Towers Watson

Towers Watson est l’un des plus importants cabinets mondiaux de conseil qui aide les entreprises à améliorer leur performance grâce à une gestion efficace du risque et de leur capital humain et financier. La société offre des services en matière de politiques d’avantages sociaux, de gestion des talents, de rémunération, de gestion du risque et des actifs qui y sont liés. Towers Watson compte 14 000 collaborateurs dans le monde.

Articles

September 2016

Note The world’s 300 largest pension funds – year ended 2015

Total assets of the world’s largest 300 pension funds fell by over 3% in 2015 (compared to growth of over 3% in 2014) to a sum of US$14.8 trillion according to Pensions & Investments and Willis Towers Watson (...)

July 2016

Note Investors go alternative

The research - which includes data on a diverse range of institutional investor types - shows that pension fund assets represent a third (34%) of the top 100 alternative managers’ assets, followed by wealth managers (19%), insurance companies (10%), sovereign wealth funds (...)

March 2016

Note Diversity wins : Persistent investor interest in smart beta, particularly within diversifying strategies

Willis Towers Watson’s institutional investment clients globally allocated $10bn, via 175 selections, to diversifying investment strategies in 2015. Within this grouping, liquid alternatives attracted the most interest with over $8.1bn, of which approximately half is in smart (...)

February 2015

Note Global pension fund assets reach new highs

Global institutional pension fund assets in the 16 major markets grew by over 6% during 2014 (compared to around 10% in 2013) to reach a new high of US$36 trillion, according to Towers Watson’s Global Pension Assets Study released (...)

January 2015

Note Corporate Pension Plan Funding Levels Declined in 2014, Reversing Much of 2013 Gains, Towers Watson Analysis Finds

The pension funded status of the nation’s largest corporate sponsors reversed direction in 2014, dropping nine percentage points as falling interest rates (which increased liabilities) and the impact of new mortality tables were only partially offset by strong returns on (...)

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