GMPF prioritises low costs in LGPS pool

The United Kingdom’s Northern Powerhouse, one of the funds to emerge in a pooling process that is combining 89 local government pension schemes (LGPS), into some eight so-called wealth funds, will prioritise infrastructure investment and low costs.

The £17.6 billion ($22.8 billion) Greater Manchester Pension Fund, GMPF, pooling with West Yorkshire Pension Fund and Merseyside Pension Fund are together shaping an investment strategy that will include a 10 per cent allocation to infrastructure within three to five years, says councillor Kieran Quinn, chair of the GMPF.

The Northern Powerhouse, named after the previous UK government’s policy to boost growth in the region and with combined assets of $45 billion as also pledged to become “the lowest cost pool in the LGPS on a like-for-like basis.”

Most of the savings will come from building direct investments in illiquid assets like private equity and infrastructure, says Manchester-born Quinn, a former postal worker elected to the board of the pension fund in 1997. Existing private equity allocations in fund of funds will move to a single fund with a focus on co-investments. Similarly, hedge fund allocations in fund of funds will move to single strategy funds

The GMPF currently has a target allocation to private equity of 5 per cent and a target allocation to infrastructure of 4 per cent. Asset allocation at the fund is split between a 61.5 per cent allocation to public equity, 23.5 per cent to bonds and cash, 10 per cent to property and 5 per cent to alternatives.

The Northern Powerhouse will also reduce the proportion of indirect property and infrastructure relative to direct property and infrastructure, says Quinn.

Sponsored Content

To date the fund’s direct local infrastructure holdings are characterised by investments anchored in the community and include house building on brownfield sites, office developments and a stake in Manchester city airport. Additional cost savings will come from moving equity and bond allocations in-house as the internal team is strengthened.

“The GMPF sees the potential from further internal resourcing,” says Quinn. Here managing assets in-house will benefit from West Yorkshire’s strong internal team which manages around $11.6 billion of listed assets.

It starts from an advantageous position of already having many of the economies of scale that other merged funds are seeking, says Quinn.

“We have been very efficient regarding our fees and issues around costs. There is more to do, but this is less fertile ground to plough. Some of the smaller funds will make more significant savings.”

 

Counterproductive to compete

He wants infrastructure investment to include co-investment with the UK’s other local authority pooled funds. Co-investment will help win the bigger deals where competition has squeezed UK pension funds out of the market, he says.

It’s a strategy the GMPF has already embarked on through collaboration with the London Pension Fund Authority, LPFA, in two direct infrastructure investments in renewables in the last year. The joint venture, which he hopes will double in size to $1.3 billion worth of investment, is currently exploring opportunities in a rail franchise scheme.

“Significant and large direct investment in the UK economy is the holy grail. Pension funds must work collectively.”

It would be counterproductive if the six or so pools competed against each other, as well as against other international pension and wealth funds, for the same trophy infrastructure projects, argues Quinn.

“We are keen to create a significant investment pool, which will enable us to compete with global wealth funds when bidding for airports, shipping ports and new railway connectivity such as HS3 high-speed rail link between Leeds, Manchester and Liverpool.”

Infrastructure investments make up only 1 per cent of the assets of UK pension funds compared to 5 per cent for Canadian pension funds.

Now Quinn is impatient for progress. Like other executive teams at the local authority pools, he is waiting for government approval. Once it comes “we will quickly implement the collective monitoring and benchmarking of legacy illiquid assets, generating improvements in governance and costs savings.”

“Progress is being slowed down because we still need formal responses to our pooling submissions,” he concludes.

Leave a Comment

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

As concerns in private credit mount, Colorado PERA CIO and COO Amy McGarrity says the pension fund isn’t seeing any strains in its growing allocation to the asset class, arguing that long-term investors are shielded from the risks because they can lock up their capital to weather market cycles.

Sort content by

UK local authority funds question “bigger is best”

UK local authority schemes are under pressure to merge. It’s their turn to suggest ways in which pooling investments, or adminstriation, could achieve the economies of scale necessary for survival, but many are resisting the notion that “bigger is better” when it comes to investments.   The United Kingdom’s local government pension schemes have begun

Finding wriggle room in North Dakota

The monthly income pouring into the $1.3-billion North Dakota Legacy Fund arrives as thick and fast as fracking technology and new pipeline networks can draw the state’s oil and gas reserves to the surface. But investment strategy at the fund, set up in 2008 when it was portioned 30 per cent of the tax dollars

Innovating investment beliefs

The concept of investment beliefs is the basis for strategic management and, while widely used in other parts of the world, is “innovative” from a US perspective, Allan Emkin, managing director of Pension Consulting Alliance, says. In a session at the Risk Summit, convened by World Pension Forum and Conexus Financial, publisher of conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com, Emkin

Assessing reality in US public funds

Distinct regulation of United States public pension funds that links the liability discount rate to expected return on assets, rather than to the riskiness of their promised benefits, sets them apart – in a bad way. US public funds have underperformed other pension fund cohorts because of higher allocations to risky assets. Arguably, regulation is

Who should co-invest in private equity?

Some pension funds have hit on a lucrative strategy to extract more value from their private equity portfolios. The £34-billion ($51.6-billion) Universities Superannuation Scheme, the United Kingdom’s second biggest pension fund for university and higher education staff, is expanding a private equity co-investment strategy begun in 2008. It’s a model whereby schemes portion some investment

Norway opens a window on its global investment strategy

On March 8 when Yngve Slyngstad announced the annual results of Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, he did more than unveil a routine set of numbers. The chief executive of The Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), which manages the Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG), was also revealing the first results following what he called a “substantial” change

Previous