CalPERS stays the course with portfolio

The board of administration of the $350 billion California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) has opted for a steady-as-she-goes approach to strategic asset allocation, selecting from four candidate portfolios the one that most closely resembles the system’s current investment mix.

As part of the asset liability management (ALM) process that CalPERS conducts every four years, the board was presented with portfolios labeled from A to D offering different asset allocation mixes and long-term risk and return characteristics.

At its meeting on December 18, the board opted for Portfolio C, requiring minimum adjustments to its existing policy. The chosen portfolio has expected volatility of 11.4 per cent a year and an expected annual return of 7 per cent, which supports a board decision to reduce to 7 per cent the discount rate applied to the fund’s liabilities.

The new portfolio will come into effect on July 1, 2018.

The expected return of the selected portfolio was calculated using a so-called ‘blended’ return – a combination of a short-term (1- to 10-year) estimate, based on CalPERS’ own investment office projections, and a long-term (11- to 60-year) estimate based on actuarial forecasts, with an allowance for fees.

The other portfolios considered offered lower expected volatility but also lower expected returns, which would have required a further lowering of the discount rate and a reduction in CalPERS’ funded ratio, which stands at about 68 per cent. The investment team advised the board that adopting a portfolio with an expected return of 6.5 per cent a year would have immediately reduced the funded ratio to 64 per cent, increasing the burden on participating employers to make up the shortfall.

Sponsored Content

Other portfolios that promised higher returns would have eased that burden on employers but also would have exposed the fund’s assets to greater risk.

In a statement, the chair of the CalPERS investment committee, Henry Jones, said the selected portfolio “represents our best option for success while protecting our investments from unnecessary risk”.

CalPERS chief executive Marcie Frost said the portfolio selected took into account employers’ concerns about funding pension liabilities but balanced those against managing portfolio risk to avoid “leaving the fund more vulnerable during an economic downturn”.

The CalPERS investment office recommended the portfolio, and three of the fund’s investment consultants supported its selection.

Wilshire Associates noted that while the other candidate portfolios represented “efficient expressions of the approved capital market assumptions (CMAs) subject to basic and appropriate constraints”, the selected portfolio had two distinct advantages: it would allow the fund to maintain its 7 per cent discount rate, and as the most similar to the current portfolio it would make implementation more efficient, “with limited transactional activity and related costs”.

Pension Consulting Alliance deemed the selected portfolio appropriate for meeting CalPERS’ longer-term 7 per cent assumed rate of return, said it incorporated several of the fund’s key investment beliefs, and called it “a cost-effective solution when compared to the alternatives”.

Meketa Investment Group also supported the selection of Portfolio C, noting that all of the candidates set the same 8 per cent long-term allocation to private equity, the asset class on which it consults.

CalPERS’ investment office said the recommended portfolio would protect the fund’s assets from increased interest rate risk more than the other candidates, and would also maintain the current levels of equity risk and expected volatility, meaning the “potential for [employer] contribution changes” should remain the same.

Asset class Portfolio C Actual allocation as at 30 September 2017 Asset liability management (ALM) policy portfolio 2013
Global equity 50% 50% 47%
Private equity 8% 8% 12%
Fixed income 28% 19% 19%
Real assets 13%
Real estate 9% 11%
Infrastructure/forestland 2% 3%
Inflation assets 0% 8% 6%
Liquidity 1% 4% 2%
Blended return (1-60 years) 7.00% 6.85% 7.09%
Expected volatility 11.40% 11.50% 12.00%
Source: CalPERS

 

Leave a Comment

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

As concerns in private credit mount, Colorado PERA CIO and COO Amy McGarrity says the pension fund isn’t seeing any strains in its growing allocation to the asset class, arguing that long-term investors are shielded from the risks because they can lock up their capital to weather market cycles.

Sort content by

GPIF feels equity’s wrath; active equity reboot

Japan's GPIF feels the heat of see-sawing global equity markets in its latest quarterly results while the latest annual review reveals a shakeup in global active equity allocations in search of more manager diversification.

San Bernardino tilts to US equity; informed rebalancing reaps rewards

San Bernardino County Employees’ Retirement Association, SBCERA, plans to increase its exposure to US equity in preparation for de-globalization trends. Sarah Rundell talks to CIO, Donald Pierce about asset allocation and the fund’s ‘informed rebalancing’ program.

Beyond traditional asset allocation

Today’s challenging climate has led diversified investors like GIC, Singapore's sovereign wealth fund, to explore different approaches to portfolio construction to build resilience. Grace Qiu and Ding Li, both senior vice presidents in total portfolio policy and allocation at GIC discuss their new research.

The ingredients for success in private credit

Investing in private credit brings income and supports capital preservation, but as more investors enter the asset class, competition for assets is set to heat up. Investors from South Carolina Retirement Systems Investment Commission, Investment Management Corporation of Ontario and Ohio School Employees Retirement System explain their approaches.

Investors prioritise governance, tilts and liquidity

In a wide-ranging session at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Chicago Booth School of Business investment executives from HOOPP, CalSTRS, USS and Cbus reflect on the need for strong governance in the current climate, diversification and liquidity.

Bridgewater advises downside protection as turning point appears

Investors should shape strategies that protect against the downside, said Jeff Gardner, senior portfolio strategist, Bridgewater Associates.  Speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at the Chicago Booth School of Business, he said that investors should prioritise protecting against losses in the current environment: increasing returns can be additive to long-term wealth, but missing the big

Previous