AP2 returns active Chinese equities back to quant

AP2, Sweden’s SEK 400 billion ($38.8 billion) buffer fund, recently divested its allocation to three Chinese asset managers overseeing an allocation to China A shares despite spending many years carefully building up the successful stock picking portfolio. High points of the strategy included the portfolio returning an average alpha of 30 per cent in 2017.

The decision to build an externally managed Chinese equity allocation back in 2013 was a marked change of tack from AP2’s quant approach across global developed and emerging market equity. The only other fundamental allocation is to Swedish equity where market knowledge and expertise is close at hand.

Now the allocation to Chinese companies  is back under that quant umbrella where it accounts for 20 per cent of the pension fund’s 11 per cent allocation to emerging markets and where investment decisions are drawn from models fed by a huge data pool. Around 70 per cent of AP2’s assets are invested in risk assets of which 50 per cent is equity and 20 per cent is real assets including property and forestry.

The decision to divest the mandates was driven by the buffer fund’s quest for efficiency and cost savings which has led to around 80 per cent of assets now being managed inhouse including all public markets, explains CIO Erik Kleväng Callert who joined AP2 in May 2022.

“Managing money in house allows you to be lower cost, more dynamic and more flexible in your investment process,” he says. “We can’t invest in China with the same fundamental approach we have in our home country. It would be impossible to have a fundamental approach to managing Chinese equities from Sweden.”

The shift in strategy also comes against the backdrop of AP2’s integration of key themes amongst which is growing geopolitical tension.

Sponsored Content

“Of course, we remain concerned about developments in China, and follow it really closely,” he continues. “Geopolitical tensions are emerging that will impact many of our allocations and assets but we still have a fair share of Chinese equities.”

In the quant allocation AP2 seeks the highest risk adjusted returns via a multi-factor approach that includes value, quality, low volatility and ESG factors that favour the most sustainable companies in line with AP2’s Paris-aligned benchmarks.

Brown opportunties

Another key trend influencing strategy is the climate transition. Much of the investment team’s time is spent understanding how to adjust the portfolio, getting to grips with not just the financial risk from climate change but how the companies AP2 owns will impact the environment and climate change going forward.

It calls for a particular approach to investment that is more active than quant.

“You cannot be 100 per cent passive in ESG. You must have some kind of smart beta; you have to have a more fundamental process,” says Callert. “We have a lot of ESG data and research on every company we own. If a company doesn’t do the right thing, we will look into it and we will potentially sell it off.”

AP2 mitigates climate risk in the portfolio by avoiding investments in high emitting sectors in line with Paris-alignment and its own emission targets. It also actively invests in solutions like new energy infrastructure, green bonds where the funds are earmarked for solutions, and has a large allocation to forestry.

But Callert, who draws on years of experience in sustainable investment from previous roles at PRI Pensionsgaranti, PP Pension & Insurance and Nordea Life & Pensions, says ESG integration is far from straightforward.

“We must be careful to always look at all our investments from a risk and return perspective. Investments must have a good business case as well as support the climate transition. Sustainable development doesn’t just involve green investments, investments must have the right risk return.”

Carefully picking winners and avoiding stranded assets is leading the team to research cheaper brown investments in the hope they grow in value as they transition their operations.

“We are thinking of investing in businesses that have yet to become green, i.e. companies that are focusing on transitioning their operations. This might include energy companies that are focusing their investment budget on switching from fossil fuels to renewable energy or steel companies developing new processes,” he says. “We see a value if you can buy them a little cheaper because many investors don’t like brown companies. We can buy them and fix them and this is a good option.”

For all AP2’s long term view, stable asset allocation and risk levels and determination to ignore short term market volatility, Callert will tilt the portfolio to a short term view or dislocations.

Today that includes opportunities in the undervalued Swedish Krona, currently cheap compared to its long-term equilibrium.

“We can change our exposure to FX in the portfolio so today we have a little less exposure to foreign currencies because see them as overvalued against the Swedish krona,” he concludes.

 

Asset Owner:AP Fonden 2 (AP2)

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Aware Super mulls return to infra funds; builds AI-driven data edge

Aware Super is considering a return to infrastructure funds after years of favouring direct investments. The infrastructure allocation currently stands at $15 billion and the fund sees benefits to access a “broader set of offerings” and opportunity sets via fund commitments to GPs, its head of infrastructure Mark Hector says.

Treasurer Steiner on Oregon’s private equity future

Top1000funds.com editor Amanda White speaks to Oregon State Treasurer, Elizabeth Steiner, about the future role and expectations of private equity, how a maturing of the asset class puts pressure on returns, and the private/ public asset mix in the fund’s four-yearly asset allocation review which has just begun.

Why asset owners should not outsource innovation

Asset owners have traditionally counted on external asset managers to pursue bold innovations rather than stretching their limited internal resources to do so. But leading Stanford academic Ashby Monk has warned in a new paper that this long-standing model is distilling short-term thinking in pension management.

HOOPP: Light covenants in private credit are a growing source of concern

The boom in private credit has been accompanied by a spike in lighter covenants, reducing protection and guardrails for lenders says Jennifer Shum, senior managing director, structured and private credit at HOOPP, and warns of mounting risks in private credit.

West Yorkshire prepares to up the pressure on Shell and BP

A new approach to holding the major oil companies to account will see the West Yorkshire Pension Fund, together with a cohort of other UK and European pension funds, demand BP and Shell explain their business plans in a world of declining demand for fossil fuels.

NBIM quantifies the portfolio threat of economic fragmentation

An economically fragmented world, where different economic blocs refuse to collaborate, impose tariffs and restrict foreign investments, would have disastrous consequences on the $2.2 trillion portfolio of Norges Bank Investment Management. Its latest stress test offers a rare glimpse into the concrete portfolio impact of deglobalisation.

Previous