UK’s GMPF: Why institutional investors are pushing into the rental market

The £30 billion Greater Manchester Pension Fund (GMPF) the United Kingdom’s largest Local Government Pension Scheme is ploughing more money into affordable housing, targeting 30 per cent of its 10 per cent allocation to real estate to the residential sector.

The fund has just invested £120 million in a Legal and General fund that will invest in purpose-built social rent and shared ownership housing (where people buy a portion of a house and pay rent on the rest) that Paddy Dowdall, assistant director, GMPF, says has compelling low risk, inflation-linked income streams alongside measurable impact.

The allocation sits alongside previous investments in the “small” affordable rent sector, where rents are targeted at  30 per cent of tenant’s income and which has similar properties but is not part of the regulated sector.

GMPF has worked with L&G to design the allocation, composition of stock and pricing. “We wanted to make sure it was right for us,” says Dowdall.

A chronic shortage of housing in the UK has resulted in long waiting lists for social housing and young people left priced out of home ownership and Dowdall believes the sector is poised to attract much more institutional investment.

“In the US and Europe, the amount of investment by institutional investors in rented homes is far greater,” he says.

Sponsored Content

In recent months, Border to Coast, ACCESS and LGPS Central have all confirmed significant expansions of their real estate offering. Meanwhile, LPPI and London CIV have joined forces this year to launch the London Fund, which alongside infrastructure will also invest in affordable housing.

Investing in the social rental sector taps into large and growing tenant demand and constrained supply, he continues. For example, regarding build to rent where properties are built just for the rental market and don’t have targeted rents, he notes the UK’s private rental housing sector is valued at around £1.5 trillion but less than 2 per cent of that stock is build-to-rent compared to about 15 per cent in Germany and 40 per cent in the US.

Tennant demand is also boosted by more people stretching to afford a house and renting for longer. For example, today the average first time buyer age is 34 in the UK compared to 26 in 1997.

Meanwhile, individual private landlords continue to be squeezed out of the market, driven by tighter credit and government policy changes. Buy-to-let investor activity has slowed sharply due to adverse taxation changes including stamp duty and tighter credit, he explains.

“Tax, regulations, and access to leverage will make it much harder for small, private landlords to compete in the sector. There is a clear market opportunity for this provision to be replaced by financial institutions and social landlords.”

Historically, affordable housing in the UK has been financed via public sector housing providers called Housing Associations. Yet these organizations are also dealing with high costs to maintain large portfolios and facing rising construction costs to build new homes. Their affordability of capital is less, meaning social housing is increasingly funded by other forms of capital, says Dowdall.

“You now see a lot of annuity providers in the market.”

The sector offers long-term index linked cash flows. He calls the low net yield “fair” for the risk taken and says GMPF is happy to take liquidity risk given its long-term liabilities.

“Social housing is going to have low levels of voids and rent arears and a high correlation with inflation. The high inflation linkage makes it an attractive investment. It ends up a 6-8 per cent return on an IRR basis.”

GMPF’s seven-person real estate team invest in housing via two different portfolios: a well- established mainstream real estate allocation and a local impact portfolio that includes investments in SMEs and renewable infrastructure where this allocation will sit and where the fund is already financing close to 4,400 new homes which have either been completed, planned or are in development.

Certain real estate sectors may achieve higher yield than social housing, such as higher end residential or office. Yet these investments  carry higher risk because they are linked to the economy. “Occupancy and the level of rent for social housing is not linked to economy doing well in the same way as other real estate sectors giving it diversification qualities.”

GMPF has made a commitment to L&G’s national fund, but Dowdall says the fund would also like to invest to support the Manchester region.

Challenges include problems sourcing affordable homes. It is difficult to buy existing stock or buy new stock at rates that people can afford. The sudden collapse in rental incomes in London due to the Covid pandemic also highlighted another risk.

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

Australian allocators revisit China as AI race heats up

Top Australian allocators have conceded it is time to rethink the underweight positions to China which have characterised their portfolios, as the Asian superpower’s intensifying AI race with the US creates attractive opportunities.

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Falling dollar dents Canadian pension returns; triggers hedging rethink

A weakening US dollar has eaten into the returns of Canada’s largest pension funds as annual reports revealed the currency shock forced a fundamental rethink from some investors around hedging practices. OMERS has pivoted from a policy hedging target to a more flexible approach fulfilling multiple objectives, while OTPP more than halved its US dollar exposure in 2025.

OPTrust: hiking rates because of the oil shock is a mistake

To navigate rates and inflation uncertainty, OPTrust is leaning into dynamic portfolio construction, actively managed options, and a total portfolio approach supporting the belief that inflation resilience is built into how portfolios are constructed not an individual asset or exposure.

What I took away from the world’s ‘festival of private capital’

The on- and off-stage antics at the extravagant Milken Global Conference in Los Angeles tell us a lot about where institutional capital is right on the money – and where it is putting its head in the sand.

NBIM lays out case for real estate turnaround

Norge Bank Investment Management chief executive Nicolai Tangen conceded the $2.1 trillion fund is “not satisfied” with the performance of its real estate portfolio, as weakness in the asset class was a main contributor to three consecutive years of negative relative returns. All eyes are now on whether its overhauled strategy, which includes new structures and sector composition, can turn things around.

Previous