Inside NEST’s ‘serendipitous’ deal for IFM stake

Faced with the problem of deploying the £500 million ($645 million) of contributions that pours into its funds every month, the UK’s NEST did something that few asset owners have done: buy a stake in an external asset manager.

IFM Investors was established by a consortium of 16 Australian industry superannuation funds in 2004, and now manages circa $145 billion in private and public market investments on behalf of more than 700 institutional investors around the world. The deal was “serendipitous”, says chief investment officer Liz Fernando.

“Given the rate of growth we’re seeing we’re having to run really hard just to stand still,” Fernando tells Top1000funds.com. “So it was pretty obvious that we needed other mechanisms to help us get deployment capacity increased in a thoughtful and high-quality way.”

The strategic partnership is multi-faceted and allows NEST a unique vehicle to act on  its private investment ambitions. With the aim of increasing allocations to private markets to 30 per cent of the total fund, NEST has said it will allocate £5 billion through IFM by 2030 across infrastructure, debt and private equity. It is expected the assets of the fund will more than double to £100 billion by 2030.As a large shareholder, NEST gets to co-design products and will receive “founder’s rates” on new products.

Preferential fee structures are a feature of the institutional investment management landscape. But while NEST declined to comment on its fee arrangements, sources say that it can expect an even steeper discount on the global infrastructure debt fund it’s currently developing with IFM  than most managers would bring to even the biggest pension funds – though for new products in areas of the market where fees have already come down to a few basis points they’ll get the rack rate.

Other founding shareholders receive heavy discounts on IFM’s flagship global and Australian infrastructure products, paying less than 50 basis points with no performance fee (given NEST was not involved in seeding or designing these products, it will pay the rack rate).

Sponsored Content

The founder’s rates on these products are so attractive that a consideration in several of the Australian superannuation fund mergers that have taken place over the past few years has been whether they would pass on to the successor fund (Top1000funds.com understands the rates are generally transferable).

For NEST, the stake in IFM is held in its private equity portfolio and it will receive a dividend if IFM elects to pay one. Recent history has seen other owners encourage IFM to reinvest capital in the business to accelerate future growth rather than paying it out as dividends, which NEST is “supportive” of.

It’s another instance of the growing trend of big pension funds taking stakes in asset managers. The Oxford endowment and Commonwealth Superannuation Corporation (CSC) recently bought into a new sustainable credit business launched by Osmosis IM, after previously investing in Osmosis’ funds. In September 2024, West Yorkshire Pension Fund bought a 25 per cent stake in boutique natural capital manager Rebalance Earth, while the California State Teachers’ Retirement System invested with and took a strategic stake in “climate-as-an-asset-class” manager Just Climate as part of its collaborative model – which prioritises insourcing of asset classes like equities and fixed income, and partnering with external managers for co-investments –  in 2023. And back in 2021, Temasek took a minority stake in natural capital manager Leapfrog.

“Taking an equity stake is a long-term commitment and not one we took lightly,” Fernando said in an email response to a follow-up question. “As you’d expect, we considered multiple aspects of the investment as part of our due diligence – financial, regulatory, reputational, alignment on the ongoing management and stewardship of assets. Ultimately, particularly given the nature of IFM and our shared values, we were comfortable to proceed.”

Fernando believes that NEST fits neatly into the IFM shareholder register because it looks pretty much like everybody else there: defined contribution, profit-to-member, with a long investment horizon and a burning need to deploy more money. Other IFM shareholders include the $230 billion AustralianSuper, Australia’s largest superannuation fund, the $189 billion Australian Retirement Trust and the $63 billion Hostplus.

“We weren’t competing with other suitors because IFM was quite specific about what they were looking for,” Fernando said. “They were interested in adding a shareholder, but they wanted a like-minded shareholder and there’s not that many NESTs out there. It’s quite unique; it sits in the UK but it looks like a superannuation fund, for all intents and purposes, more than any other institution in the world.”

With a big global presence, and 13 offices around the world, IFM, which is headed by David Neal, former boss of the Future Fund, was already growing its UK presence. It will likely get a boost from its new shareholder as Fernando believes that the products IFM co-develops with NEST will be of interest to other DC plans and improve its distribution in the UK.
NEST sees the move as an extension of the strategic partnership model that it has pursued with other managers – though that pursuit has not, in the past, extended to buying a stake in them.

“We have few managers and we see them as partners,” said Rachel Farrell, NEST head of public and private markets. “We stick with them and they grow with us. If a manager isn’t particularly capital constrained, that’s a very useful way of having long-term capital that’s going to grow, because we tend to set up evergreen structures where we continue to put capital into that structure and it allows them to potentially fund multiple years of investments.”

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

NOW: Pensions crosses borders

In the city of Hillerød outside Copenhagen in Denmark, a small group of Danes want to teach the United Kingdom’s pensions industry a thing or two. Where UK trustees tend to see fund choice as a blessing, Denmark’s DKK579-billion ($101.6-billion) public pension plan ATP has always viewed picking and choosing between different managers as more

Autumnal Danish fund shows spring growth

Innovation is associated more with bold new businesses than gently declining ones, but Denmark’s Lønmodtagernes Dyrtidsfond (LD) is embracing change as it enters its final years. The pension fund’s inevitable disappearance has nothing to do with any lack of competitiveness or poor investment returns – the 9.9-per-cent net return it generated in 2012 is testament

KLM funds ride out de-risking turbulence

Pension funds can face a lot of turbulence in the course of their investing journey and many funds thrown into shortfalls have found the need to de-risk their portfolios. There might be a few investment officers at those funds casting an enviable eye upwards to the pension fund of Dutch flag-carrying airline KLM. Toine van

Mid-life crisis at West Midlands Pension Fund

The area surrounding the British city of Wolverhampton, near Birmingham, is still called the Black Country although the polluting coal mines and steel mills that sprung up during England’s nineteenth-century explosion of wealth have long gone. Today there is little evidence that Wolverhampton was the cradle of an industrial revolution and the 300-odd public sector

Inhouse target: zero to
$40 billion in 4 years

If everything continues on schedule, the $60-billion AustralianSuper will begin testing its new internal investment-management systems this month, with a view to managing its first money in house in the third quarter of 2013. Within four years the fund expects to manage as much as $40 billion in house, funded primarily from cash flow, and

Belgium’s KBC fund
thrives on LDI

Edwin Meysmans, chief executive of the KBC Pension Fund, sounds extremely relaxed for a man who rises early to avoid Brussels’ clogged roads on the way to the office. Then again, that Meysmans shies away from the madness of commuting crowds should perhaps be no real surprise given that his fund focuses on avoiding being

Previous