Hedge funds appeal at Ilmarinen as volatility returns

For years Central Bank bond buying has supressed the volatility on which hedge funds thrive. At Finnish pension fund Ilmarinen hedge funds are back in favour, particularly volatility, momentum, and macro strategies that don’t correlate to equities.  

Ilmarinen, the €60 billion Finnish pension insurer founded in 1961, is benefiting from an increased allocation to hedge funds. In recent years, Ilmarinen has grown its allocation to externally managed hedge funds from 1 per cent to around 6-7 per cent, particularly focusing on strategies that don’t correlate with listed equities including different types of volatility, momentum, and macro strategies.

“Some of these have a reasonably low or even negative correlation with equity markets,” says Mikko Mursula, chief investment officer and deputy chief executive at Ilmarinen, explaining that as the environment turns hawkish; inflation edges higher, money policy tightens and investors weigh the risk of recession, active strategies that can navigate asset class volatility appeal.

Mursula doesn’t consider hedge funds a separate asset class, arguing that the wide variety of managers and strategies make it difficult to place the allocation in a single bucket. Alongside the external allocation, Ilmarinen also runs an internally managed hedge fund allocation, although Mursula declines to disclose its size.

Selective approach

In another approach, Ilmarinen is focused on diversification and selective investment in preparation for markedly different performances ahead across countries and sectors and impacting both credit and equity markets. He is also keenly aware of the impact of a probable recession on corporate earnings and margins: investing in companies with strong balance sheets, cashflows and transparent dividends is a priority.

“In recent years, it hasn’t really mattered what sector or equities have been in your portfolio. Going forward, this won’t be the case.”

Sponsored Content

He believes analysts’ estimates that have current corporate earnings growth at between 6-8 per cent are too high given the level of inflation and its forecast impact on global growth and corporate health.

“Average US and European corporate profit margins are near historical highs. Companies are producing very high earnings numbers and if we are heading into a recession these will obviously fall. We just don’t know how much the cut will be.”

Selection at Ilmarinen will also involve steering away from companies and sectors with high levels of leverage. “As rates go higher and credit spreads widen, corporates with high levels of leverage are going to struggle more going forward,” he says. “It is crystal clear that companies, and countries, will need to pay more for their bonds and loans; there will be pressure on margins.”

Heavily indebted European countries like Italy and Greece with vast public sector debt are most vulnerable. “Reading between the lines of the recent ECB meeting, discussions about debt in Italy have already started.”

He is also wary of countries and corporates most exposed to the grain and energy crisis triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. “The negative impacts of war in Ukraine will hit Europe more than the US,” he says, attributing the 8 per cent fall in the euro versus the dollar from the start of the year (notwithstanding the interest rate differential) as a key sign of European travails.

Positively, he believes that the energy crisis will spur Europe’s transition to green energy sources away from Russian oil and gas. “In the long run I am not worried; the transition will continue and some of these projects will be launched sooner than we thought because Europe needs to get rid of its dependence on Russian oil and gas.”

Roadmaps

Ilmarinen, which targets a net zero portfolio by 2035, has created roadmaps to net zero for its listed equity and domestic real estate portfolios already. By the end of this year, it aims to have completed roadmaps for its corporate bond and foreign real estate allocations that will also include interim targets, actions, and monitoring criteria. “The single biggest challenge decarbonizing the portfolio is how best to evolve methodologies and frameworks and ensuring enough high value data about your portfolio for all asset classes. It requires more and more resources just to follow the latest evolutions.”

Once these two new roadmaps are in place, attention will turn to other sub asset classes including the whole external manager portfolio across equity, fixed income, infrastructure, and private equity.

Thirty per cent of the portfolio is  invested in fixed-income, 50 per cent in equities, 11 per cent in Real Estate and 9 per cent in other investments. Around a quarter of Ilmarinen’s pension assets are invested in Finland. In 2021, Ilmarinen’s investments returned 15.3 per cent, equivalent to €8.1 billion.

 

Leave a Comment

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

In an environment where multiple risks are emerging and their effects are compounding on the portfolio, CPP Investments' chief risk officer Priti Singh says the $572 billion fund is rethinking risk management from the ground up, shifting from reaction to preparation and embedding risk thinking earlier in investment decisions. She speaks to Amanda White about the fund's risk approach.

Sort content by

TelstraSuper: size-conscious success

What is the optimum size for an institutional investor? This is a question foremost in the mind of Jim Christensen, chief investment officer of TelstraSuper, the pension scheme of Australian telecommunications company Telstra. After four years of expansion, he believes he has maximised potential by gaining the optimum level of inhouse investment. Now running 20

Seeking partners in Alaska

The $46-billion Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation (APFC) will launch PCIO, a private equity version of its successful external chief-investment-officer partnerships, and is looking for partners now. When the fund moved to a risk-based factor allocation a few years ago, it allocated mandates under its special opportunities bucket to five managers – PIMCO, GMO, Bridgewater, AQR

Mass PRIM: great returns, close trim

Michael Trotsky, executive director and chief investment officer of Mass PRIM managers is planning a raft of cost-saving measures from co-investment to more passive strategies and much harder fee

Alternatives focus at historic Italian foundation

For many institutional investors, surviving the financial crisis in good shape has been the challenge of a lifetime. Few have had to deal with an asset seizure from Napoleon and two world wars being fought on its soil. It is a history that Italy’s Compagnia di San Paolo is proud of, yet in its asset

Santander: between its sponsor and a hard place

Antony Barker has only been director of pensions at the £8-billion ($12.2-billion) Santander Pension Fund, a defined benefit scheme for employees of the UK arm of the Spanish-owned bank, since August last year. Charged with rejuvenating the pension scheme, a worrying source of risk blighting the fortunes of the bank and a thorn in the

New Jersey: a state of long-term agility

As another fiscal year draws to a close Tim Walsh, director of the New Jersey Division of Investment, investment managers of the $75.64-billion New Jersey Pension Fund, reflects on another good year. “It’s been a double-digit year with the best asset classes, plain vanilla US equities and structured credit,” he says speaking from the Division

Previous