LGPS Central doubles in size; looks to add more alternatives

Jayne Atkinson

In a rare interview, Jayne Atkinson, chief investment officer of the £100 billion ($132 billion) UK pool LGPS Central, reveals the plan to scale up its offering after almost doubling its assets under management, including expanding alternatives to new allocations in hedge funds, diversified growth funds and insurance-linked securities.

With the sweep of a pen, LGPS Central, one of the United Kingdom’s Local Government Pension Scheme pools, has become a £100 billion ($132 billion) asset manager.

Following the government’s pursuit of economies of scale in public sector pensions, it axed two pools, ACCESS and Brunel Pension Partnership, and forced their underlying pensions funds to choose other pools.

LGPS Central has proved a popular choice, attracting six new client funds to bring its number of partner funds to 14 and nearly double its assets under management.

It requires “thinking and acting like a £100 billion asset manager” with more service offerings and a boosted exposure to asset classes and expertise CIO Jayne Atkinson, who joined LGPS Central six months ago, tells Top100funds.com.

“I wanted to join an LGPS pool that’s on the way up,” she says.

Sponsored Content

Under pressure to pool

Government policy has also put a renewed emphasis on pooling whereby partner funds transfer assets to LGPS Central. Policy makers want all LGPS assets to be pooled by March 2026, although that mandate does allow “limited flexibility” for pension funds moving to new pools.

LGPS Central’s pooled assets have grown from £19 billion in 2022 to around £50 billion today, but around £18 billion remains managed by partner funds through their existing arrangements. These include both active and passive strategies with external managers, across public and private markets.

“We have already started the transfer of these legacy assets. We are also in advanced discussions with new partner funds to understand their current asset strategies and work has started to formulate plans to transfer these assets across too,” says Atkinson.

As the pace quickens, she says her key focus is on developing stakeholder relationships, meeting new partner funds and attending the different pension committee meetings that range in size and sophistication with different needs and levels of diversification. Positively, she’s encouraged by the sense of collaboration between the funds, and how existing partner funds got behind LGPS Central’s bid to inherit new ones.

“We have been touched by how existing partner funds worked with us to inherit new ones in a truly collaborative exercise.”

In recent months she has made internal decision-making processes more efficient, including streamlining the manager line up in the pooled fund offerings. She is also building up the internal investment team to accommodate new partner funds, focused on recruiting mainstream asset managers from the external market place.

“We’ve already attracted some great hires,” she says. “It’s wonderful to see experienced household names come through the door.”

willingly taking compulsory advice

Policy makers have also ruled that  local authority pension funds take investment strategy advice from their respective investment pools. LGPS Central already provides investment advice to some of the partner funds, but in line with government policy has boosted its advisory offering in time to provide comprehensive investment strategy across all nine asset buckets, and asset liability modelling, from next spring.

“From next April, it will be compulsory for partner funds to use our advisory offering, but we want them to willingly come to us for advice and so we are working together with them on what that offering could like in the future,” she says, explaining that the individual administrative authorities will continue to decide each fund’s overall asset allocation, the major driver of overall returns.

Private markets push

LGPS Central’s existing  private markets offering is spread across OECD countries with around a quarter weighted to UK assets. Allocations span private equity, private credit, infrastructure and property, and each bucket has several closed and open-ended funds with different risk-return profiles and strategies.

This will expand to new allocations to hedge funds, diversified growth funds and insurance linked securities as well as hedging assets by April next year.

“Alternatives are one of the government’s nine asset class buckets, and we want to make sure we are ready to accommodate that next year,” she says, adding that these allocations won’t necessarily be run in-house. “We expect to in-house more investments where it is deemed cost effective, but we may also outsource if it’s not cost effective to keep the allocation in house. It’s a two-way street.”

LGPS Central is also building a new, three-person internal investment team focused on local investment in a strategy that aligns with government policy to invest more at home. Atkinson says she doesn’t want it labelled impact investment.

“The reason is, we are conscious of our members underlying need for a financial return and we are very keen to supply that financial return. These are not charitable investments, and we expect a risk adjusted return going forward.”

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Chicago Teachers: Where succession fears put managers on watch

In a recent investment committee meeting, trustees at Chicago Teachers heard how succession risk at external managers can hit not only returns but also managers' ability to bring ideas into the investment process and consistency around portfolio construction and implementation.

NYC Comptroller on corporate stewardship escalation, Israel bonds re-entry

New York City Comptroller Mark Levine says he will leverage the city’s $310 billion pension assets and link arms with other state Treasurers to apply pressure on US corporates. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, he sets out the stewardship agenda while explaining a potential re-entry into Israel bonds.

Iceland’s LV mulls more EM exposures, PE co-investments after SAA review

Iceland’s LV is eyeing more emerging markets allocation and private equity co-investments after conducting an SAA review, which will be finalised in the first half of 2026. CIO Arne Vagn Olsen says the shift is designed to make the $11 billion pension fund future-ready.

Strategy and reporting under the microscope: Denmark’s ATP awaits review

Denmark's ATP is awaiting a review that will report on the strength of its investment strategy, and suggest how to simplify reporting. But additional transparency must not hurt the future returns for members, warns Allan Japhetson, head of investment strategy at ATP.

Texas Teachers’ CIO questions TPA, DAA value-add

Chief investment officer of the $225 billion Teacher Retirement System of Texas Jase Auby has voiced reservations about the total portfolio approach, particularly regarding the robustness of its central feature, the top-down decision-making process. He also outlined why the fund doesn’t consider dynamic asset allocation a durable source of alpha.

Complexity to clarity: How AP4’s tech overhaul slashed risk and costs

A new investment management platform at Swedish buffer fund AP4 has taken almost ten years to come to fruition. Increased efficiency, lower costs and risk make it worth the wait, says head of risk and operations Nicklas Wikström.

Previous