France’s FRR on policy environment, deglobalization and the bad ESG premium

A new policy environment is spurring a sense of optimism at Fonds de reserve pour les retraites (FRR), France’s pension reserve fund.

Executive director Olivier Rousseau, a long-time critic of grindingly low bond yields which he has called a “tragedy” for pension funds, particularly those forced to hold them due to regulatory conditions like FRR, can’t hide his enthusiasm for today’s environment of higher interest rates and fiscal tightening after a decade of financial repression.

For years, bereft of any returns, government bonds had become a volatility reduction tool or insurance in a risk-off climate, forcing investors to hunt for yields with lower quality fixed income. Elsewhere, it led to strategies that have now been exposed as risky, particularly hedging liabilities via LDI. Late last year many UK pension funds, prevalent users of the strategy, had to sell assets to raise cash to maintain the level of leverage needed to ensure they could hedge their liabilities when yields jumped sharply higher.

“LDI was protecting portfolios from the consequences of a further decline in interest rates when interest rates were already absurdly low and needed to go back into normal territory,” says Rousseau, who oversees a portfolio split roughly 70:30 to performance assets versus investment-grade bonds including French government bonds and other euro- and dollar-denominated bonds, plus unlisted assets.

Elsewhere he flags another risk area revealed by rising rates: “zombie” companies that have borrowed too much and will start to feel the shock of higher borrowing costs.

The long-awaited policy reset (after many false starts) means monetary policy is returning to normal. Interest rates are edging higher and fiscal policy has tightened, preventing governments indulging in binge borrowing because it now costs money to borrow.

Sponsored Content

The policy reset means that equities and bonds are an important source of diversification once again. “The arbitrage between interest rates and equities is back. We are in a normalised environment in terms of the policy mix,” he continues – although he cautions that a traditional 60:40 portfolio is still vulnerable to inflation.

If inflation surprises on the upside, investors will lose money on both equities (at least in the short term) and bonds.

“60:40 is a portfolio for a stable inflation regime or a modestly deflationary regime,” Rousseau says.

The new policy environment is feeding into strategy tweaks. For example, come the supervisory board’s asset allocation review in June, Rousseau notes a case for somewhat reducing FRR’s equity allocation in favour of high yield bonds, an allocation he calls something of a sweet spot.

High yields bonds are not overly vulnerable to inflation, and give a decent pick up over sovereign bonds, comparing favourably to investment grade credit. “The spread of high yield over investment grade more than pays for expected credit losses,” he says. Moreover, the lower duration of these assets also gives protection if inflation surprises on the upside.

Cashing in

Like many investors, FRR’s 13 per cent allocation to illiquid investments has provided some of the best returns in recent years. The portfolio has a French bias and includes investment in small-and mid-cap companies and French real estate. Built up slowly since 2013, and mindful of FRR’s liquidity constraints, Rousseau says last year the portfolio truly came right.

Recently FRR’s GPs have started to sell some individual stakes in the €1 billion private equity portfolio at significantly higher prices than where they had been valued, suggesting they had marked valuations at reasonable levels.

“It wasn’t a question of barking up the valuations and praying for validation,” he says, attributing success to good cooperation between the investment teams, management, and the governance. Will private equity continue its run? He says a small reversal this year is possible however if it happens, it will be limited.

Elsewhere the infrastructure portfolio has garnered stellar returns, also buoyed by a few sales. FRR’s small allocation to real estate (around €200 million) has also provided a steady return and the unlisted debt portfolio (€1 billion) returned a positive result. “This is good when you compare this to listed bonds which fell by 13 per cent,” he says.

“It would have been even better if we had succeeded in convincing the governance that there was also a strong case for select hedge fund strategies and insurance-linked strategies,” he reflects.

De-coupling

The policy reset may be fanning an easier investment environment, but Rousseau is mindful of key risks of which geopolitics, manifest in the increasingly fractious relationship between China and the west and ongoing war in Europe, is one of the most perilous. Mostly because of the challenge of finding protection and shelter for the portfolio if geopolitical tension snaps higher.

“Our portfolio has been constructed on the basis that all hell doesn’t break lose,” Rousseau says.

“Except, to some extent, holding US Treasuries and of course tail risk protections which are very expensive, there isn’t much you can do to protect equities and bonds if the Hormuz Strait is on fire,” he says, referencing one of the world’s most important trade routes. Adding, “geopolitics does not matter, except when it does. And today it’s not just neutral – not just noise.”

