CalSTRS looks at big picture with total portfolio function

The $315 billion CalSTRS is looking to build a top-down portfolio function to better incorporate liquidity management alongside portfolio construction and to consider how it can better deal with often lumpy cashflows to maximise returns, while continuing to keep a tight rein on risk.

CalSTRS is developing a new top-down total portfolio function to better incorporate liquidity management alongside portfolio construction.

Deputy chief investment officer Scott Chan says the fund is at the early stages of enhancing its liquidity oversight and is building the teams and tools to centralise that function.

“Portfolio construction is at the heart of how we look at liquidity oversight, as a tool to enhance how you construct the portfolio. They go hand in hand,” he told Top1000funds.com in an interview.

“But it is integrating these components into the portfolio construction that is the hard part. You need all of your private and public markets working together and that’s hard for organisations to get right.”

Chan says the fund already has significant experience and tools for liquidity management across the various divisions, but the maturation of the portfolio meant evolving and enhancing the liquidity function was important.

Sponsored Content

The fund has a mature member profile and it pays more in benefits than it receives in contributions. In addition, a two-decades old private markets allocation means cashflows need smoothing.

“We have been increasing our allocations to private markets over the past two decades which has worked out remarkably well,” Chan says.

“But if you start every year with a negative cashflow and layer on more volatile cashflow there is an ongoing need to manage liquidity. For example, in 2021 we had a ton of cashflows come back from private investments but today not so much.”

CalSTRS’ liquidity priorities are paying benefits, avoiding selling assets at a discount, taking advantage of dislocation opportunities, and building a resilient portfolio that can rebalance to asset-allocation targets and take advantage of opportunities in the event of a recession.

“Liquidity is a tool that enhances your portfolio construction and helps build a resilient portfolio,” Chan says.

“Liquidity is the lifeblood. In this environment it’s becoming more and more important.”

A core goal in the liquidity and leverage management is to smooth out cashflows over a business cycle.

“Some years you get a lot of cash back and others you don’t, it’s lumpy cashflow,” Chan says.

“Over a cycle you can smooth that out using leverage and liquidity tools.

“We are not intending to take on permanent amounts of leverage, thinking of it more as a way to enhance the portfolio construction over a business cycle.”

Chan says the intention is that balance sheet/liquidity management will add to the existing investment strategy and risk unit which already looks after asset allocation.

A team will be hired, from both internal and external resources, and sit under a head of total portfolio management.

“It will be really critical to get this right,” Chan says.

“It is important to integrate this tightly and weave it into portfolio construction. It will be a multi-year evolution and phasing. Our organisation needs to mature into the idea of how we enhance the liquidity management.”

Chan says it is not just the technology and resources that need to evolve, but the governance structure as well.

“As we evolve we will continue to build out those risk processes,” he says.

“And we will have to build out further governance too, related to how we make the decisions. It’s going to be a multi-staged evolution for us.”

ALM and asset allocation evolution

The $315 billion fund recently went through an asset/liability exercise and made three significant changes to its asset allocation.

The global equities allocation was reduced by 4 percentage points with 2 per cent of that going to a new private debt allocation. The fund had previously invested in private lending through its innovation bucket and this is the first time that it has had its own allocation.

“Private credit is an incredible opportunity today,” Chan says.

“When you think about the portfolio of the future, here you have something near mid-teens returns and you are high in the capital structure, which is better in a recession. It is a critical part of our asset allocation going forward.”

CalSTRS’ innovation portfolio has been an incubation bucket for many asset classes that now have their own, more permanent allocation like private credit, inflation-sensitive assets and the risk-mitigating strategies bucket, which is where global macro, CTAs and other risk-mitigation hedge funds sit.

That bucket is now going to be expanded to consider other opportunities to add to diversification.

“We’re looking at how we can design greater flexibility to the portfolio,” Chan says.

“For example if there is a recession can we take advantage of the opportunities.

“The innovation portfolio has done well historically. Bonds might have returned 1.7 per cent over the last 10 years and we got a lot more return out of the asset classes [in the innovation bucket] and got diversification. We will continue to expand that opportunities bucket to flow into different areas. It gives us that flexibility that’s important in portfolio construction and asset allocation because the market is a lot more uncertain.”

It also allocated a further 1 per cent to private equity, taking it to 14 per cent, and another 1 per cent to infrastructure.

CalSTRS had a one-year return to June 30 of 6.17 per cent and a three-year return of 10.1 per cent, well above the actuarial rate of return of 7 per cent.

Leave a Comment

Public equity manager challenges the case for private

Public equity manager challenges the case for private

Loomis Sayles’ Aziz Hamzaogullari has questioned whether asset allocators are giving private equity more credit than it is worth, saying the case for investing in PE rests on flawed return measurement, hidden risks and high fees and that public equities should be treated with the same “patience” that PE receives.

Sort content by

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.

Oregon’s private equity future

Oregon State Treasury is one of the longest-standing investors in private equity but as allocations pushed beyond the outer policy limit and a maturing asset class puts pressure on returns, a recalibration was necessary. Amanda White spoke to Oregon State Treasurer, Elizabeth Steiner, about the future of private equity.

Meaningful increases in value: BCI talks ESG uplift in private equity

ESG integration in BCI's $25 billion private equity portfolio produces meaningful, double-digit percentage increases in value through focusing on strengthening operational resilience, unlocking growth, and building more valuable businesses. A paper by BCI and Stanford University’s Long-Term Investing Initiative showcases the findings through case studies.

Previous