Federal Retirement Thrift: Manager boost

American flag waving with the Capitol Hill in the background

Five years on from a board decision to increase manager diversity, Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, the Washington-based defined contribution plan for US federal civilian employees is finally poised to allocate a portion of its giant $640 billion assets to a new manager for the first time.

Since inception in 1986 the fund has only used a single external manager, originally mandating Wells Fargo Nikko Investment Advisors (WFNIA), then Barclays Global Investors and most recently BlackRock to run four key funds.

However, following a consultation back in 2015 that flagged concentration risk, the giant fund pledged to hire another manager to reduce its vulnerability to BlackRock, which manages around $400 billion across the so-called C, S, I and F Funds, suffering a black swan event. Following a series of RFP’s, State Street Global Advisors was mandated to run around 20 per cent of assets across Thrift Savings Plan’s (TSP) four funds starting January 2021.

The funds comprise F Fund (a $38 billion bond index fund that tracks the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index) the C fund (a $228 billion stock index fund that tracks the S&P 500) the S Fund (a $72 billion stock index fund that tracks the Dow Jones) and the I Fund (a $51 billion stock index fund that tracks the MSCI EAFE (Europe, Australasia, Far East) Index. Around $260 billion is invested in a G fund, an internally managed passive Treasuries allocation.

“BlackRock has always been our only manager, but several years ago our board decided to move to a two-manager structure,” says Kim Weaver, director of external affairs at the fund where the five-strong investment team, headed up by CIO Sean McCaffrey monitor quality assurance and performance and have been working from home since March.

“Should something go awry with BlackRock, State Street will continue to be able to transact business on behalf of our participants,” she says, adding that not only does the appointment of State Street diversify organisational risk providing an alternative, at-the-ready capability to manage funds. But bringing in another manager also boosts competition. However, she confirms that the fund has no plans to boost its manager roster in another push to increase diversity.

Sponsored Content

“We won’t add more managers going forward. Two will do the trick.”

Federal Retirement Thrift’s startingly simple strategy rests in its defined contribution roots and Congress decreeing from the beginning that investment rests in just five passively managed funds.

“The strategy is born out of simplicity but also a strong belief in passive management,” says Weaver who adds that multiple fund choices and a plethora of investment opportunity often overwhelms beneficiaries, paralysing their ability to make selections.

“DC plans are trending our way now,” she says, adding that the fund engages with investment consultants every five years or so to analyse afresh the benefits of changing the statute to offer different investments.

Not all are DC funds are as simple, however. The UK’s £8 billion National Employment Savings Trust, NEST chose a raft of new managers in 2019 to run illiquid allocations to infrastructure, real estate and corporate loans in a new portfolio targeting 5-10 per cent of assets under management over time. And many Australian defined contribution funds have large allocations to unlisted assets, especially infrastructure.

Federal Retirement Thrift has no such plans, says Weaver. For now, there will be no changes for beneficiaries beyond TSP’s equity and treasury offing.

“We recently looked to supplement the funds we offer but haven’t found any. Everything is structured to manage to the benchmark and there is no ambition to add active managers or do anything differently to what we are currently doing.”

Indeed, plans to do something different were abruptly halted earlier this year. About to realise a board decision first broached in 2017 to shift TSP’s I Fund benchmark to the MSCI ACWI ex-U.S. Investible Market index from the MSCI EAFE index to tap Chinese growth, were scrapped.

Having fought off pressure not to invest in the index which comprises an 8 per cent exposure to Chinese companies the previous November, the fund was forced to bow to the orders of President Trump and dropped the plan. As to whether investing in China is now back on the agenda with a Biden presidency, Weaver says she has no further comment from the May announcement of the about turn.

“We have a good plan, and we are very proud of it and hope it will continue to enhance stability for our participants,” she concludes.

Leave a Comment

Why NYC pensions CIO hasn’t drunk the ‘TPA Kool-Aid’

Why NYC pensions CIO hasn’t drunk the ‘TPA Kool-Aid’

Three decades of investing have given Monte Tarbox sharp eyes for recognising risk and opportunities, and he’s putting it to use as the new permanent chief investment officer of the $306 billion NYC Bureau of Asset Management. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, Tarbox outlines his vision for the fund, why he’s bullish on infrastructure but “nervous” on PE, and why he hasn’t drunk the TPA “Kool-Aid”.

Sort content by

Value lies where precious data is stored

Organisations across the globe are collecting data, analysing and re-analysing it more and more every day. As this trend continues, data infrastructure – tangible or intangible – becomes increasingly attractive. Canada’s OPTrust cites this reality as the rationale behind the EdgeCore partnership. It thinks data is its own asset class.

Northern LGPS forges own pooling path

The UK’s £45 billion Northern LGPS pool has eschewed creating a separate FCA-regulated entity, seeing it as an unnecessary expense. Moves in infrastructure and private equity have also reflected the asset pool’s laser-like focus on keeping costs down.

LUCRF’s member profile drives strategy

Leigh Gavin, CIO at Australian industry-fund pioneer LUCRF Super, takes care to match portfolios and costs with the needs of the fund’s low-balance membership. In recent years, this has meant taking on additional risk and questioning fee models in private equity.

London’s TfL takes ESG message to masses

The £11 billion TfL Pension Fund has released its first-ever annual sustainability report. The fund for public-sector transport workers hopes the report will help bring more members on board with its well-established ESG strategy and also make clear to its asset managers what it expects of them.

Coal bucks trend with focus on income

The £21 billion Coal Pension Trustees is targeting income and shoring up cash flows. CIO Mark Walker has a new bond portfolio in the works and is examining private debt and property closely. He’s also targeting onshore equities in China.

CERN risk appetite keeps assets liquid

The CHf4 billion CERN pension fund maintains a dynamic, tactical strategy that takes into account the market environment and the fund’s liabilities. Once risk levels are set, CIO Elena Manola-Bonthond tweaks and adjusts to stay on target, employing strict due diligence in areas such as private equity and hedge funds.

Previous