USS: Low leverage and US exposure helped navigate UK bond market turmoil

The Universities Superannuation Scheme, USS, trustees of the largest private pension scheme in the UK, withstood September’s turmoil in the government bond market for five key reasons. Speaking at USS’s 2022 Institutions’ Meeting, Simon Pilcher, chief executive of USS Investment Management, said the asset manager uses less leverage than most other UK pension funds. “Leverage has not been a problem for us,” he said. At end of September, the Valuation Investment Strategy had 16 per cent in leverage.

Pilcher said USS has also been protected because of diversification. In an important seam to strategy, USS buys US government bonds to hedge inflation and interest rate risk, no relying exclusively on UK government bonds. In a third pillar, the asset manager was also supported by its allocation to private markets which protected the downside and have less volatility than public markets.

A strategy that reduced the portfolio’s exposure to sterling also helped protect the pension fund. The investment team had observed for a while that sterling tends to perform badly in volatile markets. Fearing volatility, strategy centred around increasing the non-UK element of the portfolio, said Pilcher, adding that the team had also ensured plentiful stocks of cash and collateral in preparation for market volatility as yields rose through the year. When this was turbo charged in September, the scheme was prepared.

Finally, Pilcher credited USS’s governance for the scheme’s fortitude during September’s market turmoil. This enabled the investment team to act quickly at a time fast decision-making was critical to protect the downside and exploit opportunities.

Pilcher said the turmoil in the bond market caused UK pension funds such a challenge because of the quantum and speed of the move. “We saw daily moves five times larger than we’ve ever seen before,” he said. However, he noted that the direction of travel – aka higher bond yields – is positive for pension funds because it leads to lower liabilities and a larger surplus/lower deficit.

Hedging in the US

The portfolio is divided between a 60 per cent allocation to growth assets and a 40 per cent hedge ratio whereby USS hedges 40 per cent of the inflation and interest rate risk embedded in its liabilities.

Sponsored Content

Pilcher explained that USS has increased its liability hedge ratios for both interest rates and inflation over time. However, a large chunk of that hedging has been achieved outside the UK, mostly in US. “As bond yields have risen, it causes our hedge ratios to rise without doing anything to our underlying investments. The rise in hedge ratios is due to the market bringing it to the portfolio,” he said.

Still, he said that the investor has taken a more active approach to hedging inflation risk, seeking to add hedging when the breakeven rate has fallen. For example, USS increased hedging in the UK when breakeven rates were lower last July. “This was a cheap opportunity to acquire inflation in the UK,” he said. Similarly, the team looked for opportunities to hedge inflation exposure via the US market, given US inflation is structurally cheaper to buy than the UK. “Our actions have helped as inflation has grown around the world – hedge ratios have increased but they have been acquired at opportune times,” he said.

USS’s aggregate exposure to growth assets has been constant at 60 per cent of the portfolio. However, Pilcher said that in recent months USS has reduced that exposure given concerns about the outlook for growth assets. USS’s exposure to private markets has grown however, with a particular focus on private equity and real growth – inflation-linked assets like infrastructure. The fund hasn’t invested enormous amounts in private assets through 2022, but private assets have helped protect the portfolio and delivered well for the scheme, he said.

Indeed, Pilcher said that USS has seen a material increase in its exposure to private assets. Not via an increase in net investments but by other factors including the stronger dollar, taking the dollar-denominated private asset percentage up with it.

Stakeholders heard that USS  runs more of its allocation to private markets in-house compared to peers. Internal management has allowed USS to tailor investments more closely to its own needs – for example sourcing long-term infrastructure assets with inflation characteristics that also give an equity premium. Moreover, USS also manages to pay less to external managers than peer funds where it does outsource.

 

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

POBA performance reflected in funding level

The $15 billion fund for Korean public officials, POBA, has reached new heights including a diversified, resilient portfolio, full funding and a stellar return due to a global alternatives program. Amanda White spoke to CIO Dong Hun Jang.

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.

CalPERS’ new asset allocation to take on more risk

The largest pension fund in the United States, the $469 billion CalPERS, is in the middle of an asset liability modelling exercise to set a new asset allocation by June 2022. Chief executive Marcie Frost says it’s the most significant decision the board makes with regard to the investment portfolio and that achieving a return target of 6.8 per will require “pushing everyone’s risk appetite”.

CalPERS reduces equities universe

In the first story of an exclusive series examining investment portfolio innovation at CalPERS, Amanda White looks at the global equities portfolio where the universe of stocks was recently halved.

APG positions for a digital future

APG, the biggest pension provider in Europe, is positioning itself as a digital pioneer with investment in the large-scale use of data, workflow automation and digital analytical platforms. A leader in funds management, most notably sustainability, it is once again a frontrunner by embracing technology.

Finding alpha: Church Commissioners outperform

The £9.2 billion portfolio managed for the Church Commissioners for England has returned 9.7 per cent over 10 years through a focus on sustainability and a willingness to try things early, such as forestry and venture capital. Amanda White spoke to CIO Tom Joy about where the fund looks for alpha and the need for a non-traditional allocation.

Previous