Real estate drags for Swiss fund MPK but climate proofing gathers momentum

Migros-Pensionskasse (MPK) the CHF28.2 billion ($30 billion) pension fund for Switzerland’s largest retailer, Migros, has just posted returns of 3.7 per cent. MPK CEO Christoph Ryter told Top1000funds.com the below median performance, at least compared to MPK’s peers, was mostly attributable to its allocation to poorly performing local and international real estate that together amount to around 32 per cent of assets under management. The local portfolio returned 0.2 per cent and the international allocation -1.3 per cent.

The latest results contrast to last year when MPK’s high strategic allocation to real estate helped mute the impact of losses in equities and bonds and was the main reason the fund performed better than peers. Still, back then Ryter predicted gains in real estate valuations would begin to vanish, or turn negative.

Ryter isn’t planning any changes in the portfolio ahead of an asset liability management study this year. Conducted every four years, it will inform strategy from the beginning of 2025. MPK’s other allocations comprise nominal value investments (32.8 per cent of AUM) equities (27.7 per cent) and gold (2 per cent) as well as a 5 per cent allocation to infrastructure that sits in the property allocation.

Real estate woes

MPK divides its real estate portfolio between a larger, direct investment portfolio in Switzerland managed internally (comprising around 300 properties) and a smaller international allocation comprising fund investment and collective vehicles. The bulk of the domestic real estate allocation is invested in rental apartments where valuations and demand are usually supported by the increase in the number of people coming to live in Switzerland and a strong renting culture.

One challenge to the strategy in recent years has been finding enough properties in Switzerland to fill the target allocation. Buying and selling is slow, and finding projects and securing permits time-consuming.

MPK has made much progress preparing the real estate allocation for climate change. Strategies include replacing fossil fuel heating with heat pumps and connecting to a district heating network. However, Ryter said although real estate is one of the best asset classes to have an impact on cuttingemissions, it is also important to consider costs when integrating sustainability in real estate, and balancing costs with adding value.

Sponsored Content

Other initiatives include reducing resource consumption by better aligning consumption to changes in tenant behavior. Another initiative includes investigating the impact of improving insulation and airtight windows, and introducing LED lamps.

The pension fund reports that tenants’ need for charging options for electric vehicles continues to increase. New buildings take this trend into account from the planning stage. For existing properties, MPK will retrofit where necessary. Some 44 properties (14.8 per cent) have over 100 parking spaces with electric charging stations.

Rising interest rates have improved MPK’s coverage ratio, currently 129.4 per cent compared to 124.5 per cent in 2022. Meanwhile, MPK reported administrative costs per insured person are CHF 100.4 while the asset management costs were 35.1 centimes per CHF 100 of assets.

The number of insured people at the end of 2023 was 80,500 (300 more than in the previous year) of which 29,600 were pensioners.

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

Norway’s GPFG keeps most transparent pension fund title with perfect score

Norway’s $2 trillion Government Pension Fund Global has retained its title as the world’s most transparent fund, scoring 100 out of 100 for the second year in a row, according to the results of the 2025 Global Pension Transparency Benchmark. It was closely followed by CPP Investments and CDPQ.

Canada marks five-year reign as global transparency leader

Canada has been named the country with the most transparent pension funds for the fifth consecutive year, according to the 2025 Global Pension Transparency Benchmark, with each of the five Canadian funds assessed ranked in the top 15 funds globally.

NEST’s private markets strategic review includes manager scrutiny

NEST is conducting a strategic review of its private markets allocation to ensure the program – launched in 2020 – is still capturing a liquidity premium for its young member base. Its private market head explains the key seams including no performance fees and evergreen structures to monitor deployment.

UK corporate DB consolidation: TPT throws its hat in the ring

Trustees and employers overseeing the UK’s 5,000 corporate pension plans, which hold an estimated £1.2 trillion ($1.6 trillion), have another option to help manage their defined benefit assets following TPT Retirement Solutions' proposal for a new superfund that will access managers through a fund-of-funds structure.

Minnesota overhauls governance as CIO gets more mandate power

Chief investment officer of the $150 billion Minnesota State Board of Investment will gain authority to hire and fire managers without board approval in a governance overhaul approved this week that will sharply fast-track decision-making. The change follows an 18-month asset allocation study which has resulted in some portfolio finetunes.

AUM at LPPI, Border to Coast and Central swell as UK mega pools take shape

UK pension funds LPPI, Border to Coast and LGPS Central are soaking up assets from Brunel and ACCESS as the country takes the next step towards creating mega pools in Local Government Pension Schemes, which collectively manage £392 billion ($522 billion).

Previous