Trustees urging UK pension schemes to stress test for spike in yields

Defined benefit schemes in the United Kingdom have put aside much larger collateral buffers since the LDI crisis last year with implications for how they invest. Pension funds typically stress tested their portfolios around a 3 per cent increase in gilt yields, but after last year’s gilt crisis, many funds now scenario-plan for an 8 per cent increase in yields.

“Since the gilt crisis last year, my role has focused particularly on making pension fund portfolios more resilient,” says Tegs Harding, professional trustee with Independent Governance Group.

“DB funds have put in place more prudent collateral buffers than what they had during the crisis. We haven’t been sat on our hands. We’ve got much better collateral defaults in place and we can deal with yield increases.”

Harding is chair of the investment committee at £20 billion ($25.3 billion) Legal & General DC Mastertrust and also looks after a book of seven other pension schemes including the £5 billion Diageo Pension Scheme, where she is also chair. The Mastertrust provides pensions for  around 200 employers from around the UK and has around 1.9 million members.

The large yield increases in gilts last year had a huge impact on DB and DC funds in the UK. DB funds with large LDI exposure and an illiquid book had large and rapid calls for capital and needed to implement contingency plans quickly. To shore up collateral, they divested some assets and organized loans from sponsors to ensure they could maintain their hedge.

Investment strategies revisited

Harding says her role includes working with pension funds to revisit their investment strategies.

Sponsored Content

“Some DB schemes with, say, a 15 per cent allocation to illiquid investments going into the crisis, will now find themselves with a much bigger allocation (up to 30-40 per cent) to alternatives because of changes in the valuations in their portfolio,” she says.

“We work with them on how to change this.”

UK DC funds have larger collateral pools in place and are much better able to deal with yield increases that DB funds, says Harding.

However, DC funds are still navigating the impact of last year’s correlation between equities and bonds.

“On the DC side, we are focused on making sure funds have invested enough in illiquid assets,” Harding says.

“Investing in alternatives through the growth stage of a DC fund leads to better member outcomes. We look closely at Australia’s DC model where assets are made to work harder with more investment in illiquids and the local economy,” she says.

Harding says governance is getting more complex as regulation comes thick and fast, with trustees required to respond to it.

“Much of a trustee’s job is around policy setting and setting the overall ambition and objectives of a pension fund. And geopolitical risk is increasingly impacting the investment climate,” she says.

“My role is to help pension funds deal with these challenges and keep up with the big systematic risks that need managing.”

Integrating biodiversity

A growing element of her role involves working with pension funds on how to integrate biodiversity. She notes many pension funds began to integrate ESG with a focus on climate and TCFD reporting, but this is evolving. “Now there is a realisation that we can’t just focus on climate in the transition,” she says.

“Many companies won’t do well if we don’t tackle biodiversity too, and we must look at things holistically.”

She notes that diversity amongst UK trustees is increasing because the older generation of trustees is retiring and new, younger people are stepping in.

“Professional trustees are more diversified than member-nominated trustees,” she says. “Pension funds take diversity seriously and want trustees from different backgrounds.”

“My primary role is to make sure that people get the benefits they are entitled to. I provide support on how to invest the assets and value the liabilities; check they are administered correctly and make sure employers are contributing the right amount. We also advise on investment and cyber and operational risk.”

 

Leave a Comment

More from this fund

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

USS invests in EM linkers

The £65 billion Universities Superannuation Scheme is investing in inflation-linked emerging market bonds to profit from developing economies higher bonds yields and levels of inflation.

CalPERS wants PE ideas for new entity

The CalPERS’ board has approved the first step in the creation of a new private equity model, and now the fund’s CEO, Marcie Frost, is looking for advice on how to structure such an entity.

MetallRente builds risk return culture

A new fund in Germany combining liquidity, dynamic equity exposure and strong ESG focus is against the mould of the country’s more conservative, insurance-led investment style, and Heribert Karch, managing director of MetallRente which offers the fund, is determined to bring a return-seeking investment culture to Germany.

Oregon makes fees work

The $77. 3 billion Oregon Public Employee Retirement Fund has continued to achieve top decile returns at the same time as de-risking and reconstituting half its giant portfolio.

There’s alpha in Chinese equities

The returns of long-term investors are driven by economic growth so it is difficult to ignore China as a big part of the future investment opportunities, a panel of experts told delegates at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium.

OTPP boosts bonds, late cycle protection

OTPP increased its bond allocation from 22 to 31 per cent last year. The defensive strategy was aimed at taking advantage of rising yields in fixed income markets and protecting the portfolio from a potential economic slowdown given the late cycle and decade-long economic expansion.

Previous