UMR will add to private assets, more

France’s fourth-biggest pension fund, Union Mutualiste Retraite (UMR) will slightly increase its allocation to cash, private equity, private debt and infrastructure in response to high valuations and the late cycle, director general Paul Le Bihan says, in an interview from the fund’s Nantes headquarters.

UMR, one of France’s few pension organisations, runs three separate funds, of which the €7.9 billion ($8.9 billion) Corem is the largest; with about 300,000 members, two-thirds of whom are still active, the fund has a healthy growth-seeking allocation comprising equity, property and infrastructure.

Real assets

Real assets, which Le Bihan favours for the diversification, liability hedging and duration benefits, account for about €900 million in the Corem portfolio – about 11.5 per cent of total assets. The lion’s share of the allocation is in real estate with the remaining 2 per cent in infrastructure. UMR has steadily increased its real-estate allocation over the last decade. In that time, it has also diversified from a bias towards residential housing in Paris, entering new allocations to assets such as hotels, healthcare, logistics and industrial centres.

The portfolio has also diversified assets among France, the rest of Europe and the US, although 70 per cent still remain in France. UMR is managed dynamically and includes direct investment with allocations to funds and funds-of-funds. A key priority through 2018 has been increasing direct real estate investments, which now make up about 40 per cent of the property portfolio, Le Bihan says.

UMR’s infrastructure portfolio dates from 2008. Strategy is focused on generating recurring long-term revenues in regulated markets, visible in its stakes in European telecoms infrastructure. Investments are split between funds (75 per cent) and funds of funds (25 per cent). Tried-and-trusted partners with good track records are favoured.

Sponsored Content

Diversification

UMR’s ability to build a diverse real assets allocation outside Europe is crimped by European regulation. Solvency II makes it costly for the French pension fund to invest overseas because of a perceived risk premium.

“Due to the cost of the Solvency II regulation, if we change the risk in the portfolio, our priority is to invest within the eurozone,” Le Bihan explains.

Other new rules President Emmanuel Macron has proposed for France’s pension system are also a cause for concern.

“We think the new rules for French pension funds’ ‘third pillar’ under discussion are not favourable to customers and could be dangerous for our asset liability management,” Le Bihan says.

Under the proposals, retirees will have an “open choice” of either a lump sum or annuity product in the decumulation phase. Le Bihan argues that lump sums should make up only a small proportion of assets during the decumulation phase, to ensure a lifelong income. He adds that the policy also threatens to reduce the fund’s liability horizon, which will damage asset performance.

Equity

Corem’s 18.3 per cent equity allocation is invested in two funds-of-funds UMR manages: the Select Europe fund and the UMR Select OECD. Allocations include European equities, US equities, frontier markets and emerging markets, along with a direct allocation to Chinese listed equities. Each fund-of-funds holds about 30-40 funds and strategy is counter-cyclical and value driven, shaped around different styles of active stockpicking using a broad range of asset managers.

About 4.4 per cent of Corem’s assets under management are invested in hedge funds and, as with equity, the UMR Select Alternative portfolio is all invested in funds-of-funds. Although Le Bihan says he is looking into some of the fund choices, he has no plans to change the allocation, which seeks to reduce the volatility from the equity portfolio. UMR has invested in hedge funds since 2002. The pension fund decides on a specific investment strategy internally, before selecting individual hedge funds with the help of its fund managers, as with the equity allocation.

UMR has an internal investment team of four. It has “premium relationships” and frequent contact with five asset managers but works with about 30 in all. The priority is to build long-term relationships based on mutual understanding and confidence.

“We are very selective, particularly for private debt and private equity,” he says.

UMR adjusts its targeted rate of return to market performance and reinforces the investment-grade side of the portfolio when risk levels increase. Despite the impact of low interest rates on the bond allocation, UMR returned 4 per cent in 2017. The pension fund is also improving ESG integration. It now excludes from its investment universe tobacco firms and companies selling firearms to civilians. It also signed the Principles for Responsible Investment this year.

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

The sudden death and strange afterlife of globalisation

Daniel Celeghin, managing partner at INEFI, argues globalisation is not dead but has morphed so that post-2022 globalisation is a series of deeply rooted local investments that together result in a global portfolio.

The five characteristics of a future portfolio: CAIA

The traditional 60/40 portfolio allocation is no longer enough. The opportunity for alpha is not gone, but the low-hanging fruit has long been harvested, and the path toward higher absolute returns has gotten far more nuanced according to a new report from the Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst (CAIA)

Asset owners fear rising inflation and falling equity valuations

The 2022 annual CIO Sentiment Survey, a collaboration between Top1000funds.com and CaseyQuirk, finds asset owners most concerned about equity valuations and inflation. After three years of fee rises, asset owners are paying less for investments while CIOs in 2022 are also working with a smaller manager roster.

Beyond traditional portfolio construction: incorporating uncertainty

Incorporating uncertainty into the asset allocation process is a complicated but essential ingredient of building portfolio resilience, something investors are valuing more than ever in an environment where inflation, geopolitical and climate risks dominate. GIC and BlackRock have both developed asset allocation frameworks that incorporate investors’ aversion for uncertainty.

HOOPP and OPTrust: Funded status focus

Despite threats to pension funds’ funded status including the investment environment, plan maturity, longevity risk and low interest rates affecting the funding valuation, Canadian funds HOOPP and OPTrust celebrated healthy funded status in recent reports. Top1000funds.com looks at their approach.

AustralianSuper rebalances equities

Australia’s largest superannuation fund, the A$250 billion AustralianSuper, plans to decrease its equity allocation in favour of fixed income according to the fund’s CIO Mark Delaney, as he predicts central banks will tap the brakes on monetary policy amid concerns of rising inflation.

Previous