GIC seeks discipline, diversification in ‘profound uncertainty’ ahead

Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC is bracing for a period of “profound uncertainty”, as the fund looks to rely on more “granular” diversification and maintaining price discipline to traverse the environment.

In its 2023/ 2024 annual report the fund’s chief executive Lim Chow Kiat warned there are “no maps” for investors to navigate the volatility ahead, and the fund is looking to play into its strength as a provider of long-term capital.

The report said that several key markets had priced in a very positive outcome for the macroeconomic environment since the short-term probability of recession in the global economy had been reduced. Lim highlighted the benefits of nimble capital and a more bottom-up approach in this environment.

“Credit spreads in the US and Europe, in particular, are below or close to their lowest quartile in the past decade,” the report read. “However, there is a wide dispersion across markets and within asset classes.”

“This dispersion favours a more bottom-up approach, alongside more nimble capital allocation across different opportunities.”

In the report Lim said many markets are primed for a Goldilocks economy and “have not yet priced in the level of uncertainty investors face”.

Sponsored Content

“It is a plausible scenario, but only one of many,” he said.

“This signals a potential mismatch between investor confidence and the range of plausible outcomes.

“In such an environment, GIC must practise price discipline.”

The fund indicates that it intends to remain level-headed in the well-documented AI hype, as Lim said some early-stage AI businesses are commanding a lofty valuation.

“Hardware makers, including semiconductor firms and the infrastructure layer businesses such as cloud platforms, have less downside, though their valuations have also expanded recently,” he said.

“Each case requires careful assessment of its potential risk-return trade-offs.”

GIC has a total portfolio approach and when it comes to diversification, its process is to start with understanding of the real underlying risks, then stress test different combinations of investments in various amounts.

Lim said the fund won’t stop at diversifying on an asset class level but really digs into the “granularity” of investment opportunities, especially in private markets where the fund has built comprehensive capabilities over the years.

“Take real estate as an example. We have picked our spots across different sub-sectors — including data centres, student housing, and logistics — and different geographies,” Lim said.

“In a world where uncertainty has shaken the foundations of the investment environment, our response is to be ever more sure of who we are and to abide by our core investment principles.”

In the year to March 2024, GIC cut exposure to nominal bonds and cash by 2 per cent while upped allocations to inflation-linked bonds by 1 per cent. Private equity is also occupying a bigger part (up 1 per cent) of the portfolio due to capital deployment and returns.

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

Revolutionising private market reporting

Nearly 10 years ago Lorelei Graye was part of the team at South Carolina that pushed for private market reporting transparency. That experience has motivated her to be a part of the solution in heading up the ADS Initiative to develop global data standards for private capital. We look at the journey to get there.

Emerging markets vulnerable

Investors have pulled $83 billion from emerging markets since the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis, the largest capital outflow ever recorded, and the IMF and the World Bank are calling on G20 countries to show relief in dealing with their emerging market counterparts.

CIOs ride the corona storm

Even for long term investors who pride themselves on the big picture and horizons stretching far into the future, the unprecedented change of recent weeks is hair-raising. Enough liquidity on hand to take advantage of buying opportunities once they arise and comfortably pay benefits is crucial. We look at the strategies of investors around the world in response to the market conditions.

Coronavirus could trigger credit crisis

A former adviser to the US Federal Reserve, Danielle DiMartino Booth, said increased volatility in bonds and turmoil in the money markets from the outbreak of the coronavirus could signal a looming credit event despite the Fed’s latest bid to inject liquidity into the system.

PFA navigates corona storm

In the six months Kasper Lorenzen has been CIO of the Danish fund, PFA, he has made moves in investment and decision-making that have resulted in the fund weathering the short-term coronavirus storm. He is however, wary of the long-term structural changes particularly to patterns of globalisation.

Time for a coordinated approach

The US Federal Reserve has fired its last round of ammunition, cutting interest rates to zero, in a move that continues to see it play from the monetary policy songbook. Some market commentators doubt whether it will be enough to prop up markets, raising the question of whether it is finally time for a more coordinated fiscal and monetary policy approach.

Previous