| dc.description.abstract |
The stewardship of retirement savings portfolios and their corresponding capital
deployments is of global interest. The pension funds under the board of trustees have been
reporting low assets to GDP ratio contribution as well as poor financial performance
depicted by low and unpredictable return on assets especially in Kenya. The purpose of
this study was to examine the mediating effect of portfolio diversification in the
relationship between pension fund board characteristics and financial performance of
Universities pension funds in Kenya. The study was guided by the following objectives to:
assess the effects of board size; gender diversity, and financial expertise on financial
performance; examine the effect of board size, gender diversity and financial expertise on
portfolio diversification and; determine whether portfolio diversification mediates the
relationship between board size, gender diversity and financial expertise and financial
performance of Universities pension funds. The study was grounded on the Modern
Portfolio Theory, Agency Theory and Stewardship Theory. A positivism research paradigm
was adopted for this study. The research adopted an explanatory research design. Panel
data from 26 university pension funds which met the inclusion criteria between 2015 and
2022 with a total of 208 observations were analyzed using both descriptive and inferential
statistical techniques. Secondary data was sourced from the audited annual returns from the
Retirement Benefits Authority by the Schemes trustees after whom document analysis was
done. Prior studies have examined how board characteristics influence financial
performance especially in the corporate world. However, there is limited research that has
investigated whether this relationship operates through portfolio diversification and
particularly within university pension funds. This study has addressed this gap by testing
the mediating role of portfolio diversification on the financial performance of Universities
Pension funds. “The study findings revealed that: board size had a positive effect on
Financial performance (β = 0.1306, ρ<0.05); gender diversity had a positive effect on
financial performance ((β = 0.1306, ρ<0.05) and financial expertise had a positive effect on
financial performance (β = 0.1123787, ρ<0.05). On testing whether board characteristics
under study had an effect on portfolio diversification (Mediator) the study findings
indicated that: board size had a negative effect on portfolio diversification (β = -0.2879,
ρ<0.05); Gender diversity had negative but significant impact on portfolio diversification
(β = -0.0259, ρ<0.05 and financial expertise (β = 0.0122, ρ<0.05), financial expertise had
a positive and significant effect on portfolio diversification (β = 0.0981, ρ<0.05). regression
results for portfolio diversification on financial performance showed that portfolio
diversification had a positive and significant effect on financial performance (β =
0.2654451, ρ<0.05). Mediation analysis results revealed that: portfolio diversification does
not mediate the relationship between board size and financial performance (Z = -0.636);
Portfolio diversification partially mediates the relationship between gender diversity and
financial performance (Z = 3.213) and portfolio diversification partially mediates the
relationship between financial expertise and financial performance (Z = 2.880). The study
concluded that board size, gender diversity, and financial expertise significantly enhance
the financial performance of university pension funds; financial expertise improves
portfolio diversification; while gender diversity and board size showed mixed effects.
Portfolio diversification positively influenced performance but partially mediated the
effects of gender diversity and financial expertise. The study recommends that university
pension funds ensure optimal board size, promote gender diversity, and prioritize financial
expertise among trustees for better performance. Boards should also adopt strategic
portfolio diversification aligned with fund objectives. |
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