Norway’s GPFG argues the case for private equity – again

One of the most famous attractions in Norway, Pulpit Rock.

Norges Bank Investment Management, investment manager of Norway’s $1.5 trillion wealth fund, Government Pension Fund Global, has once again petitioned policy makers in the Ministry of Finance to let it invest in private equity. NBIM is requesting a 3-5 per cent allocation with large and mid-sized managers that will extend into a co-investment program overtime.

Some four previous appeals, most recently in 2018, have fallen on deaf ears leaving GPFG excluded from the $7.8 trillion market that has grown 20 per cent every year since 2017 in marked contrast to over sovereign funds. A decision is likely to come in the first half of next year.

“Investment in private equity could give higher returns after costs than listed equities over the long term,” wrote Ida Wolden Bache, chair of the executive board and Nicolai Tangen, chief executive of NBIM in a letter sent to the Ministry of Finance.

“The unlisted equity market has grown rapidly in recent years and accounts for an ever-larger share of the global market portfolio. A broader investment universe will provide more investment opportunities and help the fund benefit from a larger share of global value creation.”

Wolden Bache and Tangen stressed the diversification benefits of investing in private equity, arguing that moving into the asset class now fits with GPFG’s gradual diversification over time. Back in 1996 the fund only invested in government bonds; listed equity was added in 1998 and more countries and market have come online over the years. Unlisted real estate was added in 2010 and unlisted infrastructure in 2019.

The strategy could also tap into NBIM’s decade of experience investing in unlisted markets. “Norges Bank will be able to draw on experience from its existing unlisted investments. This will be relevant in areas such as designing partnership agreements, structuring ownership, accounting, risk management, tax matters, regulatory compliance and reporting.”

Sponsored Content

All private equity investment would be via managers. And although GPFG will be able to draw on its deep expertise of manager selection in listed markets, a new allocation to private equity will require new hires. “We anticipate around 10-15 employees working on unlisted equity investments in the early phase, and around 20-30 in the longer term.”

Wolden Bache and Tangen rule out investing directly in unlisted companies. “Direct investments would demand considerable and different expertise to that required to invest in or with private equity funds, which primarily requires competence in manager selection. Norges Bank has built up considerable expertise in evaluating external managers in listed markets since 1998 and has good experience with this.”

NBIM would cap investment at 5 per cent in any one fund. To manage country risk, it would invest primarily with private equity funds in developed markets in Europe and North America which mainly invest in companies in the same regions. “In order to avoid too many partners and ensure cost-efficiency, we will therefore invest with mid-sized and large partners,” they add.

GPFG would be able to make much of its advantages, they continue. “Large investors in private equity often have better access to both the best managers and co-investments, and obtain lower management fees,” continuing. “An unlisted equity portfolio of 3-5 percent of the fund will enable us to take advantage of the benefits of the fund’s size and facilitate adequate diversification across managers and vintages.”

Cap on fees?

The letter recognises the resistance to private equity’s high external manager fees – even when these investments bring the fund an excess return after costs. NBIM’s agreements with external managers currently include a cap on fees and the authors acknowledge it is unlikely that a private equity fund will accept a limit on fees, flagging “this requirement will need to be adjusted if the fund invests in private equity funds.”

NBIM will therefore build expertise in its ability to co-invest alongside private equity funds in a bid to reduce fees. “Investors do not normally pay fees on co-investments, and investments of this kind are effective in reducing total fees in relation to invested capital,” they write. “Fees as a share of invested capital will fall proportionally with the share of co-investment.”

Co-investment will involve deciding whether or not to participate in co-investments offered by the private equity fund with the opportunity to opt out. “Investors are typically given ten working days to consider whether to participate in a co-investment.”

“We will build a portfolio of co-investments gradually to ensure diversification across companies, sectors, geographies, and managers. We will acquire non-controlling interests in the companies. The GPFG’s total interest in any one company will not normally exceed 15 percent,” they write.

Transparency

The submission also addressed the MofF fears around transparency given the lack of publicly available information in the asset class and lack of daily pricing. “Norges Bank will set strict requirements for selecting partners, responsible investment and transparency, as well as restricting investments geographically.”

“For unlisted equity investments, reported results will likely be negative in the early years. It will, on average, take longer to sell unlisted equity investments than investments in listed companies, and there is a risk that we will not be able to sell before the lifetime of private equity fund naturally ends.” The board also reassured that the strategy would not increase the equity market risk in the fund relative to the benchmark index.

The latest push by NBIM has raised questions from investment commentators on linked-in, voicing concerns around building an investment program from scratch with annual allocations running into billions. Rob Baur, Professor of Finance, Institutional Investors chair at Maastricht, an expert on the fund,  writes.

“I just wonder how the executive board of Norges Bank dealt with these pro and con arguments in an (academic) evidence-based way. Has this process been spelled out in a formal document? If so, where can I find it?”

Oxford University’s Ludovic Phallipou, a critic of the private equity industry, argued the GPFG is being drawn into the industry by PE fund managers and “sales guys.”

Leave a Comment

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

A view that the US stock market is overvalued and equity risk premia will be lower over the long term has driven New Zealand Super to lower the return expectations for its reference portfolio following its recent five-yearly review of the benchmark. Co-chief investment officer Brad Dunstan also flags underweight commodity exposure as an area to address and explains why the fund remains sceptical of illiquidity premia despite seeing a growing case for private markets.

Sort content by

Investors focus on human capital

Investors are putting pressure on companies to accelerate the shift to purpose-driven leadership and focus on human capital policies during the crisis. But while there are some examples of corporations making policy changes that positively impact their workers, supply chain issues pose a significant problem.

London’s CIV talks pooling progress

The coronavirus is an unprecedented test for the UK’s eight Local Government Pension Scheme asset pools. The London Collective Investment Vehicle, the pooling manager for the pension assets of London’s 32 boroughs has lost 15 per cent of the value of its portfolio for the month, and CEO Mike O’Donnell says ensuring liquidity and diversification are priorities in the months ahead.

Long-term disclosure post COVID-19

In times of uncertainty and disruption the “long-term” is a place that’s often easy to talk about but harder to operationalise but forward-looking information is highly valued, particularly during this crisis. To understand a company’s value proposition requires a real sense of its ability to innovate and be a source of disruption (not its victim). That requires a rounded view of the forward story and an assessment of key ESG issues and mega-trends.

Wisconsin leans into opportunities

In the space of three months the State of Wisconsin Investment Board has moved its portfolio from “defensive” to “offensive” as it “leans into the opportunities” presented by the coronavirus crisis. CIO and executive director David Villa, and deputy, Rochelle Klaskin spoke to Amanda White about the portfolio and how the large internal team is managing remotely.

Korean fund faces unique challenge

The KRW14.3 trillion ($12 billion) Korea Public Officials Benefit Association is sitting on more than 10 per cent cash, but in a unique challenge due to the coronavirus crisis, it is having trouble deploying capital. Amanda White spoke to CIO, Dong Hun Jang, about the options including listed alternatives and distressed opportunities.

Risk management in a time of crisis

Markets in disarray are where long-term investors make money. Investors that perform the best over the long term will have taken calculated and deliberate risks and put money to work during crises like this one. But how? Focusing Capital on the Long Term CEO and research director discuss.

Previous