

FRONT OFFICE THOUGHT LEADERSHIP SERIES
Pushing the boundary of portfolio construction
Part 3 of 5: Building the Next-Generation Front Office
Contributors
Shirley Zhang
CFA, Senior Market Strategist
SimCorp, North America
Connect with Shirley
David Bardsley
Head of Wealth & Asset Management Advisory
KPMG Canada
Connect with David
Simcorp's Front Office Thought Leadership Series
A comprehensive series exploring next-generation front office capabilities for investment managers. From data velocity to portfolio construction and AI integration, discover how leading firms are transforming their front office operations for competitive advantage.
Pushing the boundary of portfolio construction
Part 3 of 5: Building the Next-Generation Front Office
As front office operations accelerate and boundaries between traditionally distinct teams dissolve, portfolio construction has emerged as the critical intersection where strategic investment decisions converge and materialize. Shirley Zhang explains,
In today's challenging investment landscape, where generating pure investment alpha grows increasingly elusive, portfolio construction has become the battleground where every basis point of outperformance is fought for.
This evolution has transformed portfolio construction from a simple position sizing exercise into a scientific discipline that must adroitly balance an intricate web of competing inputs, constraints, and objectives. Success requires a sophisticated optimization framework capable of simultaneously addressing multiple dimensions of investment complexity: from capturing alpha signals and implementing comprehensive risk controls, to seamlessly integrating compliance requirements, minimizing transaction costs and market impact, capturing tax efficiency, and delivering mass customization.
This sophistication extends beyond mere execution mechanics to the fundamental conceptual framework. David Bradsley notes
The conventional method of constructing portfolios by diversifying across asset classes often leads to unintended risk factor exposures. Forward-thinking firms are now intentionally curating their risk factor exposures—incorporating market, currency, and risk premia considerations—which not only enhances diversification and streamlines tactical asset allocation but represents a fundamental shift from traditional allocation frameworks.
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Mini Case Study: Reinventing Quantitative Strategy Management
SimCorp’s client: A leading global institutional investor managing over $340 billion in assets launched new quantitative strategies, requiring sophisticated portfolio construction tools that could match their ambitious investment objectives.
Key learnings: The Future of Portfolio Construction
Our expert contributors identified five key trends shaping next-generation portfolio construction:
- Investment success depends primarily on strategic asset allocation frameworks. A 2020 Vanguard study confirmed the seminal Brinson, Hood & Beebower findings that asset allocation—not security selection—drives the vast majority of portfolio return variability over time. This underscores why leading asset managers are prioritizing robust, technology-driven portfolio construction processes.
Risk management now operates as an integral component of the construction process itself. Zhang emphasized,
The sequential approach of building portfolios first and assessing risk later has given way to unified optimization frameworks where performance targets and risk parameters are evaluated simultaneously. This integration creates inherently more resilient portfolios capable of withstanding diverse market environments.
- The multidimensional complexity of today’s portfolio requirements—spanning factor exposures, ESG criteria, tax efficiency, and trading costs—demands exponentially more sophisticated optimization capabilities. The ability to handle non-linear relationships and competing constraints now differentiates industry leaders from followers in the pursuit of sustainable alpha generation.
- This evolution extends to portfolio structure itself, with forward-thinking institutions designing "all-weather" strategies organized around risk factor contributions rather than traditional asset classifications. These approaches, often implemented through dynamic overlay mechanisms, deliver superior adaptability to changing market regimes—a critical advantage in today's heightened volatility.
Sustainability continues to be an important objective for investment managers, driving the integration of comprehensive scenario testing as the emerging frontier in sophisticated portfolio design. Bradsley concluded,
By simultaneously optimizing for both financial resilience across diverse economic conditions while advancing sustainability goals, leading firms are creating truly holistic investment approaches that satisfy both performance objectives and evolving stakeholder demands.
Next in Series: The New Era of OMS and EMS
Join us for Part 4 where we explore "The New Era of OMS/EMS" - examining how leading firms are eliminating 'swivel chair' operations and creating unified trading experiences that eliminate fragmentation, reduce operational risks, and enhance execution quality.