Private equity angst at Oregon

At $26.4 billion and 28 per cent of Oregon Public Employees Retirement Fund’s total assets under the management, the pension fund’s private equity allocation is at the very top end of its target range.

Not only is the exposure stubbornly high, lacklustre M&A deals and “anaemic” exit activity; a slowdown in fundraising and deployment and market volatility creating benchmarking havoc have also conspired to cause consternation for the Oregon Investment Council (OIC).

“We are still in a phase of markets digesting what has been a wild ride since COVID,” said Michael Langdon, director of private markets at OIC, who charted how unprecedented stimulus in 2020 led to record deal activity; inflation and tightening ensued, and now a disconnect between private equity and volatile public markets continues to thwart performance.

Bias to larger funds but smaller funds do best

In its Annual Review of the asset class, the private markets team told the investment council that OPERF’s large program is skewed to allocating to larger funds – yet smaller funds have significantly outperformed. The team have now begun a “manager by manager” analysis to dig down into “why this has happened” although they noted “actual, crystalized IRR” confirming smaller fund outperformance, remains unproven.

The size of the program means OPERF can only access a narrow selection of the manager universe because small managers can’t take large commitments. Of the 5000-odd funds in the asset class composite from 2013-2022, only 352 raised $3 billion plus of committed capital – during the same time period 50 per cent of OPERF fund investments by count and 71 per cent by commitment went to funds with $3 billion or more of total commitments.

Positively, large commitments enable OIC to negotiate more favourable fees.

Sponsored Content

Cash flow negative

In another challenge, the slowdown in distributions means the private equity allocation has turned cash flow negative for the first time in a decade. In 2023, the portfolio processed capital calls of $2.9 billion and distributions of $2.4 billion leaving net contributions of $518 million.

“2023 was the portfolio’s first negative cash flow year since the GFC,” state board documents.

Moreover, it’s difficult for LPs to model how fast distributions will show up to ease the crunch of negative cash flows. “We control what we commit, but we can’t control how fast managers invest,” the board heard.

The team has also been unable to use the secondary market to pull forward distributions because of challenges around execution. Still, looking ahead, improved pricing in the public market will feed into the secondary market, helping OPERF generate more strategic liquidity.

Pacing and fewer GP relationships

OPEF has a strict private equity pacing commitment of $2.5 billion total annually. But this has also caused challenges to appear in the portfolio because it has led to an underweight in vintages that have performed well. It has created a drag on OPERF’s relative performance due to the strong, early performance from recent vintage years where OPERF is underweight, say board documents.

Around 60 per cent of OPERF’s fund investments in mature vintages are ranked below median as compared to other funds pursuing a similar strategy in the same vintage.  “Fund size continues to have an outsized impact on quartile rankings, particularly with respect to OPERF’s core allocation to North America buyout funds,” say board statements.

The pension fund will keep its pacing range of between $2-3.5 billion while there is a slowdown in distributions.

OPERF is currently “lighter” than it wants with some 30 GPs on its roster rather than a preferred 40. In a catch-22, the team will only add managers as the pacing allows, and given the team will stick with the existing roster unless “the manager gives reason not to reup” it means scant opportunity for new GPs. Since 2015 the program has sharpened manager selection, reducing the number of managers from 70.

The OPERF portfolio has buyout, venture and growth equity. An overweight to buyout and North America has served the fund well. In contrast, the struggle to retain the target weight to venture has been a detractor. In another trend, the investment team expect to tilt more to developed markets in America and Europe because of the challenging geopolitical landscape.

Shifting dynamics

The board heard how the dynamics behind private equity are changing. Since 1981 – when Oregon was one of the first US pension funds to invest in private equity – interest rates have steadily fallen. It means rates have been falling for the entire time the fund has invested in private equity, bolstering the allocation as well as bidding up all risk assets.

The new interest rate environment means that fundamentals and earnings growth will now be the most important contributors to returns in excess of the market. Moreover, if returns are muted on a real basis by inflation, every single basis point is important.

Other market trends include inflated valuations in the tech sector. GPs hunting for capital for their next fund are under pressure from LPs to sell assets but because valuations remain inflated, buyers are cautious. Still, technology is unaffected by cyclical ups and downs. In contrast, PE opportunities in healthcare and services are buffeted more by macro trends, while investors in consumer brands do best focused on the luxury segment and from digitization trends.

The current market is also characterised by an uptick in demand for and availability of leverage from direct lenders.

The board heard concerns about the rising cost of leverage, with the team counselling on the importance of paying close attention to OPERF’s ability to serve the cost of leverage so as not to impact cash flows. Many GPs didn’t hedge interest rate exposure heading into rising rates and worryingly, a fair amount of debt has come due, requiring refinancing across the capital structure.

Leave a Comment

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

Managing not just measuring risk is key to long-term returns

Nobel Prize-winning economist Myron Scholes told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Stanford University that the focus of asset owners needs to shift from measuring risk to managing it, to avoid the downside while capturing the upside and allowing compounding to do its thing.

How Swiss PUBLICA integrates climate risk

PUBLICA, one of the largest pension funds in Switzerland, has built a bespoke equity benchmark to reduce climate risk. It's not the consequence of any target to reduce emissions in the portfolio or wider ESG legislation. Senior portfolio manager Frederik von Ameln explains the process behind the strategy.

Operational excellence as critical as asset allocation for success

Asset allocation is often nominated as the most important element in long-term investment performance. But the Fiduciary Investor s Symposium at Stanford University heard that no investment strategy or process can operate in a vacuum – it can’t happen effectively without operational excellence.

Get on board: why the megatrend is your friend

Megatrends are the forces that will shape our planet, our society and our lives decades into the future. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Stanford University heard Megatrends provide potentially rich pickings for investors, as long as they know how to use them,.

Politics rivals profits for portfolio influence, says Bridgewater co-CIO

Bridgewater co-CIO Greg Jensen said government policy has steadily increased in influence over the economy and portfolio construction over the past 20 years and now outstrips the importance of private sector incentives. He says the pace of deglobalisation is a key trend for institutional investors to keep abreast of.

The hands and feet of AI and the renewable energy transition

A foundation stone of the transition to renewable energy - semiconductors - is paradoxically a major contributor to the problem it’s helping to solve. How asset owners think about investing in a solution that is also part of the problem is a challenging and complex task.

Previous