AP1 doubles alternatives

Ossain Ekdhal

The Swedish AP1 will nearly double its alternatives allocation in the coming months with plans to invest up to $1.5 billion in hedge funds for the first time.In the past year, the SEK202 billion ($28 billion) Forsta AP-Fonden (AP1) has accomplished an organisation and investment-process reorganisation centred around more focus on strategic asset allocation.

In addition to encouraging a longer-term focus, this has had a number of effects including a move away from active management, and so a benchmark, focus; a reduction in staff and costs; and an emphasis on fewer and better funds manager partnerships.

As part of this, AP1 is now looking for up to three hedge fund partners to manage between $1 and $1.5 billion, with the type of investment strategy and vehicle dependent on the partner.

Ossian Ekdahl, head of communications and ESG at AP1, says the fund has decided to increase the alternatives allocation from about 6 per cent to “something higher, which might be up to 10 per cent”.

The alternatives portfolio includes real estate, private equity, hedge funds and opportunistic investments (in 2009 these included credit and fixed income opportunities arising out of the financial crisis).

Ekdahl says by engaging hedge funds the fund is looking to diversify the total portfolio, so it is particularly looking for low correlation with equities and bonds, but it has no preconceived ideas of investment strategies.

Sponsored Content

“We want our hedge fund partners to help us with investing in several hedge funds and build a portfolio of hedge funds. Depending on who it is as to whether it will be a fund-of-funds or AP1 will build its own portfolio,” he says.

The fund is in somewhat of a tender frenzy, with submissions for a strategic hedge fund partner to close at the end of the month, a request out for a global custodian (the incumbent is BNY Mellon); and a tender for an ethical research provider.

The search for a provider of environmental, social and ethical aspects, including advice, is being tendered by the Ethical Council, on behalf and for AP1, AP2, AP3 and Ap4.

The funds do a reasonable amount of collaboration where appropriate, including administration providers, and in this case are looking for a provider of both company analysis and screening as well as advice.

Ekdahl says each fund has different views on how to integrate the research into investments.

There has been some dialogue in Sweden on merging the funds but Ekdahl will not engage, saying it is a question for Parliament.

One of the enduring benefits of the fund’s new investment model, which focuses more on strategic asset allocation than active management of each portfolio, is a reduction in costs.

The organisational change shifts the resources from active management to an increased focus on strategic asset allocation and absolute return, with a strategy committee with representatives from all investment units making strategic decisions.

“There is more collaborative work on asset allocation on an ongoing basis,” Ekdhahl says.

In the process the fund reduced the number of employees from 68 to 43 from the end of 2008 to the end of 2009, and there is an overall aim of reducing management and transaction costs by up to 40 per cent. It also changed its incentive scheme, with variable remuneration linked to the total return of the fund.

“We still manage assets actively in house and externally but more focus, and more importance on strategic asset allocation of investments,” Ekdahl says.

The fund now divides internal management into three different investment units – asset allocation, equities, fixed income and foreign exchange.

About 56 per cent of the total portfolio is managed in house. Within the past year it reallocated the portfolio to increase equities with a greater emphasis on Sweden and emerging markets – it manages both domestic and European equities in house. It will announce some further asset allocation changes at the upcoming half-yearly report in August.

Of the total externally managed assets, almost 90 per cent is managed in six different asset classes: US equities, Japanese equities, Pacific equities excluding Japan, emerging market equities, US corporate bonds and European corporate bonds. The fund hires 15 managers across 20 different management mandates.

The remainder is the alternative investment program which includes real estate, private equity, hedge funds and opportunity investments.

For the year to the end of 2009, AP1 returned 20.2 per cent.

Asset allocation 2009

Asset class                   %

Equities                       58.6

Fixed income              34.7

Alternatives                 5.1

Currency exposure      21.6

Leave a Comment

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

As Finland's pension funds prepare to increase their equity allocations to unprecedented levels compared to global peers, they must also navigate a new and unfamiliar risk. Elo's chief investment officer Jonna Ryhänen explains the fund's investment approach going forward and how it will manage stakeholder and media scrutiny as they react to swinging volatility and returns.

Sort content by

South Carolina ramps up PE

The $31.3 billion South Carolina Retirement System Investment Commission has launched a co-investment private equity program in a bid to reduce risk and enhance returns. Partnering with Chicago-headquartered GCM Grosvenor, RSIC will tap Grosvenor’s own private equity deal flow, as well as introductions to the manager’s GP network.

Danish fund cuts managers for better ESG

The €9.5 billion DanishPædagogernes Pension, PBU, is in the process of consolidating the number of managers in its listed equity portfolio. The decision at the fund - which has around 10 large, focused equity mandates - is linked to an ambition to reduce the number of companies in the portfolio in the belief that fewer companies in the 42 per cent actively-managed equity allocation allows greater ESG oversight.

The impact of technology on investments

Harshal Chaudhari recently sidestepped from his role as company-wide CIO at IBM, looking after $150 billion in pension assets, to a new role as the tech giant’s chief analytics officer. He spoke to Top1000Funds about the strategy he ran at the pension fund, his wider thoughts on the global economy and the impact of technology on the investment world.

QSuper: standing out from the crowd

QSuper CIO, Brad Holzberger, has long stood out from his peers by loading up on long-term government bonds and even the recent sudden collapse of yields, as investors started pricing in slower growth, hasn’t deterred him from sticking with this asset class. The retiring CIO of one of Australia's largest funds about expectations.

ADIA boosts internal active fixed income

The $700 billion Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, ADIA, is boosting its internal fixed income capabilities and scaling up capacity to run active strategies in-house as it simplifies the portfolio to become more fleet-of-foot.

Finding risk: First State Super

A decade of ultra-low rates and mediocre growth does not mean that every year will yield low returns for investors, according to Damian Graham, the CIO of First State Super one of Australia's largest institutional investors. He talks about how to get enough risk in the portfolio.

Previous