PGGM finds out what it really means to be a long-term investor

Customised benchmarks, absolute return strategies and long-term mandates are all being considered by the PGGM executive team as it implements the new PFZW investment framework. Amanda White spoke to Ruulke Bagijn chief investment officer of private markets and Marcel Jeucken, managing director responsible investment at PGGM about what it really means to be a long-term investor.

The €167 billion ($228 billion) Dutch pension fund manager, PGGM, is working under a new investment framework which is the result of an 18-month soul-searching review by its client PFZW, under a project called “The White Sheet of Paper”.

The investment framework has been adopted by the board and now the focus has shifted to implementing the investment framework.

It’s a work in progress, and involves both incremental and transformational change. Ruulke Bagijn chief investment officer of private markets at PGGM and Marcel Jeucken, managing director responsible investment at PGGM both sit on a working committee to determine the best way forward.

“Such a review makes you focus on what really matters,” Bagijn says.

She says at the core of the strategy is sustainability, and she identifies with the Michael Porter concept of “shared value”.

Sponsored Content

“The benefits we pay are worth more in a world worth living in,” Bagijn says. “We also can’t produce returns in a system that doesn’t work, so the sustainability of the financial system is a core part of what we look at as a long-term investor.”

PGGM’s focus will be taking on a larger role in the viability and sustainability of the world. It’s no small ambition, but it’s one that many large institutional asset owners are addressing as the debate over short-termism continues.

“Long term investing for us is providing a valuable future, providing a pension in a sustainable world. It’s working for the current generation but not at the expense of future generations. A sustainable and viable world includes saving a good pension and contributing to the economic and financial environment in which we operate and live.”

It focuses on a stable financial sector, human rights and good corporate governance with emerging investment themes as part of this including climate change, water, food security and health.

She says PGGM will intensify its efforts in focusing on long-term horizons, which leads its policy choices, including asset allocation.

In implementation terms this means better benchmarks, alternative strategies in public markets and more focused portfolios.

“As a long term investor we look at asset allocation and now wand to design a dynamic element to that. In terms of sustainability we will look at benchmarks, investing more in The Netherlands, agency issues and remuneration. We’ll look at our own behaviour and the behaviour of others, and want to continue to have a pioneering role in promoting a sustainable financial system,” she says.

“We think there needs to be courage from pension funds to create their own benchmarks and worry less about peer risk,” Bagijn says.

Customised index

PGGM has developed an index in house, which measures the 2800 companies in the FTSE All World Index for their environmental and social policy and good governance.

The index re-ranks the companies based on these criteria, which also include a minimum threshold. As a consequence of this, about 200 companies that don’t make it into the index have been sold by PGGM, which amounts to about 1 per cent of the portfolio.

PGGM has just completed the second year managing passively to this ESG customised benchmark, which accounts for about 90 per cent of its equities exposure, or about €44 billion in market-cap and smart beta strategies.

Marcel Jeucken, managing director of responsible investment at PGGM says the benchmark is not an exclusion strategy, rather it is about relative performance.

“It’s like an active benchmark, we don’t want to blindly follow an index. This ranks the relative performance of companies, and we think the worst companies are indicators of many things including management,” he says.

Jeucken chairs an internal working group that looks at many implementation issues in the context of the overall focus on sustainability, including benchmarks.

“We are looking at a number of areas and the impact they have. Benchmarks might lead to short termism and herding behaviour by passive and active managers. The benchmark provider actually has more impact on the stock than capital providers.”

“We try to figure out what we can do and what the impact will be. One option might be to not have benchmarks, rather have an absolute return target. We are investigating all options but the solution has to be workable.”

Jeucken says PGGM is also looking at long-term mandates and the impact and role of remuneration on short-termism.

“We have started the journey, looking at our role in financial markets, our behaviour, how we act and the measures we use,” he says. “Through the White Sheet of Paper Project we are focused on going back to asset ownership as the driver of what happens in financial markets – this includes who is employed, how benchmarks are set, the view of alignment and the view of incentive structures. It’s a big agenda, with difficult questions, and we’re not sure where it will lead us.”

Jaap van Dam, managing director of strategy at PGGM will contribute an article on the White Sheet of Paper project next month

Asset Owner:PGGM / PFZW

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

Postcard from Japan

For many years Japan has been an insurance-market behemoth and Japan Post Insurance Company is one of the giants with $1.13 trillion. But the industry has not been immune to change. Between 1997 and 2001 seven life insurance companies became insolvent, and there is a question mark over whether it was a low interest-rate environment

Feathering the NEST

In the United Kingdom there are around 1.5 million employers, and it is estimated more than half of them do not offer a pension to their employees. The pension system in the UK is fragmented. There are more than 10,000 mostly defined-benefit plans and, unless you are a government employee or in the high-income bracket,

Norway’s GPFG enters the property game

Last May, when Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global bought 4 per cent of the Formula One motor racing group from private-equity firm CVC Capital Partners, its goal was clear. The sovereign wealth fund, which invests Norway’s oil revenues, wanted the inside track on Formula One’s IPO in Singapore, scheduled for June. Instead, the GPFG’s foray

Irish fund “turned on its head”

Institutional investors across the planet are squaring up to changed realities in the wake of the financial crisis. It is difficult though to think of any that has found its operating environment transformed as fundamentally as Ireland’s National Pensions Reserve Fund (NPRF). “Being turned on its head is a fairly accurate way to describe the

Taking RI from in-house to front of mind

The industry needs to be better at thinking how responsible investing can be accessed by smaller funds or those lacking sufficient internal resources, David Russell, co-head of responsible investment at the UK’s Universities Superannuation Scheme, says. Russell, who will join a panel at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Santa Monica produced by Conexus Financial, publisher

Overseeing complexity with Rotman-ICPM

A week-long Board Effectiveness Program with peers from around the globe, including those from Canada’s HOOPP and Denmark’s ATP, has given AIMCo board member, Andrea Rosen, a new perspective on best practice. In a business environment where most people are working harder, multi-skilling, facing lower-than-necessary resourcing, staffing and margins, a week-long course could be viewed

Previous