Alecta sees real estate opportunities

Alecta’s head of real assets Axel Brändström took the helm a year ago. Charged with building out the real estate allocation in one of the most tumultuous years for the asset class on record, his eye is on e-commerce opportunities and allocations to assets not linked to GDP.

Scratch beneath the destruction of value across office, high street, hotel and leisure, and new opportunities in real estate are beginning to emerge. Logistics offering solutions to last mile e-commerce delivery and assets that aren’t linked to GDP like medical centres and care homes are front of mind for SEK1007 billion ($120 billion) Swedish pension fund Alecta, hunting for properties to fill a growing allocation to real assets that targets a 4 per cent return, undaunted by the pandemic’s trail of destruction.

“We are on a journey to increase exposure that has resilience and diversification at its heart,” says Axel Brändström, who left his role as CIO of Skandia Investment Management a year ago to head up the real assets allocation. “As with all things, we have a long-term strategy and we are on our way to reaching our target in terms of asset allocation. As usual, it will depend on markets and valuation. I am quite confident we will get there.” The real estate allocation will account for around 15 per cent of an expanded 20 per cent allocation to real assets that includes infrastructure (3 per cent) and alternative credit (2 per cent)

The Office

New investment opportunities are beginning to emerge in office despite everyone working from home and companies, sharply aware of these new corporate efficiencies, showing no signs of returning en-masse.

Expect tiers in the market to become more pronounced where office space in bad locations will be punished harder, predicts Brändström.

Sponsored Content

He also believes that companies will seek to keep staff working mostly from home going forward, but also want office space to gather, and that existing offices will need reconfiguring to meet employee’ demand for more space.

“The use of office space will be different and there might be a smaller requirement,” he says.

Although it’s too early to make a bet on what this means for investors, he advises close contact with tenants so as to be across their changing needs. He also predicts a jump in demand for hubs and co-working facilities, as well as new trends in large companies opening satellite offices to allow employees to have shorter commutes but still work in an office.

“These kinds of structures will increase,” he says.

Retail

He also sees opportunities in beleaguered retail where he expects strained cash flows in the sector to increasingly turn into insolvencies: Alecta’s strategy is flexible and pragmatic, he says.

“We want to invest capital, and this will create opportunities for us to go in and support viable businesses,” he explains. “This goes for retail and most stressed segments, but of course it’s dangerous and we will have to be careful where we invest.”

Elsewhere, the boom in e-commerce will drive an expansion in logistics and warehousing. Here his focus is on logistics that provide smarter solutions to delivering goods to people at home.

“The last line has to better than it is today,” he reflects. “If patterns of living change so that people shop more where they live than where they work, this might change requirements for logistics too.”

The challenge here is that warehousing and logistics assets with strong fundamentals going forward are already expensive.

“They were expensive before and are more so now,” he says, adding that assets like care homes, government-used properties and medical centres also fall into this most sought-after, costly bracket.

Allocations he is also seeking to grow in a bid to diversify from GDP exposure and tap long term trends and demographics.

“There is a lot of GDP exposure in the overall fund given our equity portfolio,” he said. “We are trying to differentiate and create better risk exposures to these cycles. They are expensive because everyone is trying to buy them but it’s important.”

Sustainability, like a building’s energy consumption or water use, is another important differentiator in the hunt for assets given its importance in both attracting tenants or employees to properties, and buyers when it comes to sell.

“In order to be competitive you need to make sure you have an asset that is well run in terms of ESG,” he says. “Our view is that we don’t have to give up returns for ESG. We don’t see any contradiction here and there are plenty of opportunities to invest with good returns and ESG in infrastructure and real estate.”

It’s a strategy that has led to tough conversations with managers in recent years.

“A manager’s view on ESG will decide if we invest with them or not. However, we also work with managers and try to influence them; if we feel their policies are not up to our standards we will try and get them to change. Overtime we need alignment; this is a big issue for all our managers, and they understand the importance.”

