Centrica focuses on dynamic decision making

For the Centrica pension fund, which adopts a liability-matching portfolio approach, last year was busy for appraising new opportunities arising out of the fact banks are no longer lending. This year its focus is on being more dynamic. Amanda White spoke to chief investment officer of the £5.5 billion ($9 billion), Chetan Ghosh.

The Centrica pension fund adopt a liability-driven approach, with a separate hedging portfolio, and growth portfolios which have slight adaptations for the three underlying pension schemes.

Fundamentally, instead of a strategic asset allocation as an investment objective, the investment committee sets a liability-related target.

“We are trying to set the optimal portfolio to best capture forward looking returns anywhere in the world in any market. We are conscious of our risk parameter so all the hedging must bring investments back to permitted boundaries,” Ghosh says. “It’s best ideas adjusted for risk.”

The fund targets excess returns over gilts which must be done within permitted volatility boundaries relative to how gilts move.

The allocations are driven by the best way to achieve return targets and investments are allocated to asset classes on a bottom up basis, aggregating up to percentage holdings in return-seeking and liability-matching, rather than the other way around.

Sponsored Content

At the moment across three schemes 20 per cent is allocated to liability-matching assets and 80 per cent in growth above the risk free.

Last year the fund looked at the top-down philosophical view, which matched with the bottom opportunities, of exploiting opportunities due to the fact banks are not, or can’t, lend anymore.

Some of the investments the fund assessed, and adopted, included mining loyalties, and social housing.

“Both of these played to the bank financing theme. Mining companies can’t get the financing they used to, and in social housing banks have pulled new finance. In liability matching we want long-dated cash-flow generating assets and these fit,” says Ghosh, who was educated at The Kings College, University of London where he received a First in Maths.

Within the growth portfolio bank financing was also a theme with the fund looking at niche, illiquid credit opportunities including direct lending, mezzanine financing and senior loans.

Within equities the fund appointed three new global unconstrained mandates as well as frontier equities and small cap.

The fund outsources all investment, and only has an internal team of three looking after operations and administration, managers monitoring and project research into new asset classes as well as the generation of new ideas.

One of the defining characteristics of its outsourced model is it works closely with managers, both for new ideas, but also to tailor mandates and opportunities.

For example Ghosh and his team have liked the insurance theme for some time, and the fund finally allocated to insurance-linked securities, but after a long search to find the right manager.

“We have liked it for a while but it took us a long time to find the right manager with the right fees,” he says. “We removed the performance fee as we think for that asset class it is not appropriate.”

Forming a network of trusted partners in asset management and banking for the generation of new ideas was one of Ghosh’s first priorities when he came on board in 2009.

“I wanted to build a network of trusted partners in the asset management and banking communities so we were not overly reliant on our consultant,” he says.

“We say the door is open if you have something relevant, but if you abuse that then the door will shut on you,” he says, adding that managers have all had a respectful manner in presenting their ideas.

“The last 10 things we have done have come from the internal team, through this process, rather than from the investment adviser,” he says, adding the consultant, Mercer, is still very much on board.

Since 2009 the governance of the fund has also evolved, with trustees setting liability related objectives. The advantage of this approach, Ghosh says, is that trustees are not in decision paralysis.

The fund has three independents on the investment committee which the team believes makes it easy to process ideas, which the CIO implements.

And there are mechanisms in place to converse between meetings, so that investment decisions can be made quickly.

“In the UK traditional pension schemes haven’t sought to be dynamic, but it is a priority in 2014 to enhance how dynamic we are. We want to focus on taking advantage of extreme valuations of asset classes or sub asset classes,” Ghosh says.

 

 

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

Japan’s GPIF sets investment principles

Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund, the largest pension fund in the world, has established a set of investment principles that focus on its ability to take advantage of its long-term investment horizon and the fund’s ability to make pension payments. The ¥137 trillion ($1.1 trillion) fund is working to long time horizons, with a fiscal

Best practice de-cumulatisation: a hybrid approach

Given annuitisation of retirement income is no longer compulsory in UK defined contribution funds, NEST has set out to uncover what best practice retirement income distribution looks like. The solution is a hybrid of flexibility and insurance – at low cost. Amanda White spoke to NEST chief investment officer, Mark Fawcett. One of the newest

AustralianSuper’s insourcing journey

By 2018 AustralianSuper will be managing about A$50 billion ($38 billion) of assets in-house. Chief investment officer of the A$84 billion($64 billion)  fund explains the logic behind the move to David Rowley. AustralianSuper is rapidly redefining the limits of what a large Australian institutional fund can be.  Projected to double its A$84 billion ($64 billion)

Asset owners take charge of the tender process

A candid feedback loop from asset owners to managers following a tender process will help raise the standard of transparency and appropriate offerings in the industry. Chief financial officer of Denmark’s Lønmodtagernes Dyrtidsfond (LD), Lars Wallberg, who has just overseen a full manager overhaul after a rigorous and deliberate tender process has advice to both

All aboard the change express as Railpen leaves the station

At the end of a corporate review process that lasted eight months, involved 23 meetings of a steering committee and produced 60 working papers, the UK railways pension fund Railpen was left with 422 action items. “We’ve done 224 of them,” Chris Hitchen, Railpen chief executive, told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium (FIS) at Harvard University.

Good for Harvard, good for the world: Why HMC embraced ESG with a passion

Harvard Management Corporation (HMC) signed up to the UN-supported Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) less than a year ago, but the company that manages the $36 billion Harvard University endowment is already moving rapidly to build environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors into every investment decision it makes. Jane Mendillo, president and chief executive of

Previous