Brunel’s responsible investment expertise helps cut management fees

Brunel Pension Partnership is making cost savings of £34 million ($41 million) per year, two years ahead of its initial target of saving £27.8 million a year by 2025. The partnership’s latest annual report and financial statements reveals that Brunel is saving almost four times the costs it incurs thanks to the management fees it is able to negotiate because of its responsible investment expertise.

“Two years ahead of schedule, Brunel is saving around four times the costs we incur via the management fees we negotiate.,” writes Denise Le Gal, Chair, in her Forward to the report.

Brunel says its success reflects two defining characteristics. The professionalism and efficiency of its approach to pooling and the negotiating power it gains from leadership in sustainability. More than 80 per cent of client AUM has been transferred into the pool.

While the specific targets on cost savings were set by Brunel Pension Partnership, the broader ambitions of pooling were defined by the UK government when it launched the pooling process. The UK’s 100-odd small local authority pension schemes grouped into eight bigger pools six years ago, tasked with creating economies of scale, cutting costs and broadening access alternative investments.

Infrastructure investment

“Private markets have been an important part of the cost-saving jigsaw,” continues le Gal. At Brunel, infrastructure is a core focus, and the partnership is in its third cycle of allocating to private market portfolios. Through these portfolios, it has targeted a range of infrastructure projects and currently has around £819 million invested in the asset class which has delivered £6 million in cost savings.

“We launched Cycle 3 of our private markets portfolios in 2022. Private markets offer us a particular opportunity to construct and direct the new economy, one that delivers both the Net Zero transition, and the Just Transition needed to make it happen,” says chief executive Laura Chappell.

Sponsored Content

Other 2022 highlights include co-launching a new series of Paris-aligned benchmarks with FTSE Russell. Brunel also added two new mandates to its Sustainable Equities portfolio.

Small is beautiful

Brunel has also launched a bespoke local impact portfolio for client fund Cornwall Pension Fund. The £115 million Cornwall Local Impact Portfolio (its smallest ever portfolio) is the first LGPS multi-asset portfolio to target local impact.

Brunel was able to negotiate mandates with two leading global managers – one for affordable housing, the other for renewables – and to harness the portfolio to target those priorities in a county where both poverty and climate change are significant challenges.

Brunel recently launched a Climate Stocktake and published a new Climate Change Policy.

“The twin challenges of transition finance and accelerating global change are enormous. By delivering on the goals set by our partnership, we will not just benefit our clients and their members. In the long-term, we will demonstrate to the wider industry to our belief that RI is indispensable to achieving healthy long-term returns,” concludes Chappell.

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

Panama’s sovereign fund mulls the future of digital assets

Abdiel Santiago, CEO and chief investment officer of the Fondo de Ahorro de Panama, Panama's $1.5 billion sovereign wealth fund, is one of many CIOs watching from the sidelines as digital asset markets develop.

Guardians of the Future: The evolution of New Zealand Super

New Zealand Super’s new chief executive Jo Townsend inherits an organisation with a strong culture but facing some challenges posed by rapid growth. An internal project aims to reduce complexity and focus on simplicity for a fund already rated by WTW as operating at global best practice levels.

Culture Club: CalPERS puts people first in talent reboot under new CIO

Only two months in and CalPERS' new CIO Stephen Gilmore has already made his mark, with plans to overhaul talent and culture in the investment office, meeting frequency and the number of strategic initiatives slashed and an increased focus on data and technology to improve efficiency and reduce risk.

Utah’s URS: Why fossil fuels and alt energy hold key to climate crisis

US public funds should stop wasting time on thinly veiled political activism, ditch ESG conferences and repurpose most of their sustainability staff, says URS’ CIO John Skjervem. Instead they should invest in proven energy investments and move from either/or to both/and which allows fossil fuels to jostle alongside alt energy.

Church Commissioners: Managing historic real assets for the future

The jewel in the crown of the Church Commissioners’ portfolio, the London-based asset manager for the historic assets of the Church of England, is its allocation to real assets, which contributes to returns used to support the work and specific needs of the church, alongside clergy pensions.

Why AP4 has decided to integrate Scope 3 emissions across equities

Swedish buffer fund AP4 has begun integrating Scope 3 into its systematic equity allocation, convinced a company's up and downstream emissions data signposts the green winners of the future.

Previous