Distressed Kentucky fund regroups

Among the 10 different pension and insurance schemes within the $16 billion Kentucky Retirement Systems portfolio lies one of America’s most distressed pension plans.

At only 17 per cent funded, the Kentucky Employees Retirement System (KERS) Non-Hazardous Plan is the biggest headache for chief investment officer David Peden. Speaking from the fund’s headquarters in Louisville, Kentucky – the US state best known for its horse racing and fried chicken – Kentucky-native Peden is under more pressure than the average pension fund CIO.

“Our investment decisions are under the microscope because of the funded status of the KERS plan,” he explains. “It’s a challenging place to be because even good investment returns will really have little impact on the health of the KERS system.”

And the investment returns Peden is dealing with are poor.

Rock-bottom bond yields and lacklustre equity gains have taken their toll on the portfolio, which reported a loss of 0.52 per cent in 2015. The worst performers were non-US and emerging market public equity (the allocation to emerging markets was axed through 2016) and hedge funds, in a result that falls short of the portfolio’s actuarially required rate of return of 7.5 per cent. Two of the 10 plans require a lower rate of return of 6.75 per cent.

Yet together with a new five-strong investment team, Peden is determined to turn Kentucky Retirement Systems’ fortunes around. He’s midway through altering the portfolio along fresh guidelines to cut costs and complexity and reduce risk.

Sponsored Content

“This is a complicated problem and we are putting as much intellectual firepower on this topic as we can,” he says, although he does acknowledge the challenge of recruiting dynamic teams in Kentucky. “We are not fully staffed; it’s a difficult place to recruit because Kentucky has only a small investment community.”

A first step has involved cutting the allocation to hedge funds by $800 million. Kentucky first invested in hedge funds five years ago and Peden stresses that this year’s lacklustre results are less of an issue in ditching the allocation than the desire to cut costs.

“Half of the hedge fund allocation will definitely be sold; the other half is under review. It is hard for hedge funds to sit within the context of a less complex and less expensive philosophy. It doesn’t mean they are wrong. In a [time of low inter-bank lending rates], while many may still be doing their job, it is difficult to justify the fee.”

Peden and his team will jettison the allocations that are duplicated in the main portfolio and don’t provide “enough bang for their buck”, such as equity beta, and credit beta in fixed income.

Global macro and trend followers, fixed income arbitrage and convertible arbitrage will remain for now. Peden is also exploring using managed accounts, rather than limited partnership structures, to improve transparency.

“I can’t say where we will invest the money from the hedge fund allocation yet; I don’t know the answer. I will in the next month or so.”

KERS Non-Hazardous has just over half its portfolio in equity, comprising a passive core with active management. The fund has increased its allocation to equity in recent months to try to achieve the 7.5 per cent long-term return goal; 2015’s best-performing allocations were US equity, private equity and real estate. Nevertheless, gradually reducing the equity allocation in line with a more risk-averse strategy is another of Peden’s priorities going forward.

“Over the last three years, the non-US equity allocation, and the dollar impact of that, have been a big drag on the portfolio. It is time to have the conversation about what is the proper allocation between US and non-US equity.”

The current allocation of the pension assets is 25.6 per cent to US equities, 25.2 per cent to broad market international equities, 10 per cent to private equity, 10 per cent to absolute return strategies, 8 per cent to real return strategies, 7.2 per cent to credit fixed income, 6.8 per cent to global fixed income, 5 per cent to real estate, and 2.2 per cent to cash or short-term securities.

The fund has relationships with 105 managers and about half of those are in private equity.

“We are looking to have fewer, more meaningful manager relationships,” Peden says.

As of June 2016, KERS Non-Hazardous had $3 billion of commitments across 42 private equity managers (66 partnerships) gaining exposure across the spectrum of strategies, including buyout, venture and growth, and credit-oriented strategies.

Peden is hopeful that the first signs of a rotation are under way as a consequence of the US election result. The selloff in bonds and rally in US equities led by sectors closely tied to economic growth, like banks, plus surging treasury yields, could be the beginning of a new era.

“[For] three years prior to the US election, it has been a very difficult period to have a diversified portfolio,” he says. “Value is doing better [since] the US election. To me, it seems that the psychology of the market has tipped, post-election; it is saying we are coming out of recession. The traditional stock-picking market is coming back.”

If he’s right, it could be just the change Kentucky needs.

Leave a Comment

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest, the largest workplace pension in the UK, says that private credit managers who prioritise institutional clients will be more favourably viewed. The £61 billion ($82 billion) fund has awarded a £450 million ($605 million) US direct lending mandate to Crescent Capital this month, citing the manager's institutional-client-first approach as a key attraction.

Sort content by

ATP returns hit again by large allocation to bonds

The $102 billion Danish pension fund, ATP, returned just 3 per cent in its return-seeking allocation in the first half of this year, buoyed by its foreign and Danish equity portfolios but pulled down by rising interest rates negatively impacting the large allocation to bonds.

How the tech surge has hit active management at Denmark’s AP Pension

The active equity strategy of Denmark’s €23 billion AP Pension – which focuses on a narrow exposure to a small set of high conviction, quality companies - has been hit by the surge in tech stocks, none more so than Nvidia. Investment director Pernille Jessen explains the problem.

UK’s GMPF: Why institutional investors are pushing into the rental market

A chronic shortage of housing in the UK has resulted in long waiting lists for social housing and young people left priced out of ownership. The experience of the Greater Manchester Pension Fund, investing more in the sector, provides lessons for other investors in jurisdictions with a housing shortage.

Border to Coast prepares to answer the call for pre-IPO growth capital

Joe McDonnell, CIO of Border to Coast, says the £45 billion fund can help fill the gap in funding UK private companies wanting to IPO. It’s part of an investment strategy that sees a focus on putting capital to work innovatively and intentionally for its underlying funds.

Private equity: Florida SBA mulls CFOs as alternative to secondaries

Florida State Board of Administration (SBA) is exploring innovative new strategies in its private equity portfolio like Collateralized Fund Obligations and “NAV loans” to tap liquidity and reposition the portfolio as an alternative to selling in the secondaries market.

CalPERS extols the benefits of co-investment in private equity

A recent board meeting marked progress in turning around the fortunes of CalPERS' private equity portfolio. Large co-investments and reducing the bias to buyout are reshaping the profile of investments, said portfolio manager Anton Orlich.

Previous