PIMCO’s Rigorous Approach to Managing Portfolio Liquidity Risk

SUMMARY

  • At PIMCO, liquidity risk management is a crucial component of portfolio construction and is complemented by diligent monitoring. We have started to see pockets of disturbance in liquidity in certain markets, and we believe the risk that future shocks result in market liquidity events has increased.
  • We use stress testing and vigorous historical data analysis to determine targets for highly liquid assets at a portfolio level. These stress tests help assess the impact from potential tail events or adverse market moves.
  • Being sufficiently liquid today does not mean that a portfolio will be liquid next week. PIMCO’s rigorous portfolio management process employs internally developed analytics to manage the risks of shifting markets and liquidity challenges.

Many market watchers cite liquidity – or the lack of it – as a major contributing factor when an investment vehicle or an entire sector suffers a significant loss during a period of market stress. This view is understandable given the empirical relationship between market liquidity and market volatility and the elusive nature of liquidity conditions during recent stress events including the 2008 financial crisis.

PIMCO’s view is that a robust portfolio liquidity risk management program can both help ensure that portfolios are well-positioned to withstand stress scenarios and allow portfolios to potentially take advantage of opportunities provided by market dislocations. Liquidity risk management is a pillar of the PIMCO portfolio and risk management process. It is a key consideration in portfolio construction and is complemented by diligent monitoring every business day within a framework that provides flexibility to incorporate impacts from evolving market conditions.

We describe market liquidity and portfolio liquidity as two interconnected but distinct variables:

  • Market liquidity refers to the ability to purchase or sell securities in the market.
  • Portfolio liquidity is defined as the ability to adjust positioning in a portfolio in response to flows or changing market conditions, or to satisfy investor redemption requests without structurally changing portfolio exposures.

Three reasons to manage liquidity

One component of the PIMCO approach to managing portfolio liquidity is setting risk-sensitive portfolio-level targets for highly liquid assets.1 There are three primary motivations for maintaining portfolio liquidity in highly liquid assets: 1) Commingled or mutual funds must be prepared to meet potential client redemption requests on demand. 2) Portfolios must be prepared to meet potential collateral or margin call needs for derivative or forward settling positions. 3) Portfolios should be in a position to take advantage of potential market dislocations. They do this by having sufficient “dry powder” to buy attractive assets in market stress scenarios, with the intent to contribute positively to overall portfolio returns.