LGPS ACCESS pushes deeper into private markets as pooling inches forward

ACCESS, the United Kingdom’s £35 billion Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS) pool, is seeking two private equity managers in its latest push into private markets following mandates to infrastructure and real estate managers in the last year.

ACCESS, which outsources all investment management and has mandated to a pool operator to run its outsourced processes, is planning a multi-vintage private equity programme.

The 11 pension funds in the pool, all located in the east of England, will be able to commit to different vintages on an ongoing basis over the terms of the mandate. Each vintage will be globally diversified with investments across primary and secondary funds and co-investments.

Annual commitments to both external managers will average around £500 million in the first five years but the total allocation over time will reach £4-6 billion.

“Considering the potential ultimate scale of the mandate, it is anticipated that total assets across all vintages across both allocators could exceed £4-6 billion, based on potential asset growth and/or increases to individual authorities target allocations,” states the pool.

ACCESS pool, one of eight LGPS  pools, is under the radar compared to better-known sister pools like Border to CoastBrunel Pension Partnership or LGPS Central.

Sponsored Content

Yet with a potential £56 billion in assets under management if all assets in the 11 pension funds are pooled and representing 3,400 local authority employers, it is one of the largest LGPS partnerships. Pooled assets represent 85 per cent of all listed assets held by the individual pension funds and 59 per cent of total assets have been amalgamated so far.

In comparison, Brunel Pension Partnership now runs around 80 per cent of total member assets.

A government consultation published last year found only £145 billion, or 39 per cent, of total LGPS assets had been transferred from single funds to the pools. If the LGPS was a single fund it would have around £365 billion assets under management.

One of the reasons behind slow progress by some pools is that the government never laid down clear rules around how the pools should be structured. And although assets have been pooled, other functions including administration or governance remain in the hands of the individual pension funds.

For example, at ACCESS strategic oversight and scrutiny responsibilities remain with the individual pension funds as does all decision-making not only on their individual asset allocation, but on the timing of transfers of assets into the pool.

ACCESS’s own, modest, internal team comprise a handful of full-time staff sitting in its support unit providing program and contract management support. Neither its joint committee (the formal decision making body) nor the support unit have FCA authority.

The three pension funds making up Northern LGPS have also been slow to pool – like £18 billion West Yorkshire Pension Fund. Apart from two pool mandates in excess of £10 billion each, West Yorkshire continues to invest the bulk of its assets via its own 20-person in-house team based from its Bradford office.

ACCESS uses Apex Investment Advisory to advise on implementation for the pooling of illiquid assets including private equity, private debt, infrastructure, and real estate. As implementation advisor, Apex provides support in selecting individual investment opportunities and investment managers to build portfolios in a range of illiquid assets.

Infrastructure

Earlier this year ACCESS allocated £1.5 billion to two infrastructure fund vehicles managed by IFM Investors and J.P. Morgan in its second push into private markets in allocations focused on core plus and value add investments spanning transportation, social infrastructure, energy and telecommunications utilities, GDP sensitive assets and contracted power and energy assets.

In November last year ACCESS selected real estate manager CBRE Investment Management to manage both a UK core real estate and a global real estate mandate for its first illiquid asset class.

 

Leave a Comment

Silver is the new gold: France’s UMR targets opportunities in ageing economy

Silver is the new gold: France’s UMR targets opportunities in ageing economy

French pension organisation UMR has launched a multi-asset thematic program that will target opportunities in Europe’s ageing economy. It’s part of a broader strategy to increase diversification in private markets where it sees secondary markets as an increasingly important tool.

Sort content by

Europe, alternatives pay for Danish Sampension

The herd mentality of investors has been agonised over for as long as markets have been around. The dilemma is often raised of whether to participate in or shun market trends, but the DKK150-billion ($27-billion) Sampension has succeeded recently with a selective approach. It has fully embraced the institutional diversification movement by building a significant

NEST into infrastructure and property

The National Employment Savings Trust, NEST, the UK government-backed pension scheme set up a year ago with the introduction of auto-enrolment, developed a new allocation to real estate this summer. Now it is planning to add infrastructure to its illiquid allocations in a move reflective of a change of thinking to embrace more risk. NEST’s

AP7 accelerates equity returns with leveraging

The SEK150-billion ($22-billion) AP7 fund supplies the cream on the top of the Swedish public pension system. It essentially delivers premium pensions (in addition to the much larger pay-as-you go component) with a generous dose of equities. It has been able to further sweeten its offering by leveraging the main chunk of its portfolio. AP7

The Pension Trust: many schemes, one trust

“We are slightly unusual,” admits David Adkins, chief investment officer of The Pensions Trust (TPT), the £5.5-billion ($8.7-billion) pension fund founded after the end of World War II to provide retirement benefits for social workers. Talking from the trust’s Moorgate headquarters in London, Adkins explains how its umbrella structure has grown to provide pensions for

BT scheme treads carefully in emerging markets

Sunil Krishnan, head of market strategy at $62-billion British Telecom Pension Scheme Management Limited (BTPS), the United Kingdom’s largest pension fund for employees of global telecoms operator BT Group, has sage advice for investors contemplating their exposure to emerging markets. Examining the pros and cons of the asset class, Krishnan counsels caution. Speaking at a

Steady defense turns the wheels at Vervoer

Patrick Groenendijk, chief investment officer of €14-billion ($18-billion) Dutch fund Pensioenfonds Vervoer, seems to be well aware of the value of stability to investors, having striven to find the fund’s ideal fiduciary manager, keep faith in a defensive investment strategy and stay at an arm’s length from government investment initiatives. The Vervoer fund has been

Previous