CalPERS assumes lower returns

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System has defined its 10-year capital market assumptions, which are the essential input for its four-yearly asset liability modelling (ALM) and, ultimately, for the asset allocation in its reference portfolio.

Determining the capital market assumptions is the first item in a six-step process CalPERS uses to set its policy portfolio in ALM workshops.

This year’s assumptions, which the internal staff presented to the board, showed much lower expected returns and higher expected volatility for CalPERS’ strategic investment classes than those developed for 2013.

As a result, one of the fund’s consultants, Pension Consulting Alliance, advised that “these latest inputs will very likely translate into lower long-term expected compound returns for the range of strategic portfolio options the investment committee will consider during the 2017 ALM process”.

The capital market assumptions the CalPERS internal team proposed, after input from its consultants and other players in the industry are:

Asset class                  compound return (%)           volatility (% standard deviation)

Sponsored Content

Global equity              6.8                                           17

Private equity              8.3                                           25.5

Fixed income              3                                              6.6

Real assets                   5.8                                          12.6

Inflation                      2.8                                           8

Liquidity                     2                                              1

 

The return estimates the $323 billion fund derived were modest compared with some others in the industry. For example, in private equity, its return estimate of 8.3 per cent is significantly below the projected return assumption of its private-equity consultant, Meketa, which forecasts 9.6 per cent. This is primarily because CalPERS has a lower expected return for global equity than Meketa. Both expect a premium for private equity above global equity of about 1.4 or 1.5 per cent.

All asset assumptions are based on inflation and a real risk-free rate, with assets then divided into three categories – low, medium or high risk premium.

Input from one of CalPERS’ other consultants, Wilshire, shows return prospects across all asset classes have been declining for decades, following the downward trend in interest rates. Core fixed income remains low, and the risk premium for every other asset class is anchored to fixed income.

Once the capital market assumptions have been agreed upon, the process for developing a new strategic asset allocation will begin. As at June 30, 2016, CalPERS asset allocation was:

 

Public equity               51.1%

Income                        20.3%

Real estate                   9.3%

Private equity              8.9%

Inflation                      6.0%

Liquidity                     1.5%

Infrastructure              0.9%

Forestland                   0.7%

Leave a Comment

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

As concerns in private credit mount, Colorado PERA CIO and COO Amy McGarrity says the pension fund isn’t seeing any strains in its growing allocation to the asset class, arguing that long-term investors are shielded from the risks because they can lock up their capital to weather market cycles.

Sort content by

Cambridge hedge fund insight sells

Most of the outsourced CIO clients of Cambridge Associates have aggressive asset allocations, with a tilt towards alternatives and hedge funds. But do the high fees eat into the potential alpha?

Strathclyde cuts equity allocation

The UK’s largest public pension fund is de-risking its successful equities portfolio and looking to private debt, emerging-market debt, global credit and UK infrastructure to fill the void.

Temasek seeks tomorrow’s champions

The $203.5 billion Temasek is making plenty of shifts in its flexible equities portfolio, to target markets, sectors or entities with the competitive advantage for global growth.

CPPIB active in emerging markets

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board has increased its focus on emerging economies, using active management to access local expertise and maximise its advantages of scale.

Future Fund revamps equities

Australia’s sovereign wealth fund has revamped its equities portfolio to take on deliberate factor risk and target idiosyncratic risk. The fund’s head of equities, Björn Kvarnskog, explains.

New Mexico fund readies for trouble

A reduced and reworked equities allocation, a buildup of income-producing assets and a commitment to readily available cash are all part of NMSIC CIO Robert Smith’s protection plan.

Previous