Illinois looks inward for new portfolio

The $42 billion Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund plans to launch a new, internally managed quantitative portfolio using multifactor strategies in 2019. The new approach means the fund will add to its active internal equity management capability, hiring two portfolio managers and one trader. The allocation will be US-focused, but further details remain under wraps.

“It has been preliminarily approved in our budget, but the discussions are ongoing. [In 2019] we will go to the board with the specifics,” IMRF chief investment officer Dhvani Shah says.

The strategy builds on Shah’s gradual integration of more downside protection into the 44 per cent allocation to domestic US equity. So far, downside protection has mostly come via boosting cashflow-generating assets in an infrastructure allocation established in 2016. The new quantitative portfolio also reflects IMRF’s own growing investment expertise, where the internal team now stretches to 14, 11 of whom sit in investments.

It is an expertise evidenced by IMRF running its manager search in unlisted infrastructure internally, where Shah now hunts direct fund investment. Indeed, IMRF has carried out all its recent infrastructure searches itself, spanning five categories across the listed and unlisted spaces. In contrast, when Shah joined IMRF seven years ago from New York State Teachers’ Retirement System, where she headed up the private equity division, the fund didn’t run any inhouse investment searches or recommendations. Now IMRF has built a team that can do things itself and doesn’t need to use its consultant on every search.

“We can do things quicker ourselves,” Shah says. “We are the only client.”

Technology has helped IMRF build its internal capabilities. She has added Bloomberg and private equity software TopQ, amongst other tools.

Sponsored Content

“When I joined, if someone asked me how the portfolio did the day before, I couldn’t tell them until my consultant’s report came in. With the use of technology, I can see the portfolio and have the preliminary numbers when I need them,” Shah explains.

Other recent adjustments to the portfolio include tweaks at the edges of the asset allocation to help with implementation. For example, she recently reduced the allocation to alternatives by 1 per cent to better reflect the chunk of uncalled capital in the private equity portfolio, which had widened the gap between IMRF’s actual and target allocation.

“We reduced our alternative allocation not because of sentiment on the asset class but because the market value of our actual allocation was around 4 per cent, yet unfunded capital brings the allocation to about 7.7 per cent. As we deploy more capital, we will move back up.”

Less is more

Strategy in the alternative portfolio, which targets an annualised return of 9 per cent from allocations to private equity, venture capital, agriculture, timber and infrastructure, focuses on fewer GP relationships and direct allocations. It is a simple approach that led Shah to take hedge funds out of the alternative portfolio a couple of years ago, despite an initial decision when she joined the fund to rejuvenate the allocation by consolidating three fund-of-funds hedge fund products into one.

“The restructured hedge fund portfolio performed well and grew to around $500 million, but we had to either scale up hedge funds or reduce them and we made the decision to come out,” she recalls. “We only have a four-person team overseeing private markets. We were doing fund-of-funds but would have wanted to change this to direct control. Sourcing and monitoring hedge funds [requires] a larger team, but this didn’t match with our investment team model.”

She also says other strategies within allocations can give the same benefits as hedge funds. “There are niche strategies within each major asset class you can use to shape your risk-return profile of the portfolio.”

The private equity portfolio is structured around 20 direct GP relationships running about 55 mandates between them. Added to this, IMRF deploys capital to separate accounts for broader exposure. Success hinges on accessing the best funds; Shah believes IMRF has an edge as a “premier LP” because of its 93 per cent funded status, governance structure, reputation and ability to offer multiple mandates.

“We don’t have to invest in every private equity fund that comes our way. Our GPs are one of 20, not 200, and this makes a difference,” she says.

Within the fund’s private equity manager roster, a handful of minority managers also run mandates. It’s part of a wider program where minority managers invest about 20 per cent of the $40 billion portfolio across all asset classes, in a strategy underwritten by Illinois’ state-level pension code.

“Our minority managers are not a separate carve-out of the portfolio but are part of our performance and crucial to reaching our 7.5 per cent return,” Shah says. Most recently, IMRF mandated minority manager Piedmont Investment Advisors to run its $1 billion Russell 1000 Growth Fund. Piedmont used to run an active equity mandate for the fund, and wanted to grow into the passive space, Shah says.

“Our $1 billion investment mandate is a vote of confidence that they can do it.”

 

 

 

 

As of September 30, 2018

Market Value
ASSET CLASS (MILLIONS) % TARGET % ACTUAL
Domestic equity $18,958.6 37.0% 44.7%
International equity $8,138.5 18.0% 19.2%
Fixed income $10,915.6 28.0% 25.7%
Real estate $2,422.6 9.0% 5.7%
Alternative investments $1,704.6 7.0% 4.0%
Cash equivalents $271.8 1.0% 0.6%
Total $42,411.9 100% 100%

 

 

TOTAL INVESTMENTS BY REGION
Domestic: 76.5%
International: 23.5%

Leave a Comment

Macquarie: Deglobalisation the next inflection point in real assets

Macquarie: Deglobalisation the next inflection point in real assets

Global governments are partnering with private investors to boost their domestic infrastructure and become more self-sufficient in a geopolitically fragmented world, according to Ben Way, global head of Macquarie Asset Management, who said that constrained public balance sheets are increasingly reliant on private capital to meet their infrastructure needs.

Sort content by

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.

It’s a drag: why TPA is superior to SAA

A total portfolio approach overcomes the governance, benchmark and inertia drags inherent in strategic asset allocation, and can add returns of 50-100 basis points above SAA, according to global head of investment content at Willis Towers Watson, Roger Urwin.

The rise of the Sovereign Wealth Fund

In the past 20 years the number of SWFs has grown from 20 to more than 100 with their assets estimated to grow by $500 billion a year. So where do they invest and what impact are they having on the market? Sarah Rundell investigates.

Previous