Nebraska ups global equity; navigates ESG wild fires

Nebraska Investment Council is poised to increase its allocation to global listed equity to 22 per cent (up from 19 per cent) of the $40 billion portfolio, shaped around a specific push into active management. The NIC is in the process of hiring active managers, says state investment officer Michael Walden-Newman, explaining that mandates will be shaped to give managers the agility to invest wherever they see most opportunity, in or outside the US.  “This is where we are putting our manager money to work – on these active, looser mandates.”

The changes in global equity follow on the heels of earlier alterations in NIC’s 30 per cent allocation to fixed income. Although the Council has retained its core fixed income managers as the basic building block to the portfolio, it recently changed the value-added piece, eliminating dedicated bank loan managers and high yield mandates and hiring multi-asset managers to create nimble, diversified mandates instead. “We did away with trying to guess what would add value in the fixed income portfolio over the next five years,” says Walden-Newman who oversees 32 programs spanning retirement pools, public endowments, savings plans and various trust and funds.

Both portfolio alterations are the consequence of NIC’s blank sheet review process which Walden-Newman developed as CIO in the State Treasurer’s office at Wyoming where he worked for a decade before joining the NIC in 2014. In a constantly rolling process, each asset allocation is subject to an in-depth review lasting two years; changes are made and it is then left, largely untouched, for a five-year cycle. “We cycle through the portfolio asset class by asset class,” he explains. “Slow work at the front end makes for better decision making at the back end; we don’t leave any stone unturned.”

Private equity

Other changes on the horizon include a likely increase in the 5 per cent private equity allocation. In February 2023 NIC is due another deep-dive board meeting (it conducts two annually) dedicated to broad educational topics. “I’m certain, come February, we will have a discussion about increasing our private equity allocation,” says Walden-Newman who wants the future conversation to focus on a sizeable increase to 10 per cent. “We know we lag our peers in private equity. It’s done nothing but reward us in the eight years I’ve worked here. It’s time to up the ante.”

The current allocation comprises buyouts, some secondaries, and venture exposure with the manager NEA. Private equity investment is shaped around minimum $50 million allocations to reduce the number of investments and names, typically around 3-4 investments are made over a rolling 18-month period. The focus is on re-ups with existing managers, although Walden-Newman says there is some flexibility in this approach. “We are not a seed investor, and not even a first or second investor. However, if you are a new name coming to us raising fund three and can handle $50million, we will be there for funds four, five and six.”

Risk

Walden-Newman stresses that any future increase in NIC’s private equity allocation isn’t motivated by funding issues. Many peer funds, he believes, are being driven to allocate more to private markets to avoid having to ask for additional funding support from their Legislature; increase employee contributions or request more payments from their broader tax base. His concern is that returns from private markets won’t be realised until 10-15 years hence – and are far from certain.  “Allocating to private markets is easier for some Boards and Plans than approaching the Legislature to bail them out. They are betting on a future that might happen – it may work, I hope it does.”

Sponsored Content

He says the NIC doesn’t have to stretch for yield and return in uncertain private markets. NIC pension funds are well funded in a state renown for high taxes and where public employees pay a high percentage of their salary into their pension, he says. “We can stick to a more basic asset allocation with public liquid markets,” he says.

ESG wild fire

The NIC’s most recent, bi-annual, deep-dive board meeting in July focused on ESG. Like many public US funds, NIC has become embroiled in the sweeping politization of ESG and the July board requested BlackRock, manager of its index allocations and target date funds alongside a small allocation to active fixed income, come and explain how – and why – it steers ESG investment.

“ESG has landed in Lincoln, Nebraska. It’s a wildfire,” says Walden-Newman. “As an Investment Council we are trying to figure out what to do. We had a Q&A, not just on BlackRock’s approach, but the the larger issues within ESG.”

The process has fanned the flames even more. Since then, Nebraska’s State Treasurer, who sits on the board as a non-voting member, and the Attorney General, another state-wide, elected official, have publicly criticized BlackRock’s strategy. As the blaze rages, Walden-Newman is holding firm to his core role: to run the portfolio as best he can for the benefits of recipients.

He notes that the respect NIC wields amongst policy makers and elected officials has stopped any political interference in the past, and says state law also protects the NIC from divestiture movements. It remains to be seen if NIC beneficiaries will start requesting ESG divestment.

Still, he also holds tight to his faith in the inherent competition of free markets, encapsulated in NIC’s passive exposure structured to tap every kind of economic and sentiment risk. “I trust markets, and where we are buying indexes, we have the broadest exposure to those markets.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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

Railpen ups infra allocation; commodities investments get the green light

Railpen will ramp up its infrastructure allocation and take on more core-plus and value-add assets to complement its existing core exposures. It also received the nod to a commodities allocation which director of total portfolio investments John Greaves believes is a hedge to inflation and uncertain central bank policies.  

In-house investment and alternatives: How Germany’s WPV sets itself apart

Germany's WPV stands out amongst peers for its in-house investment management and the fact that half of its €6 billion ($6.9 billion) portfolio is invested in alternatives. Managing director Sascha Pinger explains how these characters give the fund an edge in Germany's competitive environment for industry pension funds.

Veritas plans equity boost as Finland rewrites pension rules

Finland’s €5 billion ($5.8 billion) Veritas Pension Insurance Company is preparing to increase its public equity allocation by 15 per cent in line with new regulations in the country that aim to improve the sustainability and financial stability of the pension system. CIO Laura Wickström explains her approach.

Innovation pays off at Iowa PERS with an alpha-producing TAA

An internally developed tactical asset allocation at IPERS has produced more alpha than any other active management allocation in the second half of 2025. It's the first time the investment team have gone live with an internal idea that has made money in its early months.

Alaska’s APFC: Why any nudge lower in private equity will be slow progress

As Alaska's APFC mulls trimming its 18 per cent private equity allocation, the reality of getting legacy managers off the books is proving more challenging, according to deputy CIO, private markets Allen Waldrop. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, he also shares his view on secondaries and manager selection. 

How CalPERS aims to add 50-60 bps using TPA

Stephen Gilmore says he can add 50 to 60 basis points to portfolio returns by using a total portfolio approach. In a long interview, Amanda White spoke to the CIO of CalPERS about why a TPA mindset can add value, simplify accountability and open new opportunities for investments.

Previous