Calming the waters of uncertainty at UK seafarers’ fund

The UK’s £3.3-billion ($5.6-billion) Merchant Navy Officers’ Pension Fund (MNOPF) is poised to offload the final portion of its defined-benefit liabilities in the old section of the scheme. The fund, which has provided pensions to the shipping industry since 1937, comprises a $3.2-billion new section and a $2-billion old section, closed since 1978 and with around 22,000 retired members. Galvanised into action when funding levels plummeted to 81 per cent in 2008, the MNOPF insured a total $960 million of its old section in two separate deals with insurance group Lucida. Now, to counter all investment and longevity risks within the old scheme, the balance is likely to be insured by a third party too. “Subject to market conditions, we are close to making a decision regarding the buy-in of our remaining liabilities in the old section,” said MNOPF chief executive, Andrew Waring, who took over the helm in 2008, joining from Benfield Group.

The next step in Waring’s risk-averse, insurance solution will be keenly watched by the many other UK schemes weighing up the best way to handle the headache of ballooning pension liabilities. He’s convinced it’s the only strategy to meet the MNOPF’s $160-million monthly pension obligations and safeguard against the old section’s deficit landing on the balance sheets of the thousand-odd diverse employers that stand behind the scheme. The old section is currently 96 per cent funded on an all-gilts basis.

The multi-employer MNOPF scheme is a last-man-standing fund whereby the liabilities from any employer withdrawing from the scheme are reapportioned among those that remain, increasing their share of the deficit. Although Waring jokes how employers “visibly pale” when they understand the principle behind such a scheme, he is adamant the MNOPF’s structure, shared by other UK schemes including the $48-billion Universities Superannuation Scheme, ensure a particularly robust constitution. Waring’s particular challenge is that although the old section has around 3500 employers comprising all types of seafarers from oil companies to ferry operators, the fund can only track 250 of them. It’s a problem that has bled into the new section too. It has 350 employers but the last valuation showed that around 25 per cent of all liabilities in the scheme are now so-called orphan liabilities, ultimately forcing the MNOPF to call on its employers again.

In a process Waring calls “taking chunks of risk off the table”, Lucida first took on $797 million worth of liabilities in 2009, then a further $160 million in May 2010. “Half our liabilities in the old section are now extinguished. If we don’t approach risk like this, we are putting at risk the accrued benefits of our members,” he says. He’s just as determined not to call on the support of the UK’s lifeboat fund, the Pension Projection Fund, as he is to not impose “unreasonable funding obligations” on the schemes’ remaining employers. “The idea that if we get into trouble the PPF is always there isn’t a view I share,” he says. “We don’t want to use it because we need to work though our last-man-standing principle.”

New fiduciary management

In another strategy, again born from conservatism and caution but which has also grabbed the headlines and differentiated the MNOPF from peers, Waring has overseen the introduction of a new fiduciary management at the fund. The fund outsourced investment management to Towers Watson in 2010 and appointed Hymans Robertson as independent investment advisor to oversee Towers in 2011. Although the MNOPF investment committee, which meets five times a year, still decides on basic strategy including asset class and allocation, plus the size of the risk budget, Towers Watson oversees the rest. This includes hiring and firing managers – the number of managers has grown to 30 from 15 since Towers Watson took on the role – and negotiating fees on the scheme’s behalf. “We don’t have any resources for an inhouse investment team and the investment world gets ever more complicated,” he says. “Because of the way the fund is structured, members and employers sit on our board.” The old section is invested in a passive, low-risk strategy that targets 105 per cent funding over 10 years on a gilts basis. Growth assets include equity, investment and non-investment grade credit and property.

