Utah to look for PE managers

The $37 billion Utah Retirement Systems (URS) will allocate to private equity managers directly, rather than through funds-of-funds, for the first time since it began investing in the asset class 35 years ago.

Private equity is the only asset class where URS still doesn’t control manager selection. The fund has 9 per cent allocated to private equity, which has returned 10.9 per cent over 10 years.

The move to picking its own managers is a bid to improve risk-return and will involve reducing its manager roster and focusing on larger investments in more concentrated portfolios. URS is still unsure about the number of key manager relationships it will whittle down to for private equity but knows it has way too many now.

The 2017 URS annual report shows the fund spent $4 million on private equity investment advisory fees that year. It uses Albourne Partners as a consultant.

Going directly to select managers means URS will move away from so-called gatekeepers, the funds-of-funds that make commitments on behalf of clients. URS’s 2017 annual report states that, “the majority of the private equity partnership investments are managed by two gatekeepers”.

As part of the change, URS is looking internally at what its value proposition to general partners might be.

Sponsored Content

“Managers say, ‘I can take money from anywhere, so why should I take it from you?’ ” URS chief investment officer Bruce Cundick says. “We are going to lose in the fee game and in aligning interest if we can’t give them a value proposition.”

Utah has invested in alternatives since the early 1980s, so it has a long tail of lessons it has learnt. This has taught Cundick, who has been at the fund since 2001, that success in the alternatives allocation depends greatly on implementation. The fund has 40 per cent across private equity, real assets and absolute return.

Across alternatives, URS looks for a couple of things in the managers with whom it partners; one of them is investments that use their personal capital. Observing managers’ reactions to the fund’s insistence on this point is insightful, Cundick says.

“If a manager says it isn’t going to put money into a fund it’s trying to sell, it shows me that it’s not motivated enough to be on our side of the table and it’s better for us to walk away,” Cundick says.

URS’s manager due diligence involves in-depth qualitative research modelling new managers’ returns onto URS’s portfolio to analyse how their strategy will affect risk.

“We scenario-test every manager to see what they will contribute on a risk basis,” Cundick explains.

Alignment involves other areas, too, such as insisting managers take on the duties that assure their good behaviour.

“We would struggle to understand how someone would outright refuse to be a fiduciary to the fund they manage,” Cundick says.

Fee negotiation hinges on three basic concerns: Is it fair, is it well aligned, and how capable is the manager?

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

CDPQ’s real estate arm Ivanhoé Cambridge talks agility and evolution

Two thirds of Ivanhoé Cambridge's real estate allocation used to be invested in return-dragging office and retail assets. Now, in a complete reversal, two thirds is invested in logistics and residential real estate alongside a growing allocation to alternative life sciences

CalPERS weathers SVB hit; resilience and transparency pays

Norway's sovereign wealth fund and Sweden’s largest pension fund Alecta are among funds with heavy losses from the SVB collapse. For CalPERS, which only had a small exposure, the tumultuous weekend highlighted the importance of resilience and transparency with the team quick to identify exposures and provide analysis.

Alaska grows wary of private equity

Alaska's CIO Marcus Frampton explains why he's keen to pare back private equity. Writing smaller cheques comes with consequences but he'd rather get the right portfolio exposures ahead. Absolute return and RE become a focus.

Growth equities to shine in 2023 if interest rates stabilise

For investors who believe interest rates will stabilise in 2023, growth equities such as electric vehicles, emerging markets fintech and some luxury brands could be strong investment prospects, according to equity portfolio specialist Raj Shant from Jennison Associates.

Tough choices for PE investors in 2023: MassPRIM battens down

2022 was one of the most challenging years for private equity investment for years. Successful investment in today's volatile and challenging market involves vintage year diversification and steady pacing. And the MassPRIM investment team warns that aggregate headline US private equity valuations doesn’t tell the whole story.

Switzerland’s Publica hit by equity, fixed income correlation

Hit by last year's unusual correlation between equities and bonds, and in a bid to avoid higher long-term inflation, Switzerland's €45.6 billion Publica kick-starts a new strategic asset allocation that will reduce the bond allocation and result in a search for new managers.

Previous