Improving Alpha: Jim Bethea on Resetting the Learning Process of Endowment Performance

Improving Alpha: Jim Bethea on Resetting the Learning Process of Endowment Performance
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How do Chief Investment Officers at leading endowments reshape their investment teams to foster both organizational excellence and a culture where top talent is recognized and retained?

Jim Bethea, CFA, CAIA, CIO of the West Virginia University Foundation, shares his perspectives on these priorities, addressing the capital needs of academic institutions, the integration of artificial intelligence in portfolio allocation, and more. Listen to his in-depth discussion in the latest episode of the Improving Alpha podcast below.

Michael Oliver Weinberg, co-founder, Improving Alpha Podcast Series

 

 
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Many talented endowment CIOs evolve from engineering backgrounds, consultancies, and other disciplines. These past experiences allow CIOs to transform investment office teams, broadening the search for alpha through improved portfolio construction, balancing liquidity concerns, outpacing endowment peers, and creating an environment where investment staff are valued for their continued contributions.

On the latest Improving Alpha podcast, Michael Oliver Weinberg is joined by Jim Bethea, CFA, CAIA, Chief Investment Officer, West Virginia University Foundation.

By the time this episode airs, Jim will have been in the WVU Foundation role for only a few months, but the insights that he provides from his time at RVK Consulting, the University of Iowa Center for Advancement, and now the WVU Foundation are priceless for institutional asset owners.  

Key takeaways from Jim Bethea’s discussion with Michael include:

- What were the lightbulb moments that made Jim decide to make a switch to endowment portfolio management?

- When sitting in the CIO seat at a major endowment, why should you look less at inflation and more towards fee spending and risk tolerance? Risk in PR, liquidity, etc.

- What is Jim’s mindset when the campus needs capital, and how to navigate that when considering future fiscal year projections?

- Staff buy-in and how that helps to accelerate an investment edge or interest level across the team on the search for alpha across various asset classes. More importantly, if there isn’t an edge in a given asset class, can beta be leveraged to generate median returns?

- Why having an ESG policy might be hurting your approach to managing total portfolio returns.

- How AI and future innovations in technology will be shaping his portfolio allocations.


- Red flags in VC fund managers and why you should be worried as an endowment CIO if these managers start touting 3X gains.

- Reshoring efforts, incremental capital destination with GPs, retaining staff, and more!

About Our Guest: Jim Bethea, CFA, CAIA, Chief Investment Officer, West Virginia University Foundation.


West Virginia University Foundation 


Jim Bethea is the Chief Investment Officer of the West Virginia University Foundation. He oversees the management of the Foundation’s investment portfolio, bringing decades of experience in institutional investing, manager research, and portfolio construction. Prior to joining WVU, he served as the Senior Vice President and Chief Investment Officer at the University of Iowa Center for Advancement, where he led investment strategy and expanded the endowment’s portfolio diversification.

About Our Host: Michael Oliver Weinberg, CFA

For three decades Michael has invested directly at the security level and indirectly as an asset allocator in traditional and alternative asset classes. Most recently he was a Managing Director, Head of Alternative Alpha, on the Investment Committee, and a board member at APG, a Dutch pension provider. Previously he was the Chief Investment Officer at MOV37 and Protege Partners. Michael is also an Adjunct Professor of Economics and Finance at Columbia Business School, where he teaches Institutional Investing, an advanced MBA course that he created.

Michael is a published author, having written for The New York Times, international investment books, and other publications. Michael has been interviewed by the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, CNBC, Bloomberg and Reuters. He is a frequent panelist, moderator and lecturer for investment banks, institutional and family office organizations, and business schools. 

The information covered and posted represents the views and opinions of the guest and does not necessarily represent the views or opinions of Vidrio Financial, and/or our host, Michael Oliver Weinberg. The Content has been made available for informational and educational purposes only. The Content is not intended to be a substitute for professional investing advice. Always seek the advice of your financial advisor or other qualified financial service provider with any questions you may have regarding your investment planning.

Michael is an Adjunct Professor of Economics and Finance at Columbia Business School, where he teaches Institutional Investing.

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