Strategy for the new section, which is between 60-70 per cent funded, also veers on the side of caution. Assets are portioned in global equity (20 per cent), private equity (4 per cent), hedge funds, including a distressed-debt allocation (10 per cent), property (3 per cent), commodities (2 per cent), reinsurance (3 per cent), non-investment-grade credit (8 per cent) and investment-grade credit (12 per cent). There is a 35 per cent matching asset allocation and 3 per cent in emerging market currency. The fund recently cut its equity exposure and increased its private equity and re-insurance allocations. “Our time horizons are a bit short for pure infrastructure,” says Waring. “Early stage infrastructure fits other funds better than the MNOPF – even our new section isn’t as new as it once was.” He says the fund is now robust across all possible scenarios rather than taking a bet on one particular asset class. Since the new management structure was introduced, returns have increased and risks reduced. The new section outperformed its 7.8-per-cent benchmark by 0.9 per cent over the year.

Sponsored Content

How to wind up

Waring says that other funds mulling a similar wind-up should focus on how best to present the fund to the insurance market. “Watch out for skeletons in the cupboard,” he advises. “There could be things lurking in dark corners that newer trustees wouldn’t be aware of.” For all his enthusiasm he warns that wind up is an emotional, “gut-wrenching” journey. He says the MNOPF is a club that members like belonging to; they won’t have the same affiliation or sense of trust with an insurer.

But he’s still resolute that with a mature scheme like the MNOPF, the downside risk is always greater than the upside potential. The MNOPF has less freedom than other funds; shifting more of the portfolio into return-seeking assets wouldn’t solve the problem. He talks about compromise and the balance that he’s had to strike between the fund’s diverse members. Some are big corporates, strong enough to withstand short-term volatility seeking long-term equity investment, but others are small ship owners with a low threshold for risk. “We traded in upside potential for security. It was a tough decision but we decided security was more important,” he says.

Leave a Comment

The Austin advantage: Texas Teachers talks optimism, innovation and growth

The Austin advantage: Texas Teachers talks optimism, innovation and growth

Jase Auby, TRS's celebrated CIO, explains why TPA doesn't fit with its culture; why community push back on data centres could turn out to be an investor advantage, and argues the case for continuing to invest in fossil fuels. Top1000funds.com sat down with the CIO in his Austin office for an all-encompassing conversation.

Sort content by

Vita Sammelstiftung puts bond holdings under microscope

Samuel Lisse, chief executive of Switzerland’s Vita Sammelstiftung (Vita), is currently in the process of hiring a new head of investment. The new appointee will have plenty resting in the in-tray, it appears, as she starts to assist the investment committee that governs the strategy of the 8.5-billion-Swiss-franc ($9.1-billion) joint foundation. That is not because

ATP reunites alpha and beta after 6 years

Alpha and beta rely to a large extent on exposures to systematic risk factors, so goes the “2013 thinking” of ATP in reversing the decision to separate alpha and beta in its investment portfolio six years ago. ATP has separate hedging and investment portfolios, with the hedging portfolio significantly larger at around DKK 670 billion

Environment Agency fund: a natural progression

It’s hardly surprising that a pension fund for employees working for an organisation charged with reducing climate change and its consequences invests according to strict green criteria. Yet the investment strategy of the United Kingdom’s £2.1-billion ($3.29 billion) Environment Agency Pension Fund (EAPF) definitely has the capacity to surprise. The EAPF posted a total return

Methodist morality delivers mainstream returns

When John Wesley, the 18th century Anglican cleric, preached that business practices should not harm one’s neighbour, he never imagined that his principles would guide the global investment strategy of an $18.4-billion pension fund. Today, the General Board of Pension and Health Benefits of the United Methodist Church, based in Chicago, ranks as one of

UMR: growth from government bonds?

“We have to move faster than our competitors,” says the chief executive of French retirement fund Union Mutualiste Retraite, Charles Vaquier. It is a phrase that you can hear uttered by business leaders at all sectors and levels, but one that institutional investors rarely emphasise. In chatting about its investment strategy, it soon becomes apparent

South Africa’s GEPF to invest globally

In the South African city of Pretoria, 50km outside Johannesburg, the sense of history is pervasive. The city was the capital of the apartheid regime and the site of Nelson Mandela’s presidential inauguration. It’s also home to Africa’s biggest asset manager the R1.17 trillion ($0.12 trillion) Public Investment Corporation, a state-owned body founded in 1911

Previous