Governance changes give BP flexibility in investment decision making

The most recent investment review by the £13 billion ($20 billion) BP Pension Fund, completed last month, didn’t focus on altering investment allocations, rather it examined the way investment decisions are made at the fund. Chief executive, Sally Bridgeland spoke to Amanda White about the governance changes and the new flexibility around investments.

Defined benefit funds across the globe have made varied responses to the financial crisis including, but not limited to, more conservative asset allocations, revisiting passive investing, and increasing funding levels.

For the £13 billion ($20 billion) BP Pension Fund, the crisis didn’t raise any alarm bells about the way it was investing, with its portfolio beating the benchmark last year and remaining solvent on its own internal measures.

The fund is uniquely advantaged to weather the storm, with its employer-sponsor committed to making up any shortfall on a funding basis each year.

This provides the fund with somewhat of a crutch, but by no means has prevented the chief executive, trustee board and internal investment team from engaging in a dialogue around better investment methods, techniques and decision making.Sally Bridgeland

In fact for chief executive of the fund, Sally Bridgeland, the most important part of the recent investment review was to examine, and understand the detail of the sponsor’s role.

Sponsored Content

Bridgeland describes the operations of a pension scheme as an eternal triangle between the sponsor, the covenant, and investments. And it’s this unique and sensitive relationship that was explored in the most recent investment review.

‘We decided to stick with the same investment approach but we’ve made changes to the way we do things to reflect the past few years,” she said. “In the last few years we would have liked more flexibility around decision making and investments.”

However she is cautious that there be rigor in how that translates to the reliance put on the sponsor.

This has materialised in the investment principles statements, where previously most of the investment decisions were referred to the board, some of the detail has been taken out and given Bridgeland and the internal team of BP Investment Management (BPIM) more flexibility.

“We now retain the high level split between equities and bonds but within that we have more flexibility, to make decisions, and move allocations,” she said.

For example, she said throughout the crisis the fund’s analysis across the entire portfolio of stocks and bonds showed a high concentration of financial stocks, which internally became a concern, however neither the investment team nor Bridgeland were tasked to make adjustments.

“We are not tearing up the rule book, but we want to acknowledge flexibility.”

In addition the new flexibility will allow nuances in investment, such as recognising corporate bonds is not a homogeneous asset class but that different bonds, such as financial bonds, behave differently.

“That is my role to do that and not the active mangers,” Bridgeland said.

The discussion around changing the governance model was very collaborative, and was equally driven by the investment management arm and the in-house executive team under Bridgeland, and well received by the plan sponsor.

“We have had the same governance model for three years, and everyone was too comfortable and have slackened off. Now we are more about building confidence and trust in the decisions and the people,” she said, adding that a dash of cynicism and caution was important.

An example around this new decision making flexibility is examining the allocation to an opportunistic bucket.

“We have had the discussion around what would be in it if we do. Private equity was an opportunistic but now it’s an established asset class.”

Bridgeland is also keen to maintain a forward looking overview of the pension fund, and regularly engages with funds managers.

“One thing we do that others don’t seem to do, is I have conversations with funds managers and economic advisers about what’s on the horizon, not just looking backwards.”

The fund’s asset allocation has not changed significantly, with the post-review allocations including 65 per cent to equities, 10 per cent to private equity, 15 per cent to bonds, 5 to 6 per cent to property, and a bit of cash and gilt for liquidity.

“We have the flexibility to make asset allocation changes around the benchmark,” she said.

The assets are mostly managed inhouse, under chief executive of BPIM Anthony Pike, but some corporate bonds, small caps and private equity is outsourced.

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

How a sovereign fund decided to take the road less travelled

New Zealand’s sovereign wealth fund made a big brave decision in the eye of the storm early last year and introduced a new dynamic asset allocation strategy. The strategy, driven by in-house analysis, involved several large bets on global markets. As Greg Bright reports, the decision seems to have paid off. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1

AIMCo splits top job, beefs up investment team

The C$69 billion ($66 billion) Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo) will split its chief executive and chief investment officer roles, with Leo de Bever retaining the chief executive position, while a search is underway for a new CIO. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

What Seatown could achieve for Temasek

Seatown Holdings, the fund manager being launched by the $121 billion Temasek, one of Singapore’s two sovereign wealth funds (SWFs), is not a hedge fund. It is a global investment company with a mandate to invest in stocks and bonds – but its size and private structure can enable it to tap sources of return

New Mexico rejigs domestic equities

The investment committee of the New Mexico Public Employees Retirement Association approved a domestic equities restructure at a meeting last week. Amanda White spoke with the two joint acting CIOs, Joelle Mevi and Julian Baca, about the changes to the portfolio and the plans for the year including a fixed income and international equities review.

Irish SWF emerges solid and sets long-term asset allocation

The equities allocation of the Irish National Pensions Reserve Fund fluctuated enormously in 2009 as the fund was directed to by the Minister for Finance to invest  €7 billion in preference shares issued by Bank of Ireland and Allied Irish Banks to recapitalise the banks. Amanda White spoke to Eugene O’Callaghan, head of the investment

Indiana PERS benefits from autonomous decision making

An extensive education and relationship building experience has resulted in the board of the $14 billion Indiana PERS fully outsourcing investment decision making to the executive staff. Amanda White spoke to executive director Terren Magid about the benefits of autonomous, and quick, investment decisions, particularly in relation to alternatives. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous