CalPERS sees opening in VC

With more than $170 billion in equity exposure, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System is the biggest institutional sharemarket investor in the US. But chief investment officer Ted Eliopoulos says CalPERS is missing out on opportunities because private companies are waiting longer for their initial public offerings.

“What we see as an opening in the marketplace is how long private companies are staying private now,” Eliopoulos said in an interview at CalPERS’ semi-annual retreat meeting on January 16 in Petaluma, California.

Eliopoulos wouldn’t say how big a private company investment portfolio CalPERS is envisioning, but his interview remarks came after a panel of investors spoke at the meeting about whether the largest pension system in the US could take advantage of its home-state edge in a region that is headquarters to Silicon Valley and its start-up culture.

“We think there is an opportunity for CalPERS to invest in private companies, perhaps at later stages of the venture cycle,” Eliopoulos said in the interview. “Companies that have gone through their first, second, third, fourth venture round but aren’t ready yet…to go public, that’s an opportunity.”

Eliopoulos did not say when CalPERS would make a decision on the private markets portfolio. He did tell the $357 billion pension system’s board at the meeting that CalPERS had taken a “high level” of equity risk to meet annualised return expectations of 7 per cent over the next three decades. The fund’s new asset allocation plan, which goes into effect on July 1, increases the target for equity from 46 per cent of the portfolio to 50 per cent.

CalPERS doesn’t invest in major private companies that are yet to go public, such as Uber, like some other public pension plans have done. It does have a private equity portfolio worth about $26 billion, but most of it is devoted to buyout funds. Venture funds make up just $1 billion of the system’s private equity portfolio.

Sponsored Content

They have also performed poorly. On a five-year annualised basis, ending June 30, 2017, they have returned 4.7 per cent, compared with the private equity portfolio’s overall 11.5 per cent for the same time period, CalPERS statistics show.

Venture capital should be part of CalPERS’ private equity portfolio, said Steve Poizner, a start-up investor who spoke at the retreat meeting, but he said it should have a higher-quality set of investments.

“The point is that CalPERS historically has invested in venture funds that aren’t in the top tier,” said Poizner, who has also served as California’s insurance commissioner. “The top tier in Silcon Valley hasn’t wanted to partner with CalPERS for a variety of reasons. So the returns to CalPERS in the venture capital class haven’t been all that great. CalPERS needs to get more flexible so it can work with the top-tier VCs because the top-tier VCs produce the vast majority of the profits in the VC sector.”

Eliopoulos agreed, saying some top-performing VC funds had shunned CalPERS because of transparency rules the pension plan required.

“It’s absolutely critical in the field of active management in general – private equity, private markets, venture – to attach yourself to the very best talent in the marketplace,” he said.

Eliopoulos said an ongoing review at the fund is looking at alternative business models for private equity and venture capital, including outsourcing the portfolio. He said no timetable has been set but CalPERS has been in the process of soliciting proposals from investment managers for the outsourcing program as part of its review.

Leave a Comment

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest, the largest workplace pension in the UK, says that private credit managers who prioritise institutional clients will be more favourably viewed. The £61 billion ($82 billion) fund has awarded a £450 million ($605 million) US direct lending mandate to Crescent Capital this month, citing the manager's institutional-client-first approach as a key attraction.

Sort content by

UTC and AEW build recipe for RE success

Industrial group UTC and global real estate manager AEW have structured a joint-venture investing in value-add real estate. In a relationship forged on trust and friendship, the allocation has grown to become the corporate pension fund’s best performing asset class.

Is PE a superior form of ownership?

Almost exactly 30 years ago, a famous article by Michael Jensen in the Harvard Business Review predicted that private equity would “eclipse” the public corporation because it was a superior form of corporate ownership. Academics at Oxford's Said Business School examine whether this prediction has played out.

Danish fund cuts managers for better ESG

The €9.5 billion DanishPædagogernes Pension, PBU, is in the process of consolidating the number of managers in its listed equity portfolio. The decision at the fund - which has around 10 large, focused equity mandates - is linked to an ambition to reduce the number of companies in the portfolio in the belief that fewer companies in the 42 per cent actively-managed equity allocation allows greater ESG oversight.

Are US co. profit margins sustainable?

US companies have some defensible profitability advantages but elevated margin levels may be poised for a reversal of fortune. The tide appears to be turning on some of the secular trends that have supported high US profit margins.

QSuper: standing out from the crowd

QSuper CIO, Brad Holzberger, has long stood out from his peers by loading up on long-term government bonds and even the recent sudden collapse of yields, as investors started pricing in slower growth, hasn’t deterred him from sticking with this asset class. The retiring CIO of one of Australia's largest funds about expectations.

ADIA boosts internal active fixed income

The $700 billion Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, ADIA, is boosting its internal fixed income capabilities and scaling up capacity to run active strategies in-house as it simplifies the portfolio to become more fleet-of-foot.

Previous