For VFMC, alternatives boom in the gloom

The $31 billion Australian government-backed asset manager, VFMC, has reaped big rewards from its belief in the hedge fund managers it backed five or more years ago, reports Simon Mumme.

Justin Arter
Justin Arter

In its latest performance figures, which show a headline return of 12.7 per cent, gross of fees and tax, against the 10.9 per cent gained by its benchmark in the year to June 30, the absolute return and private equity portfolios run by the Victorian Funds Management Corporation (VFMC) were standout performers.

The absolute return portfolio boomed 27.1 per cent over the 5.9 per cent gained by its benchmark, the UBSA Bank Bill index plus 2 per cent annually, while its private equity book gained 26.5 per cent over the 13.05 per cent achieved by its benchmark, the ASX 300 Accumulation, an index of the largest 300 listed companies in the Australian market.

Justin Arter, VFMC’s CEO, says the performance was due to the “snap back” performance of underlying hedge fund managers, many of whom experienced substantial client redemptions at the height of the financial crisis.

VFMC was not among the redeemers from these large, sophisticated, “east coast US” hedge funds, whose strategies range across credit and equities, Arter says.

Rather, it saw an opportunity to up its stake with managers as new capacity became available, earning itself “some kudos” with the big hedge fund shops in the process.

Sponsored Content

“We tend to try and partner and make a substantial investment with managers, so we’re not a tiny part their fund. We’re material.”

VFMC’s current private equity portfolio is, generally, about three years into an expected seven-year lifetime, Arter says, meaning its recent outperformance is not attributable to a “harvesting” of investments.

The program does not extend to emerging markets, where the operational conditions required for private equity investing are not as mature as in developed markets, Arter says.

“Private equity depends on real transparency, on books and records, on the rule of law. It’s a real deep dive. It’s seven years.”

He acknowledges the difficulty of consistently measuring the unlisted portfolio’s performance against its listed benchmark – the listed market moves ahead of the private market, providing a mismatch in returns which makes comparisons difficult – but questions whether private equity indexes, such as that run by State Street, are mature enough to be used by large institutional investors.

Buy low and be wary

The current VFMC team was established last year with the appointment of Arter. This followed a turbulent period in which its former CEO, Syd Bone, and investments chief Leo de Bever walked at different stages of the financial crisis.

The team is “acutely aware” their headline three- and five-year performance falls below benchmark, even though many of them, including CIO Justin Pascoe, were not at VFMC during that period.

Arter says the team has been strengthened by the expansion of its strategy unit, a team of four led by Peter Osborne, a former chief economist with Merrill Lynch Australia, which provides analysis and guidance to its asset class specialists.

While VFMC consults an expert hedge fund advisor, it does not retain an asset consultant to help develop its investment strategy and views, making the strategy unit an integral part of the team.

It also means the team can implement investment decisions in a matter of weeks, not months, as there is no recourse to an external consultant.

At present, the strategists are warning their colleagues to be increasingly careful when investing – and to be ready for anything.

“The tenor of their analysis has become more and more cautious in the last six weeks,” Arter says.

They don’t see many obvious opportunities across asset classes, but recommend carefully buying assets at the relatively cheap valuations currently available.

Rather than make a decisive call amid chronic European debt problems and signs the US may require a second stimulus, “we’re happy to let things develop over the back half of the year,” Arter says. “We think some strong signals will emerge.”

Or markets may just “churn” along, neither falling precipitously or rallying, in response to the entrenched problems originating from deleveraging in the West.

VFMC’s caution extends to China. The equities team recently visited inland tier one and tier two cities, and were concerned by reasonably high number of newly constructed buildings without tenants.

But in the long-term, the purchasing power that will one day be unleashed by the high personal savings rate in China will be a powerful force of growth, Arter says.

Leave a Comment

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

A view that the US stock market is overvalued and equity risk premia will be lower over the long term has driven New Zealand Super to lower the return expectations for its reference portfolio following its recent five-yearly review of the benchmark. Co-chief investment officer Brad Dunstan also flags underweight commodity exposure as an area to address and explains why the fund remains sceptical of illiquidity premia despite seeing a growing case for private markets.

Sort content by

New Mexico rejigs domestic equities

The investment committee of the New Mexico Public Employees Retirement Association approved a domestic equities restructure at a meeting last week. Amanda White spoke with the two joint acting CIOs, Joelle Mevi and Julian Baca, about the changes to the portfolio and the plans for the year including a fixed income and international equities review.

Irish SWF emerges solid and sets long-term asset allocation

The equities allocation of the Irish National Pensions Reserve Fund fluctuated enormously in 2009 as the fund was directed to by the Minister for Finance to invest  €7 billion in preference shares issued by Bank of Ireland and Allied Irish Banks to recapitalise the banks. Amanda White spoke to Eugene O’Callaghan, head of the investment

Indiana PERS benefits from autonomous decision making

An extensive education and relationship building experience has resulted in the board of the $14 billion Indiana PERS fully outsourcing investment decision making to the executive staff. Amanda White spoke to executive director Terren Magid about the benefits of autonomous, and quick, investment decisions, particularly in relation to alternatives. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Kansas PERS cuts global equities

The Kansas Public Employees Retirement System is slowly reducing its exposure to global equities as it explores “just about everything else”. Amanda White spoke with chief investment officer Robert ‘Vince’ Smith about the fund’s plans for 2010 which include an asset/liability study and the reorganisation of its equities allocations. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Passive tilt for Massachusetts state fund

The $42 billion Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Management (PRIM) will move half of its developed non-US equity portfolio and 25 per cent of its emerging market equity portfolio into passive strategies and has begun a search for a single manager for each asset class with a commencement date of May. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2

World’s largest DC plan to tender investments

The $244 billion Thrift Savings Plan, the largest defined contribution plan in the world, faces an enormous operational challenge this year as it moves from an opt-in to an opt-out default for US federal employees. Amanda White spoke with executive director Greg Long about the fund’s plans for 2010, which include a substantial investment tender.

Previous