Positively, it is leading to investable trends (witness Apple’s boosted manufacturing operations in India, for example) that he says will bring increasing opportunities.

“Tapping into deglobalisation trends has very good days ahead of it,” Rousseau says.

And deglobalisation doesn’t mean that everything will be re-shored, he adds. Rather it means companies will build supply chains in countries they deem reliable and friendly.

Because FRR delegates to managers, the investor has no bearing on the day-to-day translation of these concerns on portfolio composition.

“I hope most of our managers are reducing their vulnerability to de-globalisation trends and adapting their portfolios to more recognised supply chains,” Rousseau says.

By law, all FRR’s allocations are managed externally either via mandates (around 80 per cent) or a subscription into collective open, or closed end funds.

Decarbonization

Rousseau’s other enduring concern is the lack of policy action around climate change.

“Governments must stop procrastinating. Policy action is coming, but it is coming too slowly,” Rousseau says, calling for regulation and carbon pricing that means it costs money for investors to hold polluting assets.

Rousseau says he is most encouraged by European disclosure regulation that will require European companies publish their climate exposure at a comparable level to financial disclosure.

“I hope there will be more similar initiatives in the rest of the world,” he says.

“This disclosure will reveal the big losers when the price of carbon finally goes up for real.”

Bad ESG premium

So far, 40 per cent of the equity and bonds allocation has been decarbonised and FRR puts additional demands on its managers every time it renews its mandates.

“It will keep coming down,” Rousseau says. However, like many other investors, he is concerned that divestment (without regulation) is leading to less responsible investors profiting from holding polluting assets.

Responsible investors, he says, are selling polluting assets only for them to be snapped up by other investors (hedge funds, family offices, some private equity, for example) not subject to the same regulation or stakeholder pressure.

This cohort of buyers only see carbon assets through a risk lens – and in the current environment “could have a nice run ahead” in what amounts to, in factor-speak, “a bad ESG premium”.

Only disclosure will reveal the true risk of holding these dirty assets, Rousseau continues.

“As long as carbon pricing remains too low, these investors can continue to hold these assets,” he says.

“What they are doing is mostly rational.

“Disclosure to the susceptibility of a hike in the carbon price is so important because these investors will react to this element. Everybody will see the risk picture more clearly.”

Leave a Comment

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

In an environment where multiple risks are emerging and their effects are compounding on the portfolio, CPP Investments' chief risk officer Priti Singh says the $572 billion fund is rethinking risk management from the ground up, shifting from reaction to preparation and embedding risk thinking earlier in investment decisions. She speaks to Amanda White about the fund's risk approach.

Sort content by

Kansas PERS cuts global equities

The Kansas Public Employees Retirement System is slowly reducing its exposure to global equities as it explores “just about everything else”. Amanda White spoke with chief investment officer Robert ‘Vince’ Smith about the fund’s plans for 2010 which include an asset/liability study and the reorganisation of its equities allocations. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Passive tilt for Massachusetts state fund

The $42 billion Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Management (PRIM) will move half of its developed non-US equity portfolio and 25 per cent of its emerging market equity portfolio into passive strategies and has begun a search for a single manager for each asset class with a commencement date of May. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2

World’s largest DC plan to tender investments

The $244 billion Thrift Savings Plan, the largest defined contribution plan in the world, faces an enormous operational challenge this year as it moves from an opt-in to an opt-out default for US federal employees. Amanda White spoke with executive director Greg Long about the fund’s plans for 2010, which include a substantial investment tender.

Global views spur LPFA’s bets on growth, diversification

With the ability to make investments of up to £50 million ($80.4 million) without board oversight, the London Pensions Fund Authority (LPFA) has boosted its exposure to emerging markets while also buying global infrastructure, commodities and solar energy. Chief executive Mike Taylor told Simon Mumme about some further opportunities, such as Brazilian agriculture, the fund

Strong internal team powers New Jersey fund

The $68 billion New Jersey Division of Investment (NJDI) has made claims to be the best performing public pension fund in the US in fiscal year 2009. This is made all the more impressive considering the internal investment team, which manages a large majority of assets, numbers only 16. Amanda White looks behind the scenes

Wisconsin remains confident in disciplined approach to active management

The Wisconsin Investment Board is not tweaking its asset allocation or adding inflation-linked assets to its line-up in reaction to the market turmoil, rather, it’s continuing to focus on generating alpha from active management. Chief investment officer, David Villa, spoke with Amanda White about the fund’s disciplined approach to hiring and firing. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content

Previous