NZ Super pares back tilts

New Zealand Super has pulled back its strategic tilting positions for the first time since the program was introduced in 2009, as it sees most asset classes returning to long-term fair value.

The strategy has added an annualised return of 1.2 per cent for the NZ$34 billion ($24 billion) sovereign wealth fund since inception; however, David Iverson, head of asset allocation at New Zealand Super, says prices are now closer to fair valuations, so the relative sizes of the tilt positions will be pared back.

The tilting decisions are driven by the fund’s view on how current prices compare with estimates of the fair value of assets based on long-term fundamental and economic factors.

Even though the tilting is executed through short-term trades, Iverson is firm that it is a long-term strategy, because it is all based on long-term valuations. Momentum, for example, is not a signal the fund uses in its tilting decisions, because it is a short-term behavioural signal.

The relative sizes of the positions are determined by how far current prices have deviated from the fund’s assessment of fair value and the relative confidence in tilting that asset.

“We started this program after the [global financial crisis] and have had those positions on for a long time. Now we see prices closer to our fair valuations and there is less opportunity,” Iverson says. “This is new for us…Prices are closer to our fair values in equities and currencies.

Sponsored Content

“One of our beliefs is that a long-horizon investor can outperform short-horizon investors. We can do everything short-horizon investors can do, and more,” Iverson says. “The illiquidity premium is a fact, but that is not the only way to act long term. You can also take advantage of short-term activities.”

More active in unlisted assets

The fund does its strategic tilting in-house, and has a team of four dedicated to it, partly to reduce transaction costs, but primarily because of the difficulty in getting a manager to maintain the discipline of acting long term while transacting in the short term.

While the strategic tilting program, which has done much of the heavy lifting for the fund over the past seven years, will not be as active, the fund is taking active risk in a number of other areas, particularly in unlisted, including timber – which is run internally – distressed debt and life settlements.

All of its active risk decisions are based on a long-term outlook.

“For example, in distressed credit, we look at where we are in the cycle and how attractive it is, our views on loan default rates, downgrades versus upgrades, spreads in the credit bands, where we are in the cycle and the ride through. We have been in distressed for a while. We were in European distressed debt, now the US has started sparking and we’re looking at that,” he says.

The fund’s timber allocations are primarily managed in-house, while European distressed debt is managed externally (by Bain), as is US life settlements (by Apollo).

New Zealand Super uses a reference portfolio to benchmark the performance of its actual investment portfolio and the value it is adding through active investment strategies. The reference is a low-cost, passive, listed investments portfolio split 80:20 between growth and fixed income investments.

About two-thirds of the fund is invested passively and in line with the reference.

As an active investor, NZ Super then adds value to the fund using illiquid assets, manager selection and trading activities.

The fund’s active risk falls into five baskets: asset selection; market pricing – arbitrage, credit and funding; market pricing – broad markets; market pricing – real assets; and structural.

The strategic tilting falls into the market pricing – broad markets bucket. Timber and life settlements fall into the structural bucket.

At the end of February 2017, the actual asset-class exposure of the fund was global equities (66 per cent), fixed income (11 per cent), timber (5 per cent), private equity (5 per cent), New Zealand equities (4 per cent), infrastructure (3 per cent), other private markets (3 per cent), other public markets (2 per cent) and rural farmland (1 per cent).

In the 12 months to the end of March 2017, the fund returned 23.14 per cent versus the reference portfolio of 19.78 per cent; in effect, adding 3.36 percentage points over the year.

Since inception in 2003, New Zealand Super has returned 10.04 per cent, versus the reference portfolio of 8.67 per cent.

Leave a Comment

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

As concerns in private credit mount, Colorado PERA CIO and COO Amy McGarrity says the pension fund isn’t seeing any strains in its growing allocation to the asset class, arguing that long-term investors are shielded from the risks because they can lock up their capital to weather market cycles.

Sort content by

Cash and overweight to US equities pays at New Jersey

The New Jersey Division of Investment generated double digit returns in fiscal year 2024 while maintaining good liquidity and dry powder on hand with an overweight to cash and cash equivalents. The cash position is likely to decline through 2025 given the robust pipeline in new private market opportunities.

San Jose Retirement: How risk-on restored returns

Uniquely positioned in Silicon Valley, the City of San Jose Retirement System is poised to fulfil its 4 per cent target allocation to venture capital. It underscores a bold risk-on strategy that CIO Prabhu Palani has used to transform the fund he joined in 2018.

New York City’s TRS: Junk rallies make active management hard

At the October investment committee meeting for the Teachers Retirement System of the City of New York, TRS' Tax Deferred Annuity Programme trustees heard how lower quality stocks are outperforming the broad market in what is commonly referred to as a “junk rally.”

Behind Future Fund’s $70bn inflation-related portfolio shift

In the past two years, the Future Fund has made around $70 billion worth of changes in the portfolio that can be traced back to stubbornly high inflation. Its director of research and insights, Craig Thorburn, outlined how asset allocation around currencies, alternatives and bonds are all looking different.

Texas Teachers marks highest ever quarterly return

Texas Teachers records the highest quarterly return in its 85-year history – 333 basis points of alpha – with US and Indian equities fuelling the excess return. The fund has made a number of recent changes to the portfolio including removing China and reducing allocations to private equity.

Better performance and alignment of purpose: The benefits of TPA

A total portfolio approach aligns investment implementation with the purpose of being a fiduciary, rather than short term or relative performance. Not only that, there is huge upside performance from the approach, the source of which is not what you might think according to Sue Brake.

Previous