NOW: Pensions crosses borders

In the city of Hillerød outside Copenhagen in Denmark, a small group of Danes want to teach the United Kingdom’s pensions industry a thing or two. Where UK trustees tend to see fund choice as a blessing, Denmark’s DKK579-billion ($101.6-billion) public pension plan ATP has always viewed picking and choosing between different managers as more of a curse. It has applied the ethos to its UK subsidiary, defined-contribution workplace pension-scheme provider, NOW: Pensions, which sells itself to UK companies looking to automatically enrol staff on the strength of one single investment strategy. Having set up a year ago, it’s still early days but NOW: Pensions Investments A/S chief investment officer, Mads Gosvig, is convinced he’s on the right track.

“Many schemes in the UK have been set up for people with higher incomes used to taking investment decisions, but you don’t want the same tool for everyone,” he says from Denmark where the NOW investment team sits alongside ATP’s. “With auto-enrolment, more people will be taking out pensions and our research shows it’s best to keep the number of decisions small because pensions are a specialist area.” NOW won’t ever pool assets with ATP but the two funds already share ideas and processes and, as NOW’s assets accumulate, the funds will implement the same strategies and buy into the same third party investment vehicles.

What’s NOW?

NOW offers members access to three funds catering first to a savings phase via a Diversified Growth Fund. A decade before retirement, members’ assets pass into a Retirement Protection Fund, in which returns from the growth phase are safeguarded through long-term gilt allocations and interest rate swaps in a hedged portfolio. Finally, assets pass to the Cash Protection Fund. The Growth Fund, split 60/40 between equities and bonds, targets a return of 3 per cent above cash, a target Gosvig believes is easily achievable given trial results from a $15.3-billion synthetic portfolio have returned 10 per cent. NOW only began accruing assets midway through 2012; Gosvig won’t be drawn on current assets under management just yet.

Like ATP, the Growth Fund is built around risk allocations rather than conventional asset allocations. It’s an approach that better manages risk since most asset classes have “an inherent exposure to equity risk,” explains Gosvig. The fund favours five classes comprising interest rate risk, credit risk, equity risk and inflation risk with allocations to government bonds, high yield bonds mostly in emerging markets, global listed equities, commodities and inflation-linked bonds. It’s a strategy eschewing any exposure to illiquid assets and although this could change, Gosvig isn’t convinced returns from the likes of private equity, infrastructure or property are worth the risk for NOW just yet. Liquidity, he says, is not only key to his scheme’s success, giving it an edge over other UK providers like NEST which don’t allow members to transfer assets in or out, but is also crucial in encouraging people to keep saving under auto-enrolment. “The average person in the UK changes jobs twelve times in their working life. You need liquid assets so they can take their pension with them.”

How NOW manages

In the same way other multi-asset funds rebalance a portfolio between asset classes as they see fit and aren’t locked into static allocations, the Growth Fund’s balanced allocation will make managing volatility easier. “Any losses in equities will be cancelled out by gains in bonds,” he says. NOW will actively manage volatility in “risk-on” and “risk-off” strategies. In what Gosvig calls a first line of defence, NOW will first alert trustees of the need to reduce allocations to riskier assets in the fund. A second “risk-on” tool kicks in automatically if the value of the fund falls 25 per cent over a twelve months period. “In this scenario risk is automatically taken off the portfolio with all risk classes reduced by 10 per cent,” he says, using a driving metaphor to illustrate his point. “From time to time we will need to take speed out of the portfolio and this way we can.”

Equity exposure will come via investing in indices. Gosvig believes this is the best way to buy into equity risk, but it’s a strategy that has still presented challenges since many indices include exposures NOW would rather not hold. Emerging markets equity indices, often characterised by clusters of big companies, bring a concentration of risk. How to buy into European equities without exposure to banking stocks is another challenge. “We’ve discussed creating own indices with ATP, but you need somebody to trade the index with and there’s a cost to that,” he says. Rather than buy bond indices, NOW will buy bond futures, primarily in the UK, US and Germany, but will access commodities via commodity future indices.

Sponsored Content

NOW’s UK subsidiary has no external managers, bar a handful of allocations to exchange traded funds, and its own investment team comprises just three people. Of course NOW isn’t the only fund built around a simple investment strategy; variations of the no-frills approach are apparent in a raft of much bigger and proven schemes. But it’s a low-cost model that APT could take beyond the UK to nations such as India, which is currently opening its pension sector to foreign investment. The concept that choice isn’t necessarily a good thing could be about to take off.

Asset Owner:ATP

Leave a Comment

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

A view that the US stock market is overvalued and equity risk premia will be lower over the long term has driven New Zealand Super to lower the return expectations for its reference portfolio following its recent five-yearly review of the benchmark. Co-chief investment officer Brad Dunstan also flags underweight commodity exposure as an area to address and explains why the fund remains sceptical of illiquidity premia despite seeing a growing case for private markets.

Sort content by

UK local authority funds question “bigger is best”

UK local authority schemes are under pressure to merge. It’s their turn to suggest ways in which pooling investments, or adminstriation, could achieve the economies of scale necessary for survival, but many are resisting the notion that “bigger is better” when it comes to investments.   The United Kingdom’s local government pension schemes have begun

Longevity storm in Nedlloyd’s cruise to safety

Setting a strategy to keep an ageing pension fund in fine health is “a lot more challenging than selecting where to invest premiums flowing into a young fund,” reflects Frans Dooren, chief investment officer of the Nedlloyd Pension Fund. Dooren began to skipper investment strategy at the €1.2-billion ($1.6-billion) fund in 2011, taking over after

Penny Green: London’s lady of the long term

When Penny Green joined the Superannuation Arrangements of the University of London (SAUL) as chief executive in 1998, the multi-employer defined benefit scheme had £790 million ($1.27 billion) assets under management and two asset managers. Sixteen years later the pooled fund now manages assets for 49 employers in higher education institutions including the University of

The Finnish line: Varma tackles low interest

The scourge of low interest rates looks likely to be confronting investors for at least a little longer after Washington’s budgetary shenanigans delayed the Federal Reserve’s plans to taper quantitative easing. Over in the more sedate surroundings of Helsinki, this is keeping the pressure on the investment policy of Varma, a €36-billion ($49-billion) Finnish pension

Finding wriggle room in North Dakota

The monthly income pouring into the $1.3-billion North Dakota Legacy Fund arrives as thick and fast as fracking technology and new pipeline networks can draw the state’s oil and gas reserves to the surface. But investment strategy at the fund, set up in 2008 when it was portioned 30 per cent of the tax dollars

Irish construction fund hangs on to Dublin debt

Few industries around the world could have more reason to bemoan their fortune in the recent past than the Irish construction sector, which recently recorded its first month of growth in over six years. The €1.2-billion ($1.6-billion) fund that invests construction workers’ pension savings on the Emerald Isle has jumped at the opportunities presented by

Previous