Idaho’s simplicity pays off

The best return in 25 years for the Public Employee System of Idaho is testament to its investment simplicity – a basic asset mix, strict rebalancing, few manager relationships and limited internal investment staff – and proof that the appropriate investment structure is very idiosyncratic.The Public Employee System of Idaho (PERSI) returned 20.7 per cent to June 30, the fund’s best return in 25 years, surpassing the previous best performance in the 2007 fiscal year.

It continues to maintain its very basic, but slightly aggressive, investment mix: 70 per cent to equities, and 30 per cent to fixed income (although it has been slightly overweight equities), with a considerable allocation to emerging markets a differentiator among its peers.

Staying the course is paying off for the fund, which at the end of the financial year boasted a 90 per cent funding level.

The fund held a board meeting last week at which chief investment officer, Bob Maynard, said the board was not “even tempted” to change the asset allocation.

“We have been doing this for decades and the board has been around for a while. On any particular quarter, year, or month we can have odd returns but over the long term we are above the medium. If markets are anything like they have been for the past 150 years then we should meet our 10-year targets.”

At the end of June the fund’s actual asset allocation was 25 per cent in fixed income, and 75 per cent invested in equities, and within equities 59 per cent was in US and global equities, 7 per cent international equities and 9 per cent emerging market equities.

Sponsored Content

“We have a relatively straight forward plan and that is to do with the underlying liabilities and the legislative and political system around that. Our return expectation is 3.5 per cent above inflation,” he says.

Maynard says beyond the long-term basic target of 70:30, the fund has a number of areas it emphasises which include emerging markets, TIPS, private equity and real estate, and global equities.

Certainly international equities and emerging market equities have been good contributors to the fund’s return, with both asset classes returning 28.9 per cent for the year.

In the past few months the fund has appointed a new global equities manager, Longview, but that is a rare occurrence.

“We have never fired a manager on performance, we will fire if an organisation blows up,” he reassures. “We recently appointed a new global equities manager but apart from that we’ll be standing still for the next few years.”

But for the most part the fund maintains a limited number of relationships for each asset class – for example there are seven US equities managers, and six global equities managers – even within private equity where it has between 15 and 20 major relationships.

The fund also only has two internal investment staff, which Maynard says “requires little maintenance”, but it does employ a number of consultants, including Callan, Hamilton Lane and Chadwick Saylor.

“The last decade came out very well for us. We are back to where we were in asset size, and our funded status is doing well. There is no need to move our investment strategy,” he says.

Maynard also points out that bigger picture debates, such as the move to defined contribution, also do not affect the fund’s investment decisions, because it already prices assets daily.

“Our public assets are daily priced through our custodian, Mellon, which means we are on top of any liquidity issues. I have practical and theoretical problems with all other approaches,” he says.

“This was one of the big lessons of 2008-09, we worked out our daily pricing requirements. We could see everything at the end of the day, and if we couldn’t see it was a problem. Our portfolio doesn’t have that many moving parts, but this approach assures liquidity.”

While Maynard says the past two to three years have been the best investment environment in his lifetime, he says the mood is still ‘nervous’ in the US.

“US Treasuries are the oil that lubricates the whole world’s financial system,” he says. “You can’t prepare for Armageddon.”

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

BCI: A masterclass in private debt

British Columbia Investment Management Corporation has been investing in private debt since 2018. Global head of public markets Daniel Garant, whose team oversees private debt, articulates the secrets of success at a time of fierce competition for returns as more investors pile into the asset class, tightening credit spreads.

A rock and a hard place: GEPF on the challenges of transitioning coal

Reducing exposure to the risk in coal is particularly challenging for South Africa’s $122 billion Government Employees Pension Fund. ESG manager Belaina Negash explains the complexities due to the industry's tie with the economy and the fund's transition framework.

Mid-market, asset-backed private credit shines for growing Asian allocators

Asia's growing investors, including university endowments and family offices, are hunting for returns in lower-middle market and asset-backed private credit. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, head of Asian clients at the $92 billion OCIO Cambridge Associates, Prabhat Ojha, talks manager selection and Asian allocators' rising appetite for alternatives.

France’s FRR ups risk in line with longer term investment horizon

Fonds de reserve pour les retraites (FRR), France’s €21 billion ($24 billion) pension reserve fund, has increased its weighting to equity in line with a new strategic asset allocation to reflect the investor's longer return horizon. It is also eyeing more unlisted assets including private equity, private debt and infrastructure.

AP4: Why a dynamic, shorter term allocation is paying off

Volatile markets have provided a rich hunting ground and opportunistic best ideas have come thick and fast for AP4’s new five-pronged global allocation made up of systematic equity, currency and rates, asset allocation, hedge funds/external mandates and analysis. Magdalena Högberg explains the risks and opportunities of the best ideas allocation.

University of California: Less is more and simple is better in investing

Jagdeep Singh Bachher, the CIO who oversees the University of California's $198 billion in pension and endowment assets, says that he wants to keep investment simple as the fund removed its hedge fund allocation completely, conceding "it’s not one of the things we are good at doing".

Previous