Japan’s GPIF and the next 100 years

Mt. fuji and cherry blossom at lake kawaguchikoMt. fuji and cherry blossom at lake kawaguchiko

The $1.3 trillion Government Pension Investment Fund of Japan has a 100-year timeframe but that doesn’t mean all of its assets are long term.

“We are happy for active managers to trade on a short-term cycle, and passive managers to focus on sustainability over the long term of the company,” executive managing director and chief investment officer, Hiromichi Mizuno says.

“You can’t force all investors to have the same horizon. If as a whole it works, I am happy. I agree the sum of investors as a whole have a long term perspective, but you can’t dictate that all investors behave the same way.”

The GPIF is managed externally and around 20 per cent of the portfolio is managed by active managers and 80 per cent passive.

“The direction we are trying to make clear is that active and passive managers can have different roles and different time horizons,” Mizuno says.

“We are encouraging passive managers to engage with companies with a long time horizon in mind. On the other hand, if active managers say they think three months is the best timeframe to produce alpha then I won’t discourage it. The mismatch might be difficult to manage but we are trying to make the rules as clear as possible.”

Sponsored Content

This month the GPIF established a new division in its public market investment department, called “stewardship and ESG”.

Its investment principles outline that the fund will continue to maximise medium- to long-term equity investment returns for the benefit of pension beneficiaries by fulfilling stewardship responsibilities. And it believes that it is appropriate and essential for GPIF as a pension fund to increase long-term investment returns for pension beneficiaries by fostering sustainable growth and worth of companies in which it invests.

The fund accepted Japan’s Stewardship Code in May 2014 and became a signatory of PRI (principles for responsible investment) in September 2015.

Mizuno’s comments were made as part of a panel discussion at the PRI in Person conference in Singapore last month. Mizuno is a member of PRI asset owner advisory committee.

Commenting on climate risk and fiduciary duty, he said that “I don’t see a point in beneficiaries getting a full pension but they can’t step outside”.

The fund is looking at how to interpret this into daily investment activities, including looking at a proposal for environmental, social and governance (ESG) indices.

“Climate change is a long-term issue but we need to take it into our daily investment practice, ESG indices/positive screen companies is one way to do that.”

Bold proposition

To overcome the problems associated with short term reporting, Mizuno made a bold proposition to the audience.

“I propose that every asset owner only reports 50-year rolling performance number,” he said.

The session, which was chaired by the chair of PRI, Martin Skancke, also heard about the challenges of reporting long-term numbers.

Paul Smith, chief executive of the CFA Institute, says keeping focused on the long term is hard.

“With a 100-year time horizon you’re not around to reap the benefit, so behaviourally it is difficult, but also hard from a metric point of view. Also difficult where there’s a trust issue in the industry, hard to conduct long term investing in that environment,” he says.

Scancke says the Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund’s working definition of long-term is the capacity to hold an asset and not be forced to sell it; the ability to be contrarian and can sell or buy and rebalance when others aren’t.

Smith says the problem the industry is trying to resolve is that ESG issues, especially the environment, require a long-term focus.

“As the joke runs, the long-term is a series of short-term events, not as simple as saying the long-term is good and the short-term is bad, but about needs; finance industry structure needs to change to fit those needs,” he says.

“If we believe those challenges exist, then how do we enable that to happen?”

Chief finance and chief risk officer of APG, Angelien Kemna, says that APG and PPGM have collaborated on metrics to measure sustainability impact and keep returns focused first.

 

 

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

Funds SA cuts active risk as CIO puts stable beta first

Australia’s $36 billion Funds SA has slashed tracking error in its equities book and is reorienting its philosophy around stable beta, as chief investment officer Con Michalakis argues the role of alpha in a multi-asset portfolio needs a fundamental rethink.

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

OPTrust: hiking rates because of the oil shock is a mistake

To navigate rates and inflation uncertainty, OPTrust is leaning into dynamic portfolio construction, actively managed options, and a total portfolio approach supporting the belief that inflation resilience is built into how portfolios are constructed not an individual asset or exposure.

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest, the largest workplace pension in the UK, says that private credit managers who prioritise institutional clients will be more favourably viewed. The £61 billion ($82 billion) fund has awarded a £450 million ($605 million) US direct lending mandate to Crescent Capital this month, citing the manager's institutional-client-first approach as a key attraction.

PKA ups the risk; builds out infrastructure

PKA, one of Denmark’s largest pension service providers, is exploring whether to increase its risk budget by 10 per cent to boost returns. Michael Flycht, deputy director of equities and liquid alternatives at PKA, outlines why the fund is achieving this objective via leverage rather than direct exposures, and where it's allocating towards in hedge funds and infrastructure.

Chicago Teachers leans into diverse managers; exceeds targets

Chicago Teachers is bullish on allocating to diverse managers, more than doubling its target allocation to more than half of the fund's AUM. Its CIO explains how the strategy adds value through access to differentiated strategies and competitive fee structures.