ATP returns hit again by large allocation to bonds

ATP, the DKK 693.3bn ($102 billion) Danish pension fund returned just 3 per cent in its return seeking allocation in the first half of this year, buoyed by its foreign and Danish equity portfolios but pulled down by rising interest rates negatively impacting the large allocation to bonds.

ATP’s complex portfolio comprises an investment or return seeking portfolio (20 per cent of AUM) and a large hedging program that guarantees pensions for the fund’s five million beneficiaries.

An internal loan from the hedging portfolio gives the investment team more funds to invest while a large part of the interest hedging consists of interest rate swaps which do not tie down liquidity. The high cost of borrowing attributed to its use of leverage also ate into returns, costing the portfolio DKK2.8 billion ($0.41 billion)

Current assets under management are down from DKK 710bn ($105 billion) at the end of the first quarter of this year.

Why risk parity is still important

Portfolio construction in the return seeking allocation is based on risk parity where allocations comprise equity, interest rates, inflation and other risk factors – namely illiquid risk factors and an allocation to long/short hedge funds or alternative risk premiums. The strategy sells itself on an ability to function well in almost any market environment due to the balance between different asset classes.

However, the strategy faired particularly badly in 2022 when the correlation between bonds and equities resulted in the investment portfolio shedding -40.9 per cent, equivalent to 54.5 billion kroner ($7 billion).

Sponsored Content

Despite a growing number of questions about the strategy where vocal critics include Jesper Rangvid, Professor of Finance at Copenhagen Business School, ATP’s chief executive Martin Præstegaard told Top1000funds.com that risk parity continues to perform well.

He said ATP remains guided by the fundamental belief that a properly diversified portfolio levered to an acceptable level of risk is the best path to deliver the required expected return over time.

“ATP’s investment strategy for the bonus potential (investment portfolio) differs from market rate products by operating with a higher risk level and a different distribution of risk,” he explained.

He said that ATP has a far more equal distribution between equity and interest rate risk than the traditional market-rate product of other Danish pension funds.

“Overall, this means that ATP performs relatively well when bonds have positive price movements, while ATP performs relatively poorly when equities do very well – precisely because ATP has more bonds and fewer equities in comparison.”

He acknowledged that in the first half of 2024 it has not played to the fund’s advantage to have a high share of interest rate risk in the portfolio. “Inflation fell more slowly than expected in the first half of the year and central banks have therefore been more reluctant to lower interest rates.”

Over the past 10 years, ATP has generated a return of DKK 117bn ($17 billion) in its investment portfolio.

“ATP focuses on creating security in our pensions, and our investment strategy delivers that security year after year,” he said.

ATP is in the process of introducing two new overlay strategies in its investment portfolio to better manage unwelcome correlations between bonds and equities.

New overlays, mostly developed since 2022, will be rolled out through 2024.

In another defence of the strategy, Præstegaard highlighted its low costs.

ATP’s administration activity expenses in H1 2024 totalled DKK 18 per member or 0.03 per cent of the aggregate assets. This is similar to last year and still low in both a Danish and international context.

Asset Owner:ATP

Leave a Comment

PMT talks infra equity and how to balance stock concentration risk

PMT talks infra equity and how to balance stock concentration risk

Scenario testing has put inflation risk front and centre at PMT, the Netherlands’ third largest pension fund, and it's driving the investor to take stock of the inflation protection it gets from infrastructure. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, chief investment officer Hartwig Liersch unpacks the risk, as well as another initiative where it's balancing concentration risk in the equity allocation without hurting returns.

Sort content by

Autumnal Danish fund shows spring growth

Innovation is associated more with bold new businesses than gently declining ones, but Denmark’s Lønmodtagernes Dyrtidsfond (LD) is embracing change as it enters its final years. The pension fund’s inevitable disappearance has nothing to do with any lack of competitiveness or poor investment returns – the 9.9-per-cent net return it generated in 2012 is testament

KLM funds ride out de-risking turbulence

Pension funds can face a lot of turbulence in the course of their investing journey and many funds thrown into shortfalls have found the need to de-risk their portfolios. There might be a few investment officers at those funds casting an enviable eye upwards to the pension fund of Dutch flag-carrying airline KLM. Toine van

Mid-life crisis at West Midlands Pension Fund

The area surrounding the British city of Wolverhampton, near Birmingham, is still called the Black Country although the polluting coal mines and steel mills that sprung up during England’s nineteenth-century explosion of wealth have long gone. Today there is little evidence that Wolverhampton was the cradle of an industrial revolution and the 300-odd public sector

Inhouse target: zero to
$40 billion in 4 years

If everything continues on schedule, the $60-billion AustralianSuper will begin testing its new internal investment-management systems this month, with a view to managing its first money in house in the third quarter of 2013. Within four years the fund expects to manage as much as $40 billion in house, funded primarily from cash flow, and

Belgium’s KBC fund
thrives on LDI

Edwin Meysmans, chief executive of the KBC Pension Fund, sounds extremely relaxed for a man who rises early to avoid Brussels’ clogged roads on the way to the office. Then again, that Meysmans shies away from the madness of commuting crowds should perhaps be no real surprise given that his fund focuses on avoiding being

PKA seeks to satisfy its infrastructure hunger

The DKK200-billion ($35-billion) Danish medical professionals pension fund grouping, PKA, wants its government to help satisfy its appetite for investing in major infrastructure projects. Frank Jensen, an analyst on its asset strategy team, says PKA “is eager to get started” on sealing public-private partnerships with the Danish government, but its plans “have not come as

Previous