Equities bias for Nottinghamshire local fund

An equities-biased strategy for the Nottinghamshire Local Government Pension Scheme is against the trend for funds in the UK, but the local government scheme has no plans to de-risk as it tries to make up its funding level.

 

The strategy of the £3.5 billion ($5.7 billion) Nottinghamshire Local Government Pension Scheme, one of the United Kingdom’s many individual public sector pension funds, will remain biased towards equities with the fund holding steady with a 72 per cent allocation to the asset class and no plans to de-risk.

“We are a traditional Local Authority Fund with a high allocation to equities,” says Simon Cunnington in the Pensions and Treasury Management division at the fund which draws its membership from over 100 local employers in the East Midlands and with over 100,000 individual members.

“Our members like us to invest in real assets that generate economic growth and all our investments are long-term. We tend not to worry about quarterly numbers too much and we know equities are volatile, but believe they will continue to outperform other asset classes over 10-15 years.”

In a strategy Cunnington characterises as proudly independent and without any recourse to investment consultants, Nottinghamshire returned 14 per cent last year against its benchmark of 12.5 per cent, boosting assets under management by $653 million.

Sponsored Content

The equity allocation produced the best returns at 17.7 per cent followed by bonds returning 12 per cent with the fund’s UK property allocation trailing with returns of 1.8 per cent.

Around two-thirds of the equity portfolio is passively managed, mostly in-house by a team of six, but with a portion also invested via Legal and General tracker funds. The remaining third is actively managed by Schroders.

Nottinghamshire uses active management both for diversification and to improve returns, says Cunnington, proven by the in-house passively managed equity portfolio returning 10.4 per cent on a 5 year annualised basis ending September 2013 versus returns in the actively managed portfolio coming in at 12.2 per cent.

Nevertheless, it is not ignoring passive strategies and is currently stress testing all its portfolios in a benchmarking process that looks at the returns possible in passive index strategies versus the active strategies it has chosen to pursue.

“We wanted to measure the impact of our decision to invest differently,” says Cunnington. “It has kicked off a process that may see a few changes.”

One change, he says, will see a reduction in its allocation to UK gilts in favour of sterling denominated corporate bonds that will include European and US companies.

“Our bond portfolio is traditional and low risk with the majority in UK gilts. We plan to reduce our exposure to gilts because we don’t believe performance is going to be as strong going forward,” he says.

Nottinghamshire’s private equity allocation accounts for 2 per cent, around $261 million, of the total equity allocation. In an allocation begun in 2001 most investments are via fund of funds and secondary funds.

Despite the costs incurred in this strategy, Cunnington insists it is essential given Nottinghamshire’s lack of in-house expertise with the asset class. In coming months he hopes to increase the allocation to infrastructure currently made through private equity fund managers Partners Group.

Nottinghamshire is also unusual for its large property allocation accounting for 12 per cent of assets. $473 million of the property portfolio is directly held in domestic property investments managed by Aberdeen Asset Management.

“We like property over bonds because it gives a similar income, but has a better prospect of capital growth. Our UK investments did particularly well up until 2007 and although they have suffered since, we are just beginning to see a turnaround,” says Cunnington, noting that secondary property in particular has struggled.

“There is only a limited supply of prime property so values have held up here but secondary stock has fallen. The key is to keep the rents coming in.”

The remainder of the property portfolio is invested in pooled property funds in the UK and Europe.

Asset allocation at the fund is shaped according to set ranges. The equity allocation ranges from between 55-75 per cent, the property allocation can stretch from 5-25 per cent, the bond allocation between 10-25 per cent and cash holdings between 0-10 per cent.

The large equity allocation is also part of the fund’s deficit recovery program. Nottinghamshire is only 84 per cent funded but because of its buoyant cash flow, with an annual investment income of around $147 million, it can “ride out the volatility.”

Costs are kept low at the fund by a combination of in house management and a limited number of external managers.

The fund had investment management costs of 0.18 per cent net of assets in 2012-2013 and it is driven by the belief that simpler investment strategies lead to lower management fees because of less trading and transition costs.

 

 

 

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

NEST into infrastructure and property

The National Employment Savings Trust, NEST, the UK government-backed pension scheme set up a year ago with the introduction of auto-enrolment, developed a new allocation to real estate this summer. Now it is planning to add infrastructure to its illiquid allocations in a move reflective of a change of thinking to embrace more risk. NEST’s

AP7 accelerates equity returns with leveraging

The SEK150-billion ($22-billion) AP7 fund supplies the cream on the top of the Swedish public pension system. It essentially delivers premium pensions (in addition to the much larger pay-as-you go component) with a generous dose of equities. It has been able to further sweeten its offering by leveraging the main chunk of its portfolio. AP7

The Pension Trust: many schemes, one trust

“We are slightly unusual,” admits David Adkins, chief investment officer of The Pensions Trust (TPT), the £5.5-billion ($8.7-billion) pension fund founded after the end of World War II to provide retirement benefits for social workers. Talking from the trust’s Moorgate headquarters in London, Adkins explains how its umbrella structure has grown to provide pensions for

BT scheme treads carefully in emerging markets

Sunil Krishnan, head of market strategy at $62-billion British Telecom Pension Scheme Management Limited (BTPS), the United Kingdom’s largest pension fund for employees of global telecoms operator BT Group, has sage advice for investors contemplating their exposure to emerging markets. Examining the pros and cons of the asset class, Krishnan counsels caution. Speaking at a

Steady defense turns the wheels at Vervoer

Patrick Groenendijk, chief investment officer of €14-billion ($18-billion) Dutch fund Pensioenfonds Vervoer, seems to be well aware of the value of stability to investors, having striven to find the fund’s ideal fiduciary manager, keep faith in a defensive investment strategy and stay at an arm’s length from government investment initiatives. The Vervoer fund has been

CalSTRS asset liability study recommends…

The investment staff of the $170-billion Californian Teachers Fund, CalSTRS, will present new asset allocation recommendations to the board next week, with a reduction in fixed income and the adoption of a new “absolute return” category the likely outcome. The fund is in the final stages of the long process of its 2012 asset liability

Previous