Funds SA cuts active risk as CIO puts stable beta first

Con Michalakis

Australia’s A$50 billion ($36 billion) Fund SA has culled the number of active strategies in its equity portfolio and reallocated the capital to passive and low-risk quant investments, as chief investment officer Con Michalakis says stable beta carries more weight than alpha in today’s multi-asset portfolio.  

The fund manages capital for 11 pension, endowment and foundation clients in the state of South Australia. The biggest among them is the A$40 billion superannuation fund, Super SA, which is a pension fund only open to government workers but under pressure to compete for members with the public-offer, more commercialised super funds in a highly pro-consumer-choice industry.

In recent years, too many drivers in traditional active management have become a source of underperformance, according to Michalakis, whose key priority when he became CIO in February 2025 was to make Super SA “peer competitive” again.

“The game’s changed [in active management]. I don’t believe you can rock up with a wooden tennis racket playing in a graphite world. It’s actually changed,” he tells Top1000funds.com in an interview from the fund’s Adelaide office, pointing to the prevalence of sophisticated multi-manager hedge funds, quant firms and thematic ETFs making it more difficult for active managers to find an edge.

To reduce active risk, Funds SA cut the tracking error in its Australian and global equities book from close to 3 per cent a few years ago to 1.5 per cent today.

“It’s beta-first with a bit of alpha. Maybe the belief in the past was alpha was an engine here for multi-asset, [but now] we believe get your beta, and if you see [the opportunities] to do a little bit of alpha, go for it. But don’t bet the farm on it.”

Sponsored Content

Underpinned by a core set of fundamental active managers and passive and systematic exposures, Michalakis wants the fund to gain more “targeted” exposures in active global equities moving forward. On the wish list are crossover strategies – where public investors aim to invest in private companies before their IPOs to secure higher returns – and extended strategies like shorting, although the latter would need to be reviewed and approved by the board.

“It’s an extension to the benchmark, so it won’t be net short… We may not get there, but I’m interested to go down and see what we can do,” he says. Funds SA largely outsources its investment management as it describes itself as having a “manager of managers” model.

Private markets playbook

Broadly, Funds SA is trimming its manager roster and opting for deeper partnerships. It was a recommendation put forward by the fund’s external asset consultant JANA, which Michalakis has also brought on board in a more full-service capacity and can offer inputs to investment ideas earlier in the process.

It is not so much to do with the upkeep of relationships or team resources – Funds SA has a 20-strong investment team and not stretched by any means.

“We want to just make sure we are close to them and getting access to their best ideas,” he says. The fund already has a number of key relationships in private markets such as Macquarie and EQT in infrastructure, Bain in private equity and Oak Hill in private credit which Michalakis would like to expand.

“Basically having not just one mandate here, one mandate there, but having multiple relationships with a few managers where you get scale, and also the… sharing of ideas, being opportunistic to move early and take advantage of dislocation, or if there’s a niche opportunity,” he says.

Michalakis moved to Funds SA after close to three years as the deputy CIO at Hostplus, which has the best performing balanced investment option in Australia over a 10-year horizon according to research house Chant West. The fund is known for having a larger than peer exposure to private equity and venture capital which is something Michalakis carried through to Funds SA.

“We introduced Australian VC firms like Square Peg and Blackbird, where we’ve done their core fund, their follow-on fund and co-investment, so we have got a nice program built out there.”

TPA lite

Funds SA, due to it being a sovereign investor, isn’t subjected to the Australian pension performance test as the prudentially regulated super funds – a measure that is heavily criticised domestically for encouraging benchmarking-hugging behaviours.

Michalakis says Funds SA is determined not to miss a good investment opportunity just because it doesn’t fit into an asset class bucket, and to aid that goal has introduced a so-called “TPA-lite” framework. It means that the fund is incorporating some TPA principles into the organisation, such as reducing silos in the investment team and investing more for the total fund objectives, but not adhering to them in an “extreme” manner.

“We’re not high priest monks of the TPA approach, but we can think about how to design portfolios [with its principles]. That’s a breath of fresh air,” Michalakis says.

“Underwrite well, generate a return, and then worry about where you want to stick it. That’s one thing I love to change in investing, don’t be a slave to benchmarks.”

To facilitate the transition toward TPA-lite, Michalakis says there has been extensive communication between the senior leadership team and the broader investment team. TPA can put a strain on investment team structure as a sharper focus on total fund objectives usually means there is also more fierce competition between asset classes for capital.

“The most important thing was to get the team together, and we do this with the broader investment team, with the senior leadership team and with [CEO] John [Piteo], and say it’s not personal. We’re not taking strategies away from you,” Michalakis says.

“That conversation has gone very well actually, within the team, [there] hasn’t been really any turnover.”

There has been an investment team restructure after former deputy CIO and head of equities Matthew Kempton departed the fund last April, which saw Cameron Sinclair promoted to the second-in-command position and Kelly Howlett elevated to head of portfolio implementation. 

Asset Owner:Funds SA

Leave a Comment

More from this fund

Returns, resilience and reinvention: What private markets’ top brass are worried about

Returns, resilience and reinvention: What private markets’ top brass are worried about

Senior executives from some of the world's largest private market managers gathered in Berlin this month with a collective understanding: managers who move slowly on AI face not just weaker returns but the risk of owning businesses that have been competitively displaced before they can exit.

Sort content by

TIFF plays the long game in venture capital

The $9 billion asset manager for 500 US endowments and foundations, TIFF, is famed for its PE and venture capital allocation. Head of private markets Brendon Parry reflects on his priorities, including navigating the winners and losers of AI, and leaning into independent sponsors and relationships with the best managers.

Danish investors shun the US but complete divestment ‘unlikely’

Danish pension investors are pulling capital out of US Treasuries amid tensions around Greenland, but a complete divestment from the world’s biggest market will hurt Danish funds’ performance and ultimately their pensioners more than the US government’s balance sheet.

Can risk 2.0 save us from crises yet to come?

In this regular column from WTW's Thinking Ahead Institute, researcher Andrea Caloisi explores two potential risk events in the future and how a more interconnected risk mindset, or 'risk 2.0', can protect us from them.

Railpen ups infra allocation; commodities investments get the green light

Railpen will ramp up its infrastructure allocation and take on more core-plus and value-add assets to complement its existing core exposures. It also received the nod to a commodities allocation which director of total portfolio investments John Greaves believes is a hedge to inflation and uncertain central bank policies.  

Dutch DC reform: Eyes on the bond markets as funds step up risk

The Dutch pension sector's switch to a defined contribution system will have big consequences for Europe’s bond market, as funds push up the risk curve with their investment strategies. It comes at a time when European governments face record funding needs.

CPP Investments on how AI redefines core investing roles and processes

CPP Investments’ trials show AI agents can handle key investment tasks end-to-end. In an interview, chief operating officer Jon Webster says tight governance, and the right human oversight, is the difference between breakthroughs and mistakes.

Previous