LACERA: Why rebalancing is asset allocation’s best friend

Rebalancing back to asset class strategic ranges after a market rise or fall is one of the most vital seams of strategy at the $70.1 billion Los Angeles County Employees Retirement Association (LACERA). Rebalancing ensures the investment team remain consistent with investment policy statements, don’t try and time the market and avoid behavioural bias.

“Rebalancing really is the best long-term strategy we have,” said chief investment officer, Jonathan Grabel, speaking in a recent board meeting at the fund.

Rebalancing forces the investor to sell when asset prices have gone up and buy when they have gone down to stay within asset class bands in a strategy that has come to the fore in today’s volatile and unpredictable markets. In stark contrast to December 2022, all major asset classes have climbed higher in January in a lock step trajectory that is a source of alarm for Grabel, telling board members that he is instinctively cautious when asset classes move in tandem in either direction.

The rules-based approach removes the temptation to follow trends and media fads – it avoids the tendency to follow strategies that “worked yesterday,” he continued.

It led Grabel to reflect on the importance of avoiding peer comparisons and rankings too. His focus is on LACERA’s actual performance versus the benchmark, for the investor to “run its own race” and focus on its ability to pay benefits to members. “Peer ranking is not really related to our mandate,” he said.

According to its latest annual report, LACERA’s 2022 target asset allocation comprises a 51.1 per cent allocation to to growth (global equity, private equity and non-core private real estate) 11 per cent allocation to credit, 17 per cent allocation to real assets and inflation hedges and a 21 per cent allocation to risk reduction and mitigation.

Sponsored Content

The pension fund’s cash levels currently sit around $900 million, equivalent to around three months-worth of benefits.

“Any cash above this is used to stay invested and rebalance,” he said.

Risk management

LACERA’s investment team is midway through a review of operational due diligence processes in a bid to improve risk management. Recent horror stories at JPMorgan Chase, now suing executives at recently-acquired startup Frank for creating nearly 4 million fake customer accounts, illustrate what can go wrong and underscores the importance and timely nature of LACERA’s review.

“Diligence is the place even the best investors can fail,” said independent board member Gina Sanchez.

So far, the process has already tightened operational effectiveness. For example, historically LACERA’s investment division was siloed into individual asset class teams. Now two new teams focused on portfolio risk management and asset allocation, and corporate governance and stewardship across the portfolio work alongside the asset class teams.

Elsewhere, new technology is supporting the risk function, developed internal investment committees are helping standardize processes and operational due diligence assessments are included in all investment recommendations.

LACERA also appraises properties in the real estate allocation annually rather than every three years. Other incremental changes include a daily NAV with a custody bank.

“We are focused on trying to have consistent procedures,” said Grabel, who told the board providing relevant material to the consultants is a time-consuming process but wholly in line with the investor’s “mantra of continuous improvement.”

“It will help us be better investors,” he concluded.

 

Leave a Comment

PGGM: Impact begins at home

PGGM: Impact begins at home

PGGM is preparing to build out the third element to its impact strategy targeting biodiversity. By focusing on food and the circular economy, PGGM aims to create most impact at home. Top1000funds.com looks at the fund's impact journey.

Sort content by

Arizona ups equity, adjusts pacing on overweight private markets

Arizona State Retirement System will opportunistically increase both US and international public equity exposure in line with its moderately bullish view on public equities and a new strategic asset allocation that targets 44 per cent of AUM in the asset class.

IMCO explains its key criteria when it comes to investing outside Canada

Canadian investor IMCO lays out compelling arguments to invest overseas but warns that a country's GDP growth does not equate to returns and tends to avoid emerging and frontier markets because of heightened geopolitical and currency risk.

UTIMCO gets ready for 2024

The endowment for two major Texan universities is hoping for a soft economic landing but planning for a recession. It is honing a playbook that ensures ongoing liquidity to make distributions, is not over its skis in terms of capital calls and commitments and has the firepower to invest in.

How Denmark’s Industriens is exploring AI to overhaul risk analysis

Industriens, the DKK 217 billion ($30.6 billion) Danish pension fund, is using advanced technology and exploring AI models to bring sweeping advantages to its risk management processes. Julia Sommer Legaard, investment risk and data manager at the fund for the last year, explains the process behind the innovation.

Norway’s GPFG argues the case for private equity – again

NBIM has petitioned politicians to let it invest in private equity - again. Arguing for a 3-5 per cent allocation with large managers in developed markets, NBIM recognises it will be unable to cap fees like in its other allocations and will curb costs by developing a co-investment program.

Behind CalSTRS’ cost savings: Better returns and control of risks

CalSTRS has saved more than $1.6 billion in costs since 2017 thanks to its collaborative model approach, which brings more assets in-house and encourages the use of different investment vehicles. Now it’s looking to measure the other benefits including boosted returns and more control over risks.

Previous