Kansas PERS cuts global equities

The Kansas Public Employees Retirement System is slowly reducing its exposure to global equities as it explores “just about everything else”. Amanda White spoke with chief investment officer Robert ‘Vince’ Smith about the fund’s plans for 2010 which include an asset/liability study and the reorganisation of its equities allocations.

The $12 billion Kansas PERS is due for its triennial asset/liability study this year and will most likely conduct it, in conjunction with its general consultant Pension Consulting Alliance, this July.

One of the primary adjustments the fund has been slowly conducting is a reduction and reorganisation of its equities exposure.

In its last asset/liability study, in 2007, the equities allocation was lowered from 57 to 55 per cent and chief investment officer of the fund, Robert ‘Vince’ Smith, anticipates that will fall further this year.

Historically the fund has had three categories of equities allocations – US, global and international – and that will be recalibrated to more workable and streamlined allocations.

Sponsored Content

“We had an 8 per cent allocation to global equity mandates going into the last asset/liability study, which we dropped to 5 per cent with the study. I expect we will reduce this further, or maybe out altogether.”

Smith’s preference, and the anticipated result from the study, is a move to a global equity benchmark, implemented with separate US, developed international, and emerging markets mandates.

“Overall, we are lowering our equities allocation and looking at anything else.”

The fund has started looking at an international small cap allocation and has been exploring real return and alternatives.

Its real return allocation is about 14 per cent and currently contains allocations to TIPS, timber and infrastructure. Hedge funds are part of the portfolio but no allocation has been made at this stage.

In the past couple of years all of the funds management capability has been outsourced, nothing is managed in-house although as chief investment officer Smith does actively manage the beta overlay program, which was particularly useful during the crisis. It employs more than 20 external funds managers.

“We managed our equity allocations through the crisis with the beta overlay program, being underweight our target allocations, but remaining reasonably close, as the markets fell. After stocks bottomed in March we were overweight equities quickly as valuations increased. This program allows us to adjust quickly. We also have some currency management with that, when the dollar was high in March it looked unsustainable so we lowered our hedges.”

Smith describes the outlook by his team throughout the crisis as fairly opportunistic. While the primary strategy throughout that time was to manage liquidity it also took advantage of mispriced assets.

“We closely monitored our assets with the most distress, we monitored managers, and then looked at opportunities,” Smith says. “We purchased a large corporate credit portfolios when the spreads were so wide in Spring, and increased TIPS a year ago rolling them back a few months ago making about 20 per cent return on those treasuries.”

Smith conducts all of the asset allocation rebalancing and the beta overlay program and employs seven investment staff which are allocated by asset group. In addition to PCA as general consultant it also gets advice from Townsend Group for real estate and LP Capital Partners for private equity.

While managing investments is Smith’s passion, he says for a lot of chief investment officers of public funds managing liabilities is becoming more of a focus.

“There is pressure for people in my seat, with such dire state budgets. We are looking at the liability side more than we have before, as the funds are quite underfunded.”

Kansas PERS asset allocation

Asset class  Target allocation

US equities  28

Cash  1

Alternatives 6

Real estate  10

Real return  11.4

Fixed income  14

Global equities 5

International equities  22

Leave a Comment

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

As Finland's pension funds prepare to increase their equity allocations to unprecedented levels compared to global peers, they must also navigate a new and unfamiliar risk. Elo's chief investment officer Jonna Ryhänen explains the fund's investment approach going forward and how it will manage stakeholder and media scrutiny as they react to swinging volatility and returns.

Sort content by

New Zealand Super reviews risk budget

New Zealand Super just returned its best-ever result of nearly 30 per cent. In addition to the gains from its overweight position to equities the fund also fully hedged the currency. Amanda White explores the fund’s strategy and the risk budgeting review currently under way.

Why engagement fails: APG and South Korea’s KEPCO

APG's Yoo Kyung Park offers insights into the challenges of engaging with state-owned monopolies and why APG finally threw in the towel with South Korea's KEPCO.

ATP pushes green bond due diligence to counter greenwashing

Danish pension fund, the DKK 925 billion ($140 billion) ATP, is protecting against greenwashing in its growing allocation to green bonds with a variety of in-house screening processes.

South Africa’s GEPF gets tough on the PIC

Africa's largest pension fund has redrawn its mandate with its asset manager PIC introducing a clause around consequence management that leaves the PIC liable in the event of inappropriate investment decisions. Elsewhere the fund has just raised the ceiling on its ability to invest more overseas.

Bank of Ireland pensions’ CIO says regulations are killing liberal economies

"I wouldn’t dare tell a company how it should be run, they are the experts. Rather than tell a board how to behave I would rather have them compete," says Paul Droop, group pensions CIO of the Bank of Ireland who believes regulation is damaging free market competition in a worrying new shift that  poses the single biggest risk for investors.

ADIA overhauls investment technology to tap alpha

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority is introducing more technology in its own internal processes and is determined to become a more active - and reactive - investor. The fund’s decision to invest more in its own in-house technology came with the realisation that a slow down in its capacity to generate alpha was linked to a lack of investment in big data and AI.

Previous