Industriens seeks more in renewables

Denmark’s DKK162 billion ($26.9 billion) Industriens Pension has just pocketed lucrative returns after selling off a range of renewable investments in Asia.

Between 2012 and 2015, Industriens invested about DKK600 million ($99 million) in various solar and wind assets in emerging Asian markets and Japan with specialist infrastructure fund managers Equis Funds Group and Actis. Now the pension fund has just sold out, for DKK1.2 billion ($200 million), to infrastructure fund manager Global Infrastructure Partners, making a 100 per cent return. The assets sat in a renewables allocation within Industriens DKK17 billion ($2.8 billion) allocation to infrastructure, part of an alternatives portfolio that accounts for a quarter of assets under management.

There are two seams to Industriens’ infrastructure strategy explains Jan Østergaard, Industriens’ head of unlisted investments, speaking from the fund’s Copenhagen offices. In its core program, Industriens invests directly in low-risk, long-term, buy and hold, often subsidised assets. Examples include its stake in the North Sea wind farm Butendiek and its DKK1.1 billion ($100 million) investment in UK utility Southern Water. For riskier investments, outside Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries, Industriens seeks co-investments with funds allowing it to access investments at the early development and construction stage, something it doesn’t have the in-house capability to do.

“Construction and development is where you get the strong returns, but we would never be able to do this ourselves,” says Østergaard, who leads a 12-person alternatives team. The non-core portfolio comprises assets the fund develops and sells when they reach their core value.

It was this co-investment strategy, and the ability it gives the pension fund to benefit from construction and development risk, that led to the latest bumper returns says Østergaard, who draws on Industriens’ investments in Japan’s renewable sector to show the strategy in action. The Japanese Government changed its energy policy in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster, pledging to double its renewable energy production by 2030. Spotting opportunity in this transition, Industriens was an early investor in Equis’s Asia Fund 1, which committed capital to eight infrastructure projects across the region between 2011 and 2014, one of which was Japan Solar, an operator of Japanese solar projects. Keen to take on more, Industriens made an additional DKK325 million ($53 million) co-investment alongside Equis in Japan Solar in 2013.

Now Østergaard says the fund will follow this success by pushing the strategy into other emerging markets. Latin America and Africa, where Actis has long track records of investment, are markets he highlights. He also says that, despite the risks, renewable investment in emerging markets can be easier than in developed markets. In emerging markets, renewable or new energy sources often start “from scratch” and do not need to integrate legacy infrastructure.

Sponsored Content

“It is nice to be part of the transformation to renewables from fossil fuels,” Østergaard says.

Infrastructure investment is also a good way to navigate the risks of emerging markets, he says. Such assets’ returns are based on demand for a service, are not subject to economic cycles, and usually involve working alongside stable, state-run utilities. About 30 per cent of Industriens infrastructure assets are now in emerging markets.

In contrast, less than 10 per cent of the pension fund’s private equity portfolio is in emerging markets, an allocation that won’t get any bigger, despite Industriens continuing private equity commitments to match its continuously growing AUM.

“Private equity in emerging markets involves all the usual business risks that come with a private company, plus emerging market risk and currency risk,” Østergaard explains. Industriens, which has a 9.7 per cent allocation to private equity, has been investing in the asset for about 20 years.

In the liquid portfolio, Industriens has a 43 per cent allocation to fixed income, comprising nominal bonds, emerging-market bonds, high-yield and investment-grade bonds. Danish and foreign equities account for 6.7 per cent and 21.4 per cent of AUM, respectively.

The latest returns in renewables follow on from consistently robust returns across the whole portfolio. The pension fund, which was established in 1992 and covers employees in Denmark’s industrial sectors, reported an 8.2 per cent return on its total investment portfolio for 2017 in preliminary financial results for the year; average returns over the last 10 years come in at 8.4 per cent. Investment assets are split into two sub-portfolios, with high and low risk. Members up to the age of 45 have their entire savings placed in the high-risk portfolio, after which the percentage is reduced gradually as they get older.

Industriens’ internal team manages the allocation to Danish and foreign government and mortgage bonds and Danish and European listed equities, along with overseeing manager selection across international equities, bonds and alternatives; the fund has about 25 manager relationships. An internal team also works on tactical asset allocation.

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

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.

Global views spur LPFA’s bets on growth, diversification

With the ability to make investments of up to £50 million ($80.4 million) without board oversight, the London Pensions Fund Authority (LPFA) has boosted its exposure to emerging markets while also buying global infrastructure, commodities and solar energy. Chief executive Mike Taylor told Simon Mumme about some further opportunities, such as Brazilian agriculture, the fund

Magic of maths: harnessing the excess growth from portfolio volatility

In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, some investors are questioning the true diversification in their global equity portfolios and the appropriateness of standard benchmarks. GREG BRIGHT spoke with Adrian Banner, co-chief investment officer at INTECH Investment Management, about these and other issues. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

ATP tells polticians at Copenhagen ‘we’re ready’

The giant Danish fund ATP has earmarked €1 billion to a climate change action fund, deliberately timing the launch of the commitment to coincide with the UN conference in its capital, Copenhagen. Amanda White spoke with chief investment officer of ATP, Bjarne Graven Larsen, about how the fund is using its sizeable capital to incite

ABP supports innovation with incubator investment

Over the next few years the €180 billion ABP will invest 2 per cent of capital to innovative assets and strategies under the broad direction of innovation. One such investment has been an allocation to the incubator company, IMQubator, which invests in investment managers with innovative ideas and strategies. Amanda White spoke with chief investment

Maryland moves to strategic allocations profiting private equity and commodities

The $32 billion Maryland State Retirement System is searching for advisers in real estate and private equity, as it moves toward its strategic asset allocation target that sits signficantly distant from its actual investments at the end of September, requiring a quadrupling of its private equity investments and new allocations to real return assets. mrec4inarticleinline

Previous