Stable value at TRS proves ballast in extraordinary times

The Texas State Capitol building in Austin

Texas Teacher Retirement System, the $211.6 billion Austin-based pension fund, has an asset allocation that is built to withstand the “extraordinary times” and adverse climate investors face today, reassured CIO Jase Auby, speaking during the latest update at the fund.

A 21 per cent allocation to stable value wholly tasked with maintaining value even during “pre-recessionary times, if you believe we are on a path to recession” has proved most robust.

All four asset classes comprising real and nominal government bonds and hedge funds have remained positive proving a “ballast” that the fund depends on as it navigates the impact of negative GDP and corporate earnings news, weak demand and a flight to quality.

“The markets are highly volatile. It’s worthwhile emphasising how our asset allocation is built to  last and weather storms like this,” said Auby.

The pension fund’s  57 per cent allocation to global equity comprising public equity (45 per cent) and private equity (12 per cent) was down about 7 per cent reflecting the sharp fall in the S&P 500 which has experienced its third largest fall in post WW2 history.  “The two other times were during the GFC,” said Auby.

The impact of recent volatility on TRS’ real return allocation that includes real estate (15 per cent) and energy, natural resources and infrastructure (ENRI) is more difficult to gauge because the portfolio is private and not mark to market, he said. However, the energy allocation that includes oil and natural gas has suffered falls in oil, but positive returns in gas.

Sponsored Content

The risk parity allocation was down but still “holding its own.” This portfolio seeks to deliver the same level of return  but do so with less emphasis on the equity market.

Poised for the offensive

Auby told trustees the fund has maintained its standard rebalancing processes through the market turmoil.

“At this point in time, we have no insight or special information on how [Trump’s tariff polices] will role out,  so the best alternative is to rebalance and be as close to the benchmark as we can possibly be. But we also recognise there will be a time for offence, and to go back into the public equity market if there is a draw down to a substantial degree.”

Typically a drawdown of around 32 per cent signposts recession, and he said only at this point would TRS consider “going on the offence” and pause rebalancing so rigorously.

“When it’s time to play offense we’ll do so.”

He added that TRS’ overweight to private markets has been offset by depressing the All Country equity allocation. Last year, TRS has rolled out a new SAA that includes an increased long-term target allocation to public equity from 40 per cent to 45 per cent. It combined regional portfolios into a $70 billion all country allocation; a $9.6 billion portfolio of non-US developed market equities and a $1.9 billion emerging market allocation that fully excludes China and Hong Kong in line with new Texas laws.

TRS recently experienced the high level departure of Mohan Balachandran after 17 years at TRS where he came to lead multi asset strategies. Auby said attrition, which had been low, has recently spiked with 12 members of the investment team leaving so far this year.

Staff resignations have led to a restructuring of the teams that implement public market quantitative strategies. A new quantitative equity group will continue current stock selection strategies, but TRS has reduced assets in internal quantitative equity strategies by approximately 60 per cent with the intent to grow them back as appropriate.

In another note, TRS has ended its working from home policies with staff now in the office five days a week.

“The parking lots are full,” said Auby.

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

PKA ups the risk; builds out infrastructure

PKA, one of Denmark’s largest pension service providers, is exploring whether to increase its risk budget by 10 per cent to boost returns. Michael Flycht, deputy director of equities and liquid alternatives at PKA, outlines why the fund is achieving this objective via leverage rather than direct exposures, and where it's allocating towards in hedge funds and infrastructure.

NPS raises hedging ratio as Korea’s capital outflows weigh on won

South Korean investors’ pursuit of offshore investments has become a significant source of won weakness and triggered a shift in hedging rules for the $1 trillion National Pension Service. With an overseas asset exposure greater than Korea’s national foreign reserves, NPS’ move demonstrates the scale of impact FX risks can have on portfolios.

Balancing act: How investors can navigate pressure to invest more at home

As pension funds face growing pressure to invest more at home, investors face a balancing act between supporting long-term national interests and their fiduciary duties to beneficiaries. Investors call for policy incentives, not mandates, and transparency, not constraints.

‘AI-washing’ risk grows as tech due diligence on managers lags

The pace of change in AI models poses a significant challenge to the due diligence frameworks employed by asset owners, whose own ability to adapt is being outstripped by the technological advancements they’re being asked to assess.

NY Common joins allocator push on company AI transparency

The $273 billion New York State Common has upped the pressure on portfolio companies to report on how artificial intelligence usage is contributing to layoffs, as AI governance becomes a growing focus in the proxy voting and engagement activities of asset owners.

Chicago Teachers leans into diverse managers; exceeds targets

Chicago Teachers is bullish on allocating to diverse managers, more than doubling its target allocation to more than half of the fund's AUM. Its CIO explains how the strategy adds value through access to differentiated strategies and competitive fee structures.

Previous