Ignore diversification: BCI’s Dunatov

Stefan Dunatov, head of investment strategy and risk at Canada’s BCI, says long term investors should forget about diversification at the strategic level and instead focus on buying growth beta assets.

Dunatov, who joined British Columbia Investment Management two years ago, said the most successful portfolios over the last 40 years invested in equities, real estate and infrastructure which were all just various plays on growth. Under his guidance, the $170 billion fund has increased its allocation to private assets and focused on buying investments with predictable income flows.

“We have to be honest with ourselves and admit that being long growth beta is the answer to investing in the long term,” Dunatov told a roomful of asset owners and consultants at a recent Conexus Financial conference. “It exposes what I call the fallacy of composition when it comes to portfolio theory. Diversification works at a portfolio level. Diversification doesn’t go up, it doesn’t work at the strategic level and at the strategic level you want to own growth beta.”

The former chief investment officer of Coal Pension Trustees Services said that with interest rates near zero, institutional investors had to think differently about monetary policy, which could mean the markets will have to contend with negative interest rates for the next 20 years. He said it was time to “think outside the box and think a little more laterally and unconventionally.”

“When you are sitting down to current long term strategy that you have, you have to disconnect current zero rates from what valuations are telling you,” he said. “How do you reconcile a zero rate world with valuations and equity risk premiums still telling you that you are probably going to get 6 or 8 per cent in the equities space? How does that work?”

Dunatov said the challenge for asset owners right now was figuring out how to invest in a zero rate policy world that was still growing, albeit slowly. He said BCI, which manage assets for British Columbia’s public sector, spends a lot of time focused on liquidity in the portfolio to make sure the strategy of owning growth assets is robust enough in the event of a downturn.

Sponsored Content

“That is probably the most important thing,” he said. “How do I know that I’m not going to sell them in a drawdown? We spend a lot of time on the liquidity aspect of that. Just imagine that there are only two sorts of bad worlds – a hard stop world like 2008 or a slow stop world like 1991,1992, 1993. We need to know that we will have the liquidity to get through both of them. As we are in net outflow mode, crystallising losses destroys wealth.”

Even so, one of Dunatov’s three key changes at BCI has seen the fund increase its allocation to private assets, a repeat of his strategy at Coal Pension where private assets had doubled by the time he left to make up closer to 45 per cent of the portfolio. The other changes include investing down the capital structure, particularly in private credit, as yields have rallied and a focus on owning assets with predictable income streams.

“Whether that is in equities, private credit, infra, real estate (we are looking for) more predicable income flows,” said Dunatov. “When it comes to equities, I would point that even in the crisis, lots of companies kept paying their dividends. Nestle still sold lots of milk products around the world and still kept paying dividends. So there are really good companies around that world that still do that.”

As a result, the strategy has seen BCI switch money into real estate, sell public equities in favour of private credit and real estate and buy more private equity, where the fund is “looking at deals that maybe (it) would not have done beforehand,” said Dunatov. He added that the fund had also sped up the reduction in exposure to the Canadian market to make the portfolio more global.

As for emerging markets, the investment strategist said while he was less convinced on the debt side the fund had made a “general push” into more peripheral markets. “We are not far off what you would call a benchmark position,” he added.

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

Global CIO survey: lowered expectations

Connecticut-based financial services management consultant, Casey Quirk, and institutional investment specialist publication, top1000funds.com, joined forces in a global chief investment officer survey to measure the sentiment of asset owners, and the extent to which the 2008 crisis has had an effect on the behaviour of internal investment teams, their outlook and corresponding asset allocation. With

Finnish fund diversifies out of Europe

Over the past five years, Finland’s 5.4 million people have watched with alarm as the eurozone they joined as founder members has descended into financial turmoil. So it is no surprise that Keva, which manages €34.4 billion ($47.1 billion) on behalf of Finland’s municipalities, as well as administering state and Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland

ATP reunites alpha and beta after 6 years

Alpha and beta rely to a large extent on exposures to systematic risk factors, so goes the “2013 thinking” of ATP in reversing the decision to separate alpha and beta in its investment portfolio six years ago. ATP has separate hedging and investment portfolios, with the hedging portfolio significantly larger at around DKK 670 billion

Methodist morality delivers mainstream returns

When John Wesley, the 18th century Anglican cleric, preached that business practices should not harm one’s neighbour, he never imagined that his principles would guide the global investment strategy of an $18.4-billion pension fund. Today, the General Board of Pension and Health Benefits of the United Methodist Church, based in Chicago, ranks as one of

Modern portfolio theory drives Volkswagen Stiftung

The €2.3-billion ($3-billion) assets at the Volkswagen charitable foundation in Germany are powered by portfolio theory and diversification. The foundation is so keen on modern portfolio theory that its founder Harry Markowitz gets a mention in its annual report. Chief investment officer Dieter Lehmann says he is sure “that his correlation analysis isn’t correct at

USS powers into diversity

In the past few years the £34-billion ($54.7 billion) Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) has substantially diversified its asset allocation, including a large alternatives allocation, and extended its investment team from 65 to 105. In the latest chapter of the fund’s investment department reincarnation, from October this year a separate but fully owned USS company, USS

Previous