Cash and overweight to US equities pays at New Jersey

The New Jersey Division of Investment generated double digit returns in fiscal year 2024 while maintaining good liquidity and dry powder on hand with an overweight to cash and cash equivalents.

Last year, cash continued to provide a real return barbelled against a slightly overweight position to US equities in a “cautiously optimistic” strategy that afforded the investor exposure to the strongest performing asset class while maintaining maximum liquidity.

In the State Investment Council’s annual meeting held in January, director Shoaib Khan told trustees that the fund had been buoyed by a “constructive market environment” through the year. In 2025, the team expects interest rates to remain higher for longer, allowing the portfolio an opportunity to continue to benefit from higher yields on its holdings in cash. But Khan said the cash position is likely to decline through 2025 given the robust pipeline in new private market opportunities and pending closings.

The Division, one of the largest US pension fund managers, oversees the assets of seven public pension systems totalling approximately $78 billion as well as other pools of state capital that include the $41 billion Cash Management Fund, CMF.

Khan highlighted the variations between the actual allocation of the pension fund portfolio and its target allocations, explaining that the policy benchmark is a measurement tool but the team doesn’t always manage the portfolio to the benchmark. Sometimes it’s preferable to retain dry powder, alternatively the team will “put their foot on the pedal” in areas of greater return like US equity.

Asset classes that struggled last year included private equity. Real estate also continued to work through the continued cap rate adjustments. The fund returned 10.7 per cent last year while five-year annualised returns are 7.7 per cent and the ten-year return is 6.94 per cent.

Sponsored Content

In a “constructive environment” for markets, Khan said that diversity is crucial to adding value because returns from different asset classes differ. Private equity, US equity and international developed market equities are the best asset classes over the past decade. In another example of the importance of diversification, commodities was a  star performing in 2021 and a laggard in 2023 and 2024.

A milestone for emerging managers

2024 was also a milestone in the division’s emerging manager program where the investor seeks to invest with smaller, off the radar managers in order to access a larger and more robust set of investment opportunities. The platform is also an opportunity to identify the next generation of managers at an earlier point in the cycle.

Last year the emerging manager roster expanded beyond private equity to include an allocation to private real estate and private credit managers. In 2025 the Division will look to expand the platform to potentially include selected public market asset classes.

Khan noted the importance of looking forward and the steady evolution of the portfolio since the division was set up in 1951. Back then the entire portfolio was invested in fixed income.

By 1975, 10 per cent of the portfolio was invested in US equity and today it is divided between global growth, real return, income and defensive assets comprising fixed income (24 per cent) US equity (28 per cent) international equity (20 per cent) risk mitigation strategies (3 per cent) private equity (13 per cent) real estate (8 per cent) real assets (3 per cent) and cash (2 per cent)

With an eye on the future, Khan discussed how AI will impact portfolio construction and risk management. Trustees heard from Sorina Zahan, founder and chief executive at Aiperion, a consulting, technology and scientific research firm focused on risk. She explained that AI will help investors deal with uncertainty and support portfolio optimisation around market, liquidity and liability risk.

Integrating AI will support investors integrate different factors simultaneously and harmonize processes to support portfolio construction. The conversation touched on the importance of adopting a new way of thinking and abandoning linear thinking to move to a systemic, total portfolio approach.

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

New economy needs big public sector

Widgets are on the wane and disruption is the new normal, creating a need for a larger public sector with more market power, according to the former US Treasury Secretary, Larry Summers.

CalSTRS CIO backs long-haul investment

The investment community’s obsession with short-term earnings is detrimental but convincing investors to back the slow, patient money is a tough sell, according to the CIO of one of the largest US pension funds, Chris Ailman, speaking at the annual SASB conference.

Climate disclosure a bumpy road

Implementing the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures is challenging, fortunately some investors are paving the way, a PRI climate conference heard.

Musing towards a more hopeful AI future

Predictions about artificial intelligence are often dire prophecies of humanity inventing the agent of its own demise or obsolescence. But if we consider that human cognitive powers might actually grow in response to the advancement of AI, the potential outcomes become less threatening.

Price war hitting active fees, too

Fee compression is here to stay. Only the few active managers that have met their benchmarks over the past few years have been immune. But make no mistake, asset owners will be reviewing all strategies for their value and fee models will continue to evolve.

Firearms Principles provide a target

A coalition of 13 institutional investors, led by the California State Teachers’ Retirement System, has crafted principles for engaging with entities that manufacture, sell or regulate guns in a way that fosters a responsible civilian gun industry and reduces risk. The guidelines are intentionally flexible so each organisation can apply them in accordance with its own models for engagement.