Future Fund adds risk and generates best-ever return

The Future Fund, Australia’s A$196.8 billion sovereign wealth fund raised its risk profile in the year to June 30, resulting in the fund’s best-ever one-year result of 22.2 per cent.

In the past quarter public equities allocations across domestic, global and emerging markets all increased 35.8 per cent of the fund. And private equity allocations increased from 14.6 to 17.5 per cent from March to June 2021.

The risk on came from deploying cash which shifted from the target weighting of 18.6 per cent at the end of March to 13 per cent at the end of June, which was still above the 11.9 per cent weighting a year earlier.

In an interview in March the fund’s CIO, Sue Brake said that the cash allocation is not about risk aversion but about risk management – and the risk of not achieving the fund’s mandate is the primary risk it faces.

The Future Fund has a return target of CPI+ 4-5 per cent and has outperformed that since inception in 2006. In the past year the 22.2 per cent outperformed the return target of 7.8 per cent by nearly three times.

But the Future Fund chief executive, Raphael Arndt, says over the medium-term returns are going to be harder to produce, particularly given the shifts in the investment environment created by the COVID pandemic.

Sponsored Content

While risk has been added via listed equities markets, Arndt says over time the fund will increase its focus on skill-based and less liquid opportunities where the fund and its partners can create value.

Some persistent macro themes have been behind the Future Fund’s investments and have been driving some of the more than 30 transactions the fund has participated in the past year. This includes taking advantage of some very cheap pricing in inflation, diversifying away from the US dollar, and adding more currencies and it now has much lower exposure to any one currency risk. It also made an allocation to commodities for the first time.

In addition, Brake told Top1000funds.com the listed tangible markets – in infrastructure and property – looked cheap compared to equities and the fund took a large position in those.

In particular the fund made a further investment into Powering Australian Renewables, and a new partnership with Telstra InfraCo Towers.

Brake says the Future Fund has more interest in anything that is uncorrelated to equities, including the alternatives portfolio it is already active in.

 

Asset Owner:Future Fund

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

NY Common allocation review

The $210 billion New York State Common Retirement Fund is considering pushing its return target below 7 per cent as it embarks on a deep dive review of its asset allocation, a practice that comes around every five years.

Evolving the City of Austin pension fund

Amanda White sat down for an hour-long fireside chat with David Veal, CIO of the $3 billion City of Austin Employees Retirement System. They discussed private equity, managing strategic relationships, internalisation and adopting Norwegian investment beliefs.

Winter is coming

Investors are preparing for the future and the inevitability that 'winter is coming' by reducing exposure to risky assets, the delegates at the RFK Human Rights Compass conference heard.

CalPERS prepares for market dislocation

CalPERS' CIO Ben Meng is preparing for a market dislocation by ensuring the $354 billion pension fund has enough dry powder on hand to take advantage of a drawdown. A liquidity management action plan is a top priority for the fund.

UK’s PIC sees strong renewables pipeline

The United Kingdom’s £31.4 billion ($39 billion) Pension Insurance Corporation, an insurance company specialising in securing the liabilities of defined benefit pension schemes, is growing its infrastructure allocation to renewables and student housing and pushing into new markets in the Ireland and Spain.

UniSuper looks to China

The A$70 billion Australian superannuation fund for higher education and research workers, UniSuper, is keen on China. CIO John Pearce explains why.

Previous