Sweden vs overseas

The real estate allocation is divided 45:55 between Swedish and international assets respectively but he says this may change depending on opportunities coming out of the pandemic. The domestic allocation is managed internally and comprises direct investment, plus a number of joint ventures. “We will continue to work with managers where we don’t have the edge but in general in Sweden, we do it ourselves.”

In contrast, overseas investments are with managers, where partners are chosen for their expertise, control and alignment, plus the ability to offer Alecta scale and the potential to deploy large amounts of capital. “We are a small organization but we are quite a big pension fund,” he says, adding that overseas investments typically comprise co-investment alongside managers and club deals. “Our size helps us more than it hinders,” he says, adding that Alecta’s values and expertise make the pension fund a sought-after partner. “We are long term and consistent and this is what most managers want in a client. We will be an investment partners for quite some time and this is appreciated by managers. It is a competitive market, and we have a lot of things that we bring to the table.”

Inflation

Alongside diversification and returns, the strategy is also being driven by the need to ward against inflation.

“It’s fair to assume that the risk of future inflation is not negligible. Central banks will allow inflation to emerge; it is definitely a scenario that exists, and these assets will help our overall portfolio to be more resilient.”

It leads him to reflect on high asset prices across the board, something he says is a consequence of years of central bank manipulation of interest rates to stimulate struggling economies. It’s a trend that will be around for a while yet.

“Show me an asset that isn’t expensive,” he concludes. “Assets are expensive; this is going to continue and increases the risk of unknown shocks to the system for a while yet. Diversification is a good strategy, even though some of the assets we might buy are expensive.”

Leave a Comment

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

In an environment where multiple risks are emerging and their effects are compounding on the portfolio, CPP Investments' chief risk officer Priti Singh says the $572 billion fund is rethinking risk management from the ground up, shifting from reaction to preparation and embedding risk thinking earlier in investment decisions. She speaks to Amanda White about the fund's risk approach.

Sort content by

Best practice de-cumulatisation: a hybrid approach

Given annuitisation of retirement income is no longer compulsory in UK defined contribution funds, NEST has set out to uncover what best practice retirement income distribution looks like. The solution is a hybrid of flexibility and insurance – at low cost. Amanda White spoke to NEST chief investment officer, Mark Fawcett. One of the newest

AustralianSuper’s insourcing journey

By 2018 AustralianSuper will be managing about A$50 billion ($38 billion) of assets in-house. Chief investment officer of the A$84 billion($64 billion)  fund explains the logic behind the move to David Rowley. AustralianSuper is rapidly redefining the limits of what a large Australian institutional fund can be.  Projected to double its A$84 billion ($64 billion)

Asset owners take charge of the tender process

A candid feedback loop from asset owners to managers following a tender process will help raise the standard of transparency and appropriate offerings in the industry. Chief financial officer of Denmark’s Lønmodtagernes Dyrtidsfond (LD), Lars Wallberg, who has just overseen a full manager overhaul after a rigorous and deliberate tender process has advice to both

All aboard the change express as Railpen leaves the station

At the end of a corporate review process that lasted eight months, involved 23 meetings of a steering committee and produced 60 working papers, the UK railways pension fund Railpen was left with 422 action items. “We’ve done 224 of them,” Chris Hitchen, Railpen chief executive, told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium (FIS) at Harvard University.

Good for Harvard, good for the world: Why HMC embraced ESG with a passion

Harvard Management Corporation (HMC) signed up to the UN-supported Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) less than a year ago, but the company that manages the $36 billion Harvard University endowment is already moving rapidly to build environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors into every investment decision it makes. Jane Mendillo, president and chief executive of

Behind the long-horizon equities mandate at The Pensions Trust

How to implement long-term ideology is one of the enduring questions for investors. Unilever UK Pension Fund, The Pensions Trust and the Environment Agency Pension Fund have collectively allocated $750 million to the start-up, Ownership Capital, for its long-horizon engagement-focused strategy. For The Pensions Trust chief investment officer, the decision to allocate to a specialist

Previous