CAAT sheds public equity

The Toronto-based Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology Pension Fund, (CAAT), a scheme for employees in colleges across Canada’s Ontario province, celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. Yet much of the defined benefit fund’s most important milestones have occurred in more recent years.

In 1995, the plan spun out from the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, which acted as trustee, to assume a jointly-sponsored pension plan governance structure and invest on its own. Back then, CAAT had only $3 billion in assets under management but now manages $C8.1 billion ($6.1 billion) and boasts an enviably healthy funded status, recently up from 110 per cent in 2016 to 113 per cent today.

“I think you can read from this it’s been a good year,” says chief investment officer Julie Cays, who joined CAAT 11 years ago from the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan, where she looked after the external manager program, now run in-house.

“We have had strong returns from public equity as well as private equity and infrastructure. Commodities and real-return bonds haven’t done so well, but these assets are an inflation hedge, and there hasn’t been much inflation,” Cays says.

Under her leadership, CAAT is continuing to evolve as it prepares for another significant shift in strategy. Fifty seven per cent of the portfolio is invested in return-seeking allocations to public and private equity, and 43 per cent is in liability hedging assets, comprising nominal and real-return bonds, infrastructure, commodities and real estate.

“These categories are not perfect. Real estate and infrastructure blur the lines between return enhancing and liability hedging,” Cays says of the asset classes that have characteristics and risk factors that fit into both parts of the portfolio.

Sponsored Content

Following the completion of a long-term asset liability study last year, which Cays says, “updated our return assumptions for the next 20 years”, CAAT plans to take 15 per cent of its assets out of public equity. Ten per cent will be invested in private equity, and the remaining 5 per cent will go into the real assets of infrastructure and real estate, increasing the real asset allocation from 15 to 20 per cent.

It’s a change of tack born in part from public markets’ focus on results, rather than on the long-term value creation CAAT favours, Cays explains.

“Public markets are increasingly short term and we have a long-term strategy,” she says. “It’s one of the reasons we like illiquid assets. We have a long-term investment horizon and a funding reserve and yes, I would say, our appetite for short-term volatility is fairly high.” CAAT has no tactical risk-allocation program.

Three-quarters of CAAT’s assets are actively managed.

“The active program has outperformed over the past 10 years, so it has been successful,” she says. Passive management “helps with the fees” but is also an important component of the fund’s portable alpha strategy. Passive investment is confined to part of the Canadian bond portfolio and a US S&P 500 equity exposure, with the beta from the US allocation underlying a portable alpha strategy.

“We use passive strategies structured within asset classes to manage the level of active risk exposure. We target beta like US equity, and then put hedge fund alpha on top.”

 

Small in-house team

Cays, who has an internal team of only six, outsources all the public allocations to external managers, counting about 15 mandates. The fund has a low turnover of managers and tends towards “larger mandates to help bring down fees”.

Some managers on the public side have been on CAAT’s books for the last 10-15 years and the fund shares a “broader relationship and ongoing dialogue” with a select few. The scheme has also employed an advisory firm to specifically help access the best GPs in private markets, a crucial part of reducing manager selection risk in building the allocations to private markets, she says.‎ Here, CAAT invests either via funds or, increasingly and particularly in infrastructure, via co-investments.

“We like co-investment because of the cost benefits and not having to pay the fees we have to pay with fund investment. It also allows for more targeted investment. For example, we can look for inflation protection in our infrastructure portfolio,” she explains.‎

The real-estate allocation is largely Canadian, accessed through funds, although Cays says CAAT is branching out into real-estate funds in Europe and the US now, too.

 

Sharing ideas and governance

CAAT’s governance structure is shaped by its status as jointly governed and is, Cays says, another pillar of its success. It means employers and employees share responsibility for the stability and security of the scheme, in a model that fosters co-operation and flexibility, and encourages prudent and responsible decision-making.

“Our board of trustees is appointed from the employer and employee side and some of them do have an investment background and are a huge help,” Cays explains. “They ask excellent questions and allow us to be nimble in terms of approvals.”

Cays also says sharing ideas with other Canadian pension funds, facilitated particularly by the active role of the Pension Investment Association of Canada, for which she is a past chair, is a contributor to CAAT’s investment success.

“We all know one another; we share ideas and collaborate. The difference between CAAT and other plans, I suppose, is that many Canadian corporate plans are worrying more about solvency and are more liability driven than we are. We have funding reserves, and can do more in the long term.”

What do the next 50 years hold? As the fund grows, Cays says, it will start to build internal expertise, rather than use external managers. But rather than be drawn on what global investment hazards lie in wait, her focus is on the risk of changes in contribution levels – such as beneficiaries living longer, trends towards part-time work and the shift towards defined contribution plans – affecting the plan.

“This is what we have our eye on going forward,” she says.

 

 

One response to “CAAT sheds public equity”

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

Why West Virginia’s CIO is worried about its China divestment directive

The $28 billion West Virginia Investment Management Board will divest from Chinese state-owned companies and CIO Craig Slaughter has reservations about the decision. He outlines in an interview with Top1000funds.com about why the directive is an extension of a big threat facing investors: a decline in liberal democracy. 

TRS strikes gold: Tiny allocation crushes its benchmark

This year, TRS doubled its tiny allocation to gold via a special fund that buys gold ETFs and mining companies. The strategy returned nearly 60 per cent, thanks to market conditions including inflation, geopolitics, government debt levels and de-dollarisation pushing gold higher.

LGPS Central doubles in size; looks to add more alternatives

In a rare interview, Jayne Atkinson, chief investment officer of the £100 billion ($132 billion) UK pool LGPS Central, reveals the plan to scale up its offering after almost doubling its assets under management, including expanding alternatives to new allocations in hedge funds, diversified growth funds and insurance-linked securities.

CalPERS bets on outperformance from growing climate allocation

CalPERS' Peter Cashion tells Top1000funds.com how the pension fund's strategy to allocate to climate mitigation, transition and adaptation strategies is allowing it to access an untapped corner of the US market where many investors have retreated because of the policy environment.

Alaska’s APFC mulls the positives of growing its small crypto exposure

The $84 billion Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation is weighing the benefits and risks of increasing its less than 1 per cent allocation to cryptocurrency following positive returns for the sovereign wealth fund. Despite the current policy tailwinds, the investor is wary about the asset class's liquidity and value drivers. 

TPA just a new acronym for ‘common sense’: Pennsylvania PSERS CIO

As CalPERS becomes the first US pension fund to adopt a total portfolio approach, Ben Cotton, CIO of $80 billion Pennsylvania PSERS suggests TPA is just another acronym for something investors should already be doing: making decisions for what is best for the whole portfolio.

Previous