PGGM looks to pare down asset classes

Examining the complexity of individual asset classes, and their associated risks in combination, has been a major project for PGGM. Amanda White spoke to managing director investment strategy, Jaap van Dam.

One of the more important investigations going on in The Netherlands right now by pension fund boards, and their service providers, is the examination of the definition of investment complexity.

In addition to defining complexity, funds are determining what their individual dose should be, managing director investment strategy at PGGM, Jaap van Dam, says.

“After the credit crisis, several commissions discussing the pension industry in Holland, emphasised that pension fund boards should be in control, not only of the policy decision, but also of the implementation of the investment decisions.”

“I feel complexity has two elements. First, the number of different asset classes and sub-asset classes: how many different investment classes can be fully understood by the board? And second, the complexity of these asset classes in terms of implementation – such as operational, contractual and tax issues,” he says.

In the past 12 months PGGM, which includes the €90 billion ($127 billion) Dutch fund PFZW among its five clients, has undergone a project to classify its asset classes in terms of complexity, formalising a framework and identifying all the different types of risk within each asset class.

Sponsored Content

“We can now ask whether the complexity is worthwhile in terms of return and stability,” he says. “So, our clients will be able to make informed decisions trading off strategic investment decisions versus the level of complexity they find acceptable.”

PGGM on behalf of its client invests in more than 20 different (sub) investment classes, from six different identified sources of return and risk.

For PGGM, uniquely, investment allocations are a three-stage process which begins with an allocation to only four asset classes – equities, commodities, nominal obligations and inflation-linked – as a result of the ALM study.

This basic mix then goes on to van Dam’s strategy department and a more complex mix of investments – with the large majority in return-seeking assets – is created in line with the basic ALM. The objective of this process is to generate a higher and more stable return compared to the basic ALM.

PGGM’s asset class options are derived from six major sources of risk and return: equity, real estate, credit, other or complimentary risks, commodities and interest rate and inflation.

Van Dam says over the past five years the focus has been on further diversifying the portfolio in order to lower the impact of the dominant sources of risk.

“Equity has taken an enormous amount of risk and we diversify away from that. We are now looking at our pool of risk and the risk drivers of each asset class. Over the past year we have learnt collectively as an industry, liquidity is an issue and what asset class behaviour is under stress. So we’ve improved portfolio construction to be very explicit about what happens under stress and liquidity constraints and to test complexity,” he says.

The strategy department writes a formal investment case for all 24 asset classes, what the risk drivers are. In this document, a required rate of return per asset class is specified.

“Then the investment teams have to show that they can jump the hurdles of the required rate of return we set in strategy. The quality of the team drives the quality of the implementation, this is very important,” van Dam says. “It is the combination of the car and the driver that makes it work.”

PGGM has about 15 different investment teams, with a focus on autonomy of decision making and implementation. It uses a combination of internal and external management, with “clear and visible reasoning to why the decision has been made”.

“As part of a new office plan two years ago, PGGM said let the investors be the ones who invest, and looked at the teams to see what critical mass of people you need to deliver high-quality fully-credible investment management,” he says.

Van Dam credits chief investment officer, Johan van der Ende, who will leave in November, with strengthening the teams.

In 2008 PGGM became an asset  manager and pension administrator , with the first steps towards becoming a multi-client organisation occurring in the past two years, and it now has five Dutch pension funds as clients.

“We want to be able to offer a whole array of investment solutions to all clients,” van Dam says.

Asset Owner:PGGM / PFZW

Leave a Comment

PMT talks infra equity and how to balance stock concentration risk

PMT talks infra equity and how to balance stock concentration risk

Scenario testing has put inflation risk front and centre at PMT, the Netherlands’ third largest pension fund, and it's driving the investor to take stock of the inflation protection it gets from infrastructure. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, chief investment officer Hartwig Liersch unpacks the risk, as well as another initiative where it's balancing concentration risk in the equity allocation without hurting returns.

Sort content by

Danish fund cuts managers for better ESG

The €9.5 billion DanishPædagogernes Pension, PBU, is in the process of consolidating the number of managers in its listed equity portfolio. The decision at the fund - which has around 10 large, focused equity mandates - is linked to an ambition to reduce the number of companies in the portfolio in the belief that fewer companies in the 42 per cent actively-managed equity allocation allows greater ESG oversight.

The impact of technology on investments

Harshal Chaudhari recently sidestepped from his role as company-wide CIO at IBM, looking after $150 billion in pension assets, to a new role as the tech giant’s chief analytics officer. He spoke to Top1000Funds about the strategy he ran at the pension fund, his wider thoughts on the global economy and the impact of technology on the investment world.

QSuper: standing out from the crowd

QSuper CIO, Brad Holzberger, has long stood out from his peers by loading up on long-term government bonds and even the recent sudden collapse of yields, as investors started pricing in slower growth, hasn’t deterred him from sticking with this asset class. The retiring CIO of one of Australia's largest funds about expectations.

ADIA boosts internal active fixed income

The $700 billion Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, ADIA, is boosting its internal fixed income capabilities and scaling up capacity to run active strategies in-house as it simplifies the portfolio to become more fleet-of-foot.

Finding risk: First State Super

A decade of ultra-low rates and mediocre growth does not mean that every year will yield low returns for investors, according to Damian Graham, the CIO of First State Super one of Australia's largest institutional investors. He talks about how to get enough risk in the portfolio.

Caisse Geneva’s approach to risk

The pension fund for the Swiss Canton of Geneva runs a fundamental investment strategy shaped around harvesting the premia. The fund's CIO, Gregoire Haenni, mindful of heightened risk in the equity allocation because of the late cycle.

Previous