools.
“The solutions that MSCI is
This publication asked Kokolis about the MSCI Wealth side of the organisation.
Offerings include MSCI Wealth Manager (formerly known as Fabric – a wealth technology firm MSCI acquired last year). This allows investment teams and advisors to personalise client portfolios while keeping to a house view via MSCI’s proprietary Similarity Score.
Kokolis argues that MSCI data strengthens a wealth advisor’s value proposition by helping them prepare meaningful investment proposals that capture the total client portfolio.
“It is no longer enough for advisors to only provide clients access to areas of the market, such as alternative/private investments. They need to show how they fit into the client’s total financial picture,” he said.