Not your usual alternatives

A 9 year old girl has fun playing a drum set in her room, working on songs for her band. High contrast black and white image.

A low funding ratio of 64 per cent and a belief that mainstream public and alternative assets are fully priced is motivating the $11 billion New Mexico Educational Retirement Board to move into an unusual alternatives portfolio. The new allocation will include investments in litigation finance and reinsurance, as well as assets that tap royalty streams from intellectual property, music and medicines.

“We haven’t made any investments here yet. We’re doing the ground work but we expect to make our first allocation later this year,” says chief investment officer Bob Jacksha who oversees one of the more diverse portfolios among US public pension plan peers.

“We view public assets and mainline alternatives as fully priced; we’re now looking for other things that aren’t as well known and haven’t attracted so much capital.”

The allocation will sit as a subcategory within a portfolio of diversifying assets uncorrelated to public equities and core bonds that includes risk parity and global tactical asset allocation.

But choosing managers to look after such investments is a challenging process given the need for proven experience in these relatively new asset classes.

Litigation finance, where investors back costly litigation in return for a share of a successful claim in a niche strategy untethered to financial markets has only recently begun to attract university endowments and public pension funds. Early converts include the Municipal Employees’ Retirement System of Michigan and the Employees Retirement System of Texas.

Sponsored Content

“These investments are more obscure areas,” Jacksha says. “We’ve met with some managers who are on their second or third fund and these are the type of managers we’d like to work with. I’m not saying we won’t do first time managers – we’ve invested with first time managers in private equity and real estate – but we usually invest here with a group that has worked together for a while, maybe a lift out from another shop.”

The new allocation is in keeping with the trend at the fund to invest less in assets where the return comes from capital appreciation in favour of those with contractual cash flows.

“Capital appreciation is nice when it happens, and we still get it from our portfolio, but it’s irregular and harder to count on,” he says. “Our diversification theme has been to stabilise the results. It means we don’t have the lows. Unfortunately when you don’t have the lows, it means you also give up the highs, but we accept that.”

 

A preference for private markets

The new allocation will also keep the focus on private markets, where the fund has done best in recent years.

“Our public assets benchmarked against peers and indices have had a tougher time than private investments. They haven’t done poorly; they just haven’t excelled. Public markets are so liquid and so transparent it’s tough to add value.”

It means NMERB has indexed all its US public equity allocation, around half of its developed market public equity allocation, and is considering further indexing.

“If you can’t add value it doesn’t make sense to pay manager fees,” he says. “We now spend our limited resources in private markets.”

The best performing asset classes for the fund in 2016 were private infrastructure, private real estate and private equity which returned 13.4 per cent, 11.8 per cent and 9.2 per cent respectively.

NMERB’s latest allocation also chimes with Jacksha’s steady transformation of the fund, which he joined as CIO in 2007. Back then NMERB had a 70:30 equity/fixed income split.

“The trustees got tired of seeing what happens in a downturn when you have that much shaped around equity premium,” he says.

Today the fund’s target allocation to public markets is split between public equities (33 per cent), core bonds (6 per cent), REITS (3 per cent) and 3 per cent in cash.

Along with real estate, private equity and infrastructure, private investments include global tactical asset allocation and risk parity as well as opportunistic credit.

Rather than a specific allocation to hedge funds, Jacksha now favours investing in hedge funds via other assets. Most of the investments in the opportunistic credit portfolio are with hedge funds; similarly, NMERB invests in one Bridgewater hedge fund in global tactical asset allocation.

“We don’t view hedge funds as an asset class,” he says. “We’re indifferent as long as it fits the underlying asset.”

The fund also recently allocated new mandates in distressed debt and water property rights as well as infrastructure credit.

 

Strategy driven by funded ratio

The latest innovation comes against the backdrop of the NMERB’s large deficit. At only 64 per cent funded, Jacksha can’t afford any plummet in asset values.

“We need to keep the overriding strategic issues of the fund in mind when we’re casting our asset allocation targets,” he says.

Despite his ever-watchful eye on the deficit however, he is adamant that it isn’t something the fund can “invest its way out of”, observing that “investments didn’t get us into this problem”.

Since NMERB began recording its total rate of return in July 1983, it has earned an annual rate of 9.1 per cent, more than the 7.25 per cent it has been targeting since April this year, and more than the old target of 8 per cent. He believes the deficit is an historical structural problem of an imbalance between contributions and benefits.

Internal management

Internal management is another theme at the fund. Jacksha now oversees 30 per cent of assets in house with a team of 11, up from five when he started.

“We always try to think of two broad issues,” he says. “One is active or passive and if managers can’t add value, we should be passive. The other is if we should be internal or external, because if we can do it properly internally without giving up performance, we can do it cheaper.”

It is a thought process encapsulated in a dynamic, internally run core bond portfolio that used to be outsourced.

The allocation, which plays to Jacksha’s own experience in fixed income, has outperformed the Bloomberg Barclays US Aggregate Bond Index since inception in April 2015. The investment grade allocation comprises Treasuries, corporate, mortgage-backed and asset-backed bonds with the team able to deviate from the aggregate for outperformance – achieved most recently by being overweight credit.

“We don’t make duration bets,” he says. “We’re not good at predicting where interest rates are going and just focus on moving around the sectors.”

But with two vacancies on his team, building internal expertise is tough. It is no help that pay levels for most of his staff rank at the bottom of national pay surveys of state pension funds. Despite understanding from the board, pushing pay rises through the executive in times of austerity is hard.

“Calls for pay raises fall on deaf ears,” he laments.

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

Alternative benchmarks attractive for Strathclyde

For many trustees, fundamental indexing is still too much of a leap to risk any serious asset allocation. But the £11 billion Glasgow-based Strathclyde Pension Fund, one of the largest UK local authority schemes, plans to invest in the strategy. The idea is to track an equity index that weights companies according to their economic

Modern portfolio theory drives Volkswagen Stiftung

The €2.3-billion ($3-billion) assets at the Volkswagen charitable foundation in Germany are powered by portfolio theory and diversification. The foundation is so keen on modern portfolio theory that its founder Harry Markowitz gets a mention in its annual report. Chief investment officer Dieter Lehmann says he is sure “that his correlation analysis isn’t correct at

Innovation brings results at Austria’s APK

Austria is a country with a strong tradition of innovation. That can be sensed through its nineteenth century industrial emergence to Gustav Klimt’s secessionist art movement in turn-of-the-twentieth-century Vienna and the Austrian school of economics that later spawned monetarist pioneer, Friedrich Hayek. The APK pension fund is these days adding to the list of those

Calming the waters of uncertainty at UK seafarers’ fund

The UK’s £3.3-billion ($5.6-billion) Merchant Navy Officers’ Pension Fund (MNOPF) is poised to offload the final portion of its defined-benefit liabilities in the old section of the scheme. The fund, which has provided pensions to the shipping industry since 1937, comprises a $3.2-billion new section and a $2-billion old section, closed since 1978 and with

Controlling strategy inhouse at UK coal scheme

Until a few years ago, every aspect of the investment strategy at the UK’s £20-billion ($32-billion) coal industry pension scheme was outsourced. The main inhouse task at the pension fund was benefit payment but now, in a fresh approach spearheaded by straight-talking 38-year old New Zealander, Stefan Dunatov, the new chief investment officer of the

Swiss powerhouse: the Sulzer pension fund

Sulzer is a Swiss manufacturer with a proud past. From pioneering the diesel engine to making the specialist pumps that drive power production around the world, it has been around for 178 years. Perhaps leveraging off such a rich history, the company’s pension scheme is very much looking into the future thanks to solid returns

Previous