PUBLICA builds alternatives through partnerships

In the latest development of its private market portfolio, Swiss pension fund PUBLICA is investing in infrastructure equity in a partnership with three other Swiss pension funds and Dutch pension investor APG.

Private markets now account for 30 per cent of PUBLICA’s CHF40.5 billion ($46.6 billion) portfolio in an allocation that has been steadily built out since 2015 when the pension fund’s only real asset was an allocation to Swiss real estate.

Since then, risk has been added incrementally via an allocation to investment grade long-term private debt and foreign real estate. A 3 per cent allocation to infrastructure equity was added in 2022 to boost returns and add diversification divided equally between three open ended funds – and the latest allocation via partnerships.

“As we progressed through private asset classes we have added risk,” explains Dominique Gilgen, who joined the pension fund in 2015 to help build up private markets and now oversees a team of three in line with the portfolio’s growth. “At the same time, we have developed our experience, competence and confidence with these asset classes and vehicles.”

Although infrastructure equity brings higher risk, Gilgen believes in volatile markets it will be relatively stable given its long-term cash flows and the fact it sits in a more conservative space than equity. He also likes the inflation protection and ability to integrate ESG.

“Infrastructure equity has attractive characteristics from a sustainability point of view. It fits well with PUBLICA’s responsible investment approach and positive selection criteria are easier to integrate.”

Sponsored Content

Private equity remains notably absent from the real asset allocation. Equity risk, explains Gilgen, has always been the biggest risk in the portfolio (the listed equity allocation is 32 per cent of AUM) and the fund has been reluctant to go into an illiquid asset class with a risk factor that will build on existing risk.

Other concerns include how to efficiency implement private equity and high fees. He lists transparency, investor influence and the possible misalignment of interests as other issues.

“It is more difficult to access private equity and get compensated for the additional risk. For us, whether or not private equity can deliver risk premia after fees remains a question.” In 2023 PUBLICA’s total asset management expenses were 0.22 per cent.

Partnership in action

PUBLICA’s partnership with Swiss funds City of Zurich, Kanton Aargau, and Credit Suisse together with Dutch pension investor APG targets an initial commitment of €1 billion to jointly gain access to global infrastructure in the private market space. The quintet, hailing the collaboration as a benchmark for cross-border pension fund partnerships emphasize stability, transparency, and a long-term vision and hope to make the first investment “in the coming months”.

PUBLICA’s previous experience of partnerships includes collaborating with US insurance companies in private debt where stakes include real estate debt, infrastructure debt and corporate private placements. US insurance companies act as both asset manager and co-investor, typically contributing over 50 per cent of the investment, he explains. Gilgen particularly likes the alignment of interest in the active allocation that such a partnership brings.

He hopes the partnership with APG, which has a long track record of investing in private infrastructure and an experienced, large team, will bring another opportunity to learn. “We are partnering with someone who has vast experience in this area and capability to do this investment,” he says.

The partnership has been structured to incorporate differences between Swiss and Dutch legal and tax frameworks. He says the investors share many similarities including values and philosophies.

“The relationship was strong before we started. Although we are five distinct pension funds we have a common understanding that has helped bring such a project to a successful start.”

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

Future Fund’s single
total portfolio

For the past five years David Neal has been integrating the vision of “one team, one portfolio” into the culture of the investment team at the $77-billion Future Fund. This has now been set in stone – well, porcelain – with coffee cups bearing the moniker used by staff throughout the organisation. The slogan is

Hedging and risk reduction pay off at ATP

The seriousness with which the Danish pension fund ATP takes hedging paid off last year, with the fund recording its best ever return. A combination of the hedging activity and a deliberate move to substantially reduce its risk meant the fund weathered the European storm despite the fall-off in interest rates. The 579-billion-Danish kroner ($98.4-billion)

UN fund enters 21st century

With total portfolio costs of only 15.3 basis points, the $43-billion United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund is one of the most efficiently run pension funds in the world – not bad for a fund that has investments in 41 countries and 23 currencies. This year it embarked on an operations overhaul to bring even

Missouri’s risk-based
asset allocation

A decision by two of Missouri’s public pension plans to adopt a straightforward risk-based approach to asset allocation garnered their best result in two decades last year, while also providing investment staff with the autonomy to react quickly to changing market conditions. The board overseeing the Public School Retirement System of Missouri (PSRS) and the

Wyoming takes
the passive route

Investors are taking an increasingly sophisticated view of their passive equity allocations, aiming to capture the benefits of a range of risk premiums, while also lowering the volatility and improving the risk/adjusted returns – all at a considerably lower cost than active management. Wyoming Retirement System (WRS) turned to risk-premium mandates as part of a

Behind CalPERS’
sustainability report

In its most simple form, CalPERS defines sustainability as the “ability to continue”. This year CalPERS turns 80 and clearly “continuing” is something it wants to do. The strategy paper, presented to and endorsed by the board, explains the fiduciary framework the fund has adopted to integrate sustainability across the entire fund and sets out

Previous