University of California: Equity boost, and fossil fuels back on the table

University of California’s chief investment officer Jagdeep Singh Bachher said its office of investment is considering increasing its allocation to equities by 3.5 per cent. The extra allocation will be drawn from winding down the absolute return portfolio.

“The absolute return category in our asset allocation is down to zero. I propose moving 100 per cent [of that allocation] into public equity,” said Bachher, speaking during the endowment’s March investment committee meeting in its first gathering of the year.

Rather than increase the allocation to bonds or private markets, Bachher called for bold and decisive strategies in public markets where opportunities include AI, life sciences, defence and an array of tech growth industries that are poised to transform the businesses operate.

“The tech decade just getting started,” he said.

Bachher said that international equity ex-US will offer some of the most compelling opportunities because of the sudden shift in government policies and dislocations caused by recent geopolitics.

“Countries around the world have woken up,” he said, citing Europe as an example because Germany has just embarked on an economic stimulus that will unleash defence spending and overhaul German infrastructure.

Sponsored Content

“[We are seeing] the kind of spending in some parts of Europe we have not seen in decades [as] Europeans come together and stimulate the economy,” he said.

Still, despite his enthusiasm for opportunities outside the US, the board heard that the rest of the world is more likely to feel the pain of US trade policy than the US economy. He also said the record-breaking returns in equity over recent years are unlikely to be repeated in the “next five years.”

The public equity team are also exploring regional diversification in emerging markets like India, hunting for opportunities in sectors including power and utilities. However, he warned against stock picking strategies. “It’s very tough picking individual stocks.”

The portfolio has around 60 per cent in stocks (11 per cent in bonds and the rest in private assets), and Bachher said public equities typically return between 6-8 per cent. At their height in the last nine months, they have returned as much as 13 per cent.

Reconsidering fossil fuels?

Baccher didn’t rule out re-entering fossil fuels either. Re-investing in oil and gas would mark a break with strategy since the university excluded fossil fuels in 2020 when it completed the sale of more than $1 billion in assets from its pension, endowment and working capital pools.

“So far, being ex-fossil fuels is ok. But there is no policy of ours that [says] we shall never invest in oil and gas. [I am] putting that on the table as it’s a consideration I entertain as I think about oil and gas.”

However, some markets remain a no-go. The University of California is still negative on China, having reduced its allocation to the country three years ago. Bachher said he has no plans to increase the allocation to China outside the investor’s MSCI ACWI exposure because of uncertainties around tripping executive orders.

“I don’t know if I am going to be investing in something or have ties to something [that] in essence violates an executive order of the US government,” he said. Citing the compliance risk of inadvertently violating a rule that “he is not aware of,” he said China has become uninvestable for American investors, despite opportunities like electric car manufacturer BYD and AI company DeepSeek. The risk means the university has ruled out the idea of picking China-based managers and investing outside the index:  he also flagged challenges that venture capital firms invested in the region are having in exiting holdings in China.

Bachher said investors now face two separate investment worlds: China and America. University of California is playing the American world but he said “a wild card policy” could change that if the US and China agreed to a trade deal.

The two powerful countries have agreed to temporarily lower tariffs imposed on each other’s products for 90 days after negotiations that took place in Geneva, as talks towards a longer-term trade arrangement continue.

“If you asked me what could be a wild card in all of these policies – [if] President 47 and the Chinese leadership decided to do a trade deal [it would provide] a huge boost to China and the US in a wild card.”

Managing liquidity is the number one concern

Bachher said managing liquidity and ensuring he has enough capital on hand in the current uncertain environment for US universities is his number one concern. Under the Trump administration, US university endowments face higher taxes and threats to cut research funding. It’s triggered a renewed focus on the simplest forms of capital endowments manage.

California Regents has a working capital pool of around $11 billion divided between a short-term investment pool (STIP) of around $2 billion and a total return investment pool (TRIP) of around $9.4 billion.

“If you feel like you want to shore up operating liquidity, take the unrealised gain in your TRIP pool and put in your STRIP pool,” he said.

Bachher also urged Wall Street firms that benefit from investing money on behalf of universities, endowments and public pension funds, to do more to support academic institutions under fire from the current administration.

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

Positive stock and bond correlation will make portfolios more volatile

Today's positive stock-bond correlation means balanced portfolios will be more volatile without the natural hedge that bonds have long provided to stocks.

NBIM to major on contrarianism and technology over the next three years

NBIM has unveiled its latest investment strategy for the period 2023 to 2025 outlining a contrarian approach and greater integration of technology in its investment processes in a quest to become the best large investment fund in the world.

GIC: Building balanced portfolios for the long run

Navigating the two challenges of heightened macro uncertainty and an increased allocation to private assets could require a fundamental evolution of the asset-allocation process, argue Grace Qiu Tiantian and Ding Li from Singapore’s GIC in a paper written with MSCI’s Peter Shepard entitled Building Balanced Portfolios for the Long Run.

Partnering with best-in-class managers yields stellar results for TIFF

A focus on partnering with specialist, differentiated, active managers with help from “the best board in America” has generated more than 200 basis points a year for TIFF. Amanda White looks at the fund’s approach to manager sourcing and the opportunities for alpha in a tough investing environment.

Bridgewater warns markets still haven’t factored in slower growth

Markets have not begun discounting a decline in corporate earnings as Central Banks, serious about taming inflation, continue to destroy demand. Investors should expect another contraction. Meanwhile recent market moves in the UK suggest the growing risk of policy missteps, particularly if rate rises become politicised.

Why AP4 invests with emerging hedge fund managers

In contrast to other investors, AP4 invests the vast majority of its hedge fund allocation with emerging managers in a strategy it believes taps both outperformance and lower fees. We look at how it spots talent and what strategies it focuses on.

Previous