PFA navigates corona storm

Under the stewardship of new CIO, Kasper Lorenzen, Denmark’s PFA has survived the first wave of coronavirus-fuelled market mayhem.

Lorenzen, who joined the $86.3 billion PFA, from the country’s statutory pension fund the $125.7 billion ATP six months ago, told Top1000funds.com the fund’s belief in risk parity and a balanced portfolio resulted in a “reasonable” risk-on allocation at the end of last year, and for the first two months of this year.

“Equities did fine, and rates kept dropping so a balanced portfolio did really well,” he says.

So well, in fact, by the end of February 2020 the portfolio had returned as much in the first eight weeks of the year as it was expected to return over the course of the whole year. That, combined with a belief that coronavirus was “more than flu,” and would have severe supply consequences for the world economy, led PFA’s investment team to take profit on some of the equity positions in its return portfolio.

“We scaled down risk,” says Lorenzen, speaking from the fund’s Copenhagen headquarters before the country was put in a virus-induced lock down along with the rest of Europe. “Sometimes you get it right, and sometimes you don’t,” he says.

With global equity markets experiencing a “big correction” and government bond yields crashing to historic lows, he is minded that a rebound may be in the offing. “This is too much, too quickly,” he says. “We’ve put on some short-term adjustments.”

Sponsored Content

That is not to say he doesn’t have a keen awareness of the long-term structural changes the virus could trigger should patterns in globalisation, already under pressure from trade wars, populism and “now this,” shift.

“The global value chain has been closed for a while and it’s probably going to get worse. Firms and individuals are being reminded that it is great to have parts of your production in other parts of the world, but this comes with risk,” he says. “This is not going to be over, even if there is a cure for the virus tomorrow. We are going to learn something from this and that could be a reversal in globalisation.”

Lorenzen also believes the fund’s response to the crisis has been helped by changes he put in place on his arrival.

When Lorenzen joined PFA six months ago, he restructured the investment organisation’s meeting structure. It involved re-jigging which members of the team are part of the decision-making process, and which are involved in management, leadership or fund management.

“How we meet, and the agenda, is the heartbeat of the investment organisation. We needed a structure that could execute, and work with strategy on a daily basis.” It’s an evolving process that will be adjusted and developed over time, he says. “It’s difficult setting up an optimal organisation from the beginning.”

He has also turned his attention to investment strategy, where much is running well at the pension fund he needed little persuasion to join, having worked at PFA as a portfolio manager before joining ATP in 2007.

The fund’s growing alternatives allocation is a particular jewel in the crown, overhauled in 2016 when it was just 2 per cent of AUM and comprising older fund commitments and a few direct investments, to now account for around 20 per cent of AUM and invested across private equity, credit and infrastructure. Investments include TDC, the Danish incumbent telecommunications provider and a stake in the Walney Extension Offshore Wind Farm, located in the Irish Sea.

“If we are presented with good deals, we might take our private markets allocation to 25 per cent. But if we don’t see anything we like, the number of deals will gradually expire, and the allocation might go lower. It all depends on what deals we are presented with.”

The unlisted allocation is run by an internal team of around 15 – where the focus is origination, execution and leadership – plus a select group of strategic external managers. Manager relationships are based on “good strategic dialogue” that ensure efficiency and transparency around co- investment. “Our investment process in private markets allows us to execute when opportunities arise and be fairly firm on how we communicate with some of our funds. They know what we are after, and have certainty around our appetite,” he says.

Risk parity

However, there is an important element of the portfolio he is keen to develop. Namely, introducing a framework across private and public markets that would allow the team to compare risk, an area PFA has already done much work, but where he is keen to push further.

Many risk-parity investors don’t apply the strategy to illiquid investments, but at ATP Lorenzen included illiquid alternatives (private equity, real estate and infrastructure) under a risk-parity umbrella in a structure that gave a common currency, or shared risk denominator, to public and private assets. It allowed the fund to dial risk up, or down, in what he calls a “very useful” way.

“At PFA we are now working to create a similar risk framework that will allow us to specifically compare the risk of public and private markets,” he says.

For example, the new visibility will allow the fund to act if it sees too much risk in private markets by hedging some of that in public markets.

“Alternatively, if we have a good, robust private markets portfolio we want to be in a position to take on a little more risk in public markets to capitalise on that diversification benefit,” he says, adding that building an alternative risk framework will involve looking at each individual private market deal in a bottom up approach within the organisation.

Building out risk parity in private markets is neither a dramatic new strategy nor a particularly long journey ahead. PFA already looks at its portfolio through a risk lens. It has a 15-year history of using derivatives and has long hedged its liabilities.

Instead, it’s more of a fine-tuning that speaks to all Lorenzen’s experience.

“I have bought a mindset to PFA that was established at ATP over the last decade and is now is in my DNA. It comprises separating the hedging and investment activity so that hedging in one metric, and investment risk is measured using a different metric. Not being too levered against reserves – and taking on the right amount of risk.”

Asset Owner:PFA PensionATP

Leave a Comment

Silver is the new gold: France’s UMR targets opportunities in ageing economy

Silver is the new gold: France’s UMR targets opportunities in ageing economy

French pension organisation UMR has launched a multi-asset thematic program that will target opportunities in Europe’s ageing economy. It’s part of a broader strategy to increase diversification in private markets where it sees secondary markets as an increasingly important tool.

Sort content by

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.

Sampension: Why there are many reasons to be optimistic

Now is not the time to reduce risk, argues Henrik Olejasz Larsen, chief investment officer of Sampension, Denmark’s $50 billion pension fund for public and private sector employees. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, he says corporate profits have not deteriorated, and although the market has been tested from multiple directions, the underlying optimism driving equities is strong enough to overrule the negative impact of geopolitical risk.

France’s Banque des Territoires looks for data centre opportunities

France’s Banque des Territoires, a subsidiary of Caisse des Dépôts, the country’s €323 billion state-owned financial institution, plans to invest more in data centres in France. The push is in line with government policy to build out AI infrastructure off the back of the country's access to cheap, green, nuclear energy that uniquely positions France to provide power to the AI industry while maintaining net zero credentials.

Why NYC pensions CIO hasn’t drunk the ‘TPA Kool-Aid’

Three decades of investing have given Monte Tarbox sharp eyes for recognising risk and opportunities, and he’s putting it to use as the new permanent chief investment officer of the $306 billion NYC Bureau of Asset Management. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, Tarbox outlines his vision for the fund, why he’s bullish on infrastructure but “nervous” on PE, and why he hasn’t drunk the TPA “Kool-Aid”.

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.

URS bets on nuclear to power AI and lower emissions

Next-generation nuclear energy, and the money pouring into it, will truly change the world, according to CIO of Utah Retirement System John Skjervem. It’s a lonely position as the CIO of a public pension fund but one Utah is embracing as it builds out early-stage investments in nuclear energy as part of its alternative energy portfolio. He speaks to Sarah Rundell in an exclusive interview about how investing in transformational energy technologies can be part of prudent investment management.