Pension CIOs re-evaluate China exposure

The chief investment officers of three global pension schemes have told the 2023 Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Stanford University they are re-evaluating or reducing their exposure to the world’s second largest economy as tensions between the US and China escalate. But they are resisting total divestment to a country that still dominates emerging markets benchmarks. 

The chief investment officers of three global pension schemes say they are re-evaluating or reducing their exposure to China as tensions between the world’s largest and second-largest economies escalates.

Alison Romano, CEO and CIO of the San Francisco Employees’ Retirement System, told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Stanford University on Tuesday that exposure to the Chinese market had been a meaningful contributor to performance over recent years.

“When I joined [SFERS in June last year] the performance was very strong, based on a number of strategic bets,” she told the symposium, hosted by Top1000funds.com.

“We leaned into growth, we leaned into innovation, we leaned into China.”

But she said increased geopolitical risk attached to the market meant she is now re-assessing that portfolio exposure, which she described as overweight.

Sponsored Content

“Let me be very clear – we’re not throwing in the towel. But we are evaluating our risk-reward basis, there is increased risk,” Romano said. “We want to be very careful who they partner with to invest there, that they have on the ground knowledge or connections.”

She said analysts, experts and industry peers held a wide range of views on China, which made it difficult to come to a position on the appropriateness of its inclusion and weight in a well diversified portfolio.

The comments come amid heightened tensions between Washington and Beijing, with reports of diplomatic communications having faltered between the two world powers and conflict over maritime disputes and alleged espionage, most notably the incident of a suspected Chinese spy balloon over US territory earlier this year.

Mark Walker, CIO of the UK’s Coal Pension Trustees, told the symposium the fund had reduced its Chinese exposure from 15 per cent to 10 per cent of its public equities portfolio, under “pressure” from trustees and concerns about geopolitical risk. He said it would likely also reduce its private equity exposure to China going forward, but added that the country was too big to ignore or divest entirely.

He said he and his team were considering how to remain a neutral position in the escalating US-China tension, while also looking to burgeoning Southeast Asian economies that have large or growing populations and can provide alternative emerging markets exposure.

“We’ve absolutely not eliminated it, but we have downplayed,” said Walker, whose fund represents UK-based mining sector workers.

James Davis, CIO of $25 billion Canadian fund OPTrust, said the China challenge was symptomatic of a broader concern around pricing geopolitical risk, especially in developing economies.

“I am not sure I am being adequately rewarded for being exposed to China,” Davis said. But he said he had resisted eliminating the fund’s exposure to China because it still accounts for at least a third of most emerging market benchmarks.

He said divesting China would be difficult for that reason, arguing the case showed some of the flaws of an index-hugging approach to emerging markets investment. “Benchmarks are constraining; I personally don’t like them,” he said. “We follow the total portfolio approach, so we try to avoid getting caught in the benchmark trap.”

Table discussions of delegates to the symposium centred on geopolitical risk, with some attendees questioning whether China should be split out from other emerging markets when making asset allocation decisions.

 

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

Diversity: How to move the needle

Targets, allocating to diverse managers and acting on calls for change from diverse staffers are just some of the ways asset owners are boosting diversity in their own organisations. Investors at the Kresge Foundation, AP2 and AIMCo talk about their diversity, equity and inclusion action.

Bridgewater on the impact revolution

Integrating impact alongside risk and return is a revolution that will see more diversification among investor allocations to asset classes such as commodities. Elsewhere, it requires using multiple data sets to analyse stocks and sovereign bond allocations to see the real-world impact of a company’s product or services, and which governments are heading to net-zero. Bridgewater’s head of investment research Karen Karniol-Tambour explains.

Diversity doesn’t work without inclusion

Achieving diversity requires data, new recruitment practices and nurturing inclusion. And the financial industry must get its own house in order to better put pressure on investee companies.

Regulation and economics converge in ESG

Investors from Schroders, Trillium and PensionDanmark discuss how a changing regulatory picture and the economics of sustainable investment are coming together to create a tipping point in ESG, but they warn their peers to look beyond the label to what is on the inside.

New benchmarks for ESG accountability

The measurement and management of ESG needs to shift from the current paradigm of self-definitions of sustainability according to founder of the Predistribution Initiative, Delilah Rothenberg. She says the World Benchmarking Alliance’s new initiative – the Financial System Transformation Benchmark –aims to address the critical gaps which may result in valuation methodologies and incentive structures changing.

Principles of a climate-impact dashboard

The climate-impact dashboard is part of a 3-D investment framework that balances risk, return and impact. This includes total portfolio thinking, long-horizon investing, impact investment strategies, system-level engagement and strategic partnership between asset owners and asset managers. Here Tim Hodgson lays out eight guiding principles to help shape a climate-impact dashboard.

Previous