PFA poised for alternatives assault

Henrik Nøhr Poulsen joined Denmark’s biggest commercial pension fund PFA Pension three months ago, poached from local rival Industriens Pension.Over the course of his tenure at Industriens, Poulsen grew the alternative portfolio to 21 per cent of assets under management from 1.6 per cent when he first joined.

Given that PFA’s current alternative allocation accounts for just 2 per cent of the DKK550 billion ($82.1 billion) fund, coupled with Poulsen’s track record and expertise, it’s no surprise to hear alternatives will be a top priority at PFA in coming years.

“Over the next five years we will target a 10 per cent alternatives allocation,” says Poulsen, chief investment officer equities and alternatives at PFA Asset Management.

“Pension funds around the world are facing the same challenge: assets in fixed income are going to yield a return close to nothing in the short term, yet increasing equity allocations is not the solution because the risk is too high,” he says. “We expected interest rates to go up but the opposite happened.”

As the fund ventures further into alternative investments it will extend its risk analysis, which Poulsen aims to achieve via ESG integration across the entire direct, unlisted portfolio.

“Listed companies are covered by analysts and ESG screens. In the private side you have to do your homework much more thoroughly,” he says.

Sponsored Content

It will mean a bigger team, which Poulsen will build from two to five by the middle of this year, ultimately aiming for a ten-strong head count.

The unlisted focus will be on private equity, infrastructure – where the fund has so far “only dipped a toe” – and real estate.

PFA will also boost its private credit allocation via direct lending and broad, asset-backed investing.

“We want to be closer to the corporates we invest in on the equity and debt side.”

The real estate portfolio is well established but the “pricey” Danish market, where PFA has pushed into the local buy-to-let market, means it will increasingly look abroad for opportunities.

Along with alternatives, there are other areas where the fund is finding attractive risk-adjusted returns – namely, its equity portfolio.

The fund applies alternative risk premia to approximately one-fifth of its equity portfolio, with an in-house team working to systematically harvest equity premia around value, small cap and momentum.

“The equity portfolio has been boosted by active stock picking. Our returns here have been stable rather than shooting through the roof but they have been very successful,” says Poulsen.

Within the equity allocation the amount portioned to Danish stocks will be reduced gradually.

“Danish shares have performed very strongly and we will use the strong market to reduce the allocation; strong Danish companies have been taking up too much space in the portfolio,” he says.

The fund’s emerging market allocation in listed emerging market equity and debt isn’t changing for now.

“We are currently underweight emerging markets and will sit on the fence for a while still. We will eventually move into the unlisted, private space when markets pick up,” he says.

Poulsen is also quietly optimistic about European growth prospects.

“European corporations are doing well and there is the potential for good equity returns: we are overweight Europe versus US.”

The different market-based portfolios account for one-third of the total assets under management.

Eighty per cent of the fund’s current annual income, around euro 3.5 billion ($3.8 billion), flows into these portfolios.

The guaranteed portfolio accounts for the remaining two-thirds of the scheme’s assets and is closed.

Customers in the guaranteed schemes have the option to take on more risk if they want to.

Returns from the guaranteed portfolio are set between 4 per cent for long-standing members down to 1 per cent.

The market-based scheme has four different return profiles that are fashioned according to the risk appetite of the individual and the number of years until retirement.

In the market-based portfolio the typical asset allocation is a 75 per cent allocation to equity, high-yield bonds and private equity, with the remaining 25 per cent in bonds and investment grade real-estate and infrastructure.

About 90 per cent of the fund is managed in-house.

“It is much more cost efficient when you are a big fund to have internal rather than external management. It strengthens the know-how and competence in an organisation, but the main reason is cost,” says Poulsen for whom internal management is one of the most exciting aspects of his new job.

“The culture is the same but the team, and assets under management, is much bigger, and we also manage a lot more internally.”

Asset Owner:PFA Pension

Leave a Comment

The Austin advantage: Texas Teachers talks optimism, innovation and growth

The Austin advantage: Texas Teachers talks optimism, innovation and growth

Jase Auby, TRS's celebrated CIO, explains why TPA doesn't fit with its culture; why community push back on data centres could turn out to be an investor advantage, and argues the case for continuing to invest in fossil fuels. Top1000funds.com sat down with the CIO in his Austin office for an all-encompassing conversation.

Sort content by

Michigan looks to ETFs for ease of exposure

Customised ETFs are the new active management according to Jeb Burns the chief investment officer of MERS of Michigan which is using ETFs for about a third of the fund. Among other things its using ETFs to effectively tilt towards macro themes the team is currently researching.

Aware Super positions for growth

Aware Super, one of Australia's largest superannuation funds, engaged McKinsey as part of the development of its next five-year strategy which the fund presented to the board in March. As it develops its next five-year plan a key initiative is how to deal with growth as it plans for an organisation that could double in size.

PSP expands total portfolio approach

In just 20 years the Canadian fund PSP Investments has grown from a standing start to more than C$200 billion. As it enters its next five year strategy, Amanda White spoke to CIO Eduard van Gelderen about the next phase of portfolio management and the development of its total portfolio approach including assessing and allocating investments on a sector basis.

Church of Sweden manages concentration risk

The SEK10 billion Church of Sweden fund invests all its assets through a sustainability lens. It’s had stellar performance driven largely by a chunk of the fund invested in the Generation Investment Management global equity fund, an investment that was diluted last year to manage concentration risk. Amanda White spoke to CIO, Anders Thorendal.

OPTrust leads on AI innovation

The C$23 billion Canadian fund OPTrust is using AI to reduce risk in a strategy it hopes to roll out to the wider portfolio. Wei Xie explains the benefits and challenges of machine learning including AI's ability to identify complex dimensional relationships.

AIMCo enhances top down strategy function

In October 2020 AIMCo, the C$118 billion Canadian fund appointed its first chief investment strategy officer splitting the investment function between the top down strategy and bottom up implementation responsibilities. Amanda White talks to Amit Prakash about how the new function will add valuable investment insights to clients.

Previous