Capital Allocators – Inside the Institutional Investment Industry
Bill Spitz was the longtime head of Vanderbilt University’s endowment before retiring, for the first time, in 2007. He has received numerous lifetime achievement awards for his work and is one of the legends in the business. After failing in his retirement, he joined Diversified Trust Company, a wealth manager with $6.5 billion in assets under management that he co-founded back in 1994.
Our conversation discusses managing an endowment in the early years, implementing unconventional investments, creating an edge as an allocator, selecting managers and conducting due diligence, exiting managers, challenging current landscape, and working with families.
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Show Notes
1:21 - (INTERVIEW STARTS)
1:30 – Early days at Vanderbilt and the landscape for university investment offices
3:17 – Career before working at Vanderbilt
3:59 – Transition from Wall Street to going back to his alma mater
4:48 – Pioneering Portfolio Management: An Unconventional Approach to Institutional Investment
5:23 – Out of the box ideas when he first got started
6:25 – Convincing the board to approve unconventional ideas
8:28 – Why Bill retired
9:28 – Diversified Trust White Papers
9:31 – What is the edge that allocators have when it comes to investing
9:33 – Paul Johnson and Paul Sonkin podcast episode
9:35 – Pitch the Perfect Investment: The Essential Guide to Winning on Wall Street
10:05 – Gaining an Edge in Investing
12:30 – Where can skill from an allocator perspective be applied
14:32 – Judging the skill of managers as an allocator
15:16 – Looking out to the future, how will the endowment model stack up against the traditional 60/40 portfolio
17: 47 - How do you manage clients when your strategy may not be keeping up with the S&P 500 in the short term
19:15 – Thoughts on bitcoin
20:00 – How Bill was able to get involved with Diversified Trust while working at Vanderbilt
21:47 – Differences in managing endowments vs taxable pools of capital
23:22 – Stories that either derail an investment process or educate someone to stay the course
24:23 – Manager selection process and what Bill looks for when choosing the right one
28:01 – Bill’s view on exiting managers
29:55 – How do you measure the evolution of a manager’s investing strategy, especially as the market changes
31:41 – What is different today about investing vs when Bill first started
33:56 – Do alternative and emerging investment streams deliver the returns that many hope for
35:13 – Why don’t endowments, foundations, or pension funds feel comfortable with moving chunks of their portfolio to cash
37:00 – How does Bill think about the balance of investments with higher return potentials against their higher costs
38:13 – Any categories that really pique Bill’s interest
39:22 – What does the asset management industry look like in 10-20 years from now
41:56 – What should aspiring money managers think about as they move forward in this business
43:09 – What Bill is most proud of in his career
43:54 – Favorite sports moment
45:01 – What teaching from Bill’s parents has most stayed with him
45:14 – Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother
46:10 – What information does Bill read that he gets a lot out of
46:20 – The Economist
46:33 – Wall Street Journal
46:34 – Bloomberg
46:45 – Life lesson that he wished he knew a lot earlier
47:29 – In his waning days, what advice would Bill give himself today