Railpen: good partners add skills

Earlier this year, RPMI Railpen, investment manager for the £28 billion ($37 billion) pension fund serving the UK’s railway workers, embarked on a joint venture with the $66 billion Alaska Permanent Fund and Kuwait’s Public Institution for Social Security (PIFSS) to better access private markets.

Like many other asset owners, the trio have found competition and elevated prices has made accessing private markets difficult. The hope is that combining firepower and expertise in a joint venture will open up more opportunities. The joint venture, Capital Constellation, will invest in private equity and alternatives managers, and plans to deploy more than $1.5 billion in the next five years. The three funds manage about $200 billion in assets between them.

The project has revealed important lessons, Railpen chief investment officer Richard Williams says. First, asset owners should partner with investors that bring different elements to the party. In Railpen’s case, this means finding partners that can complement its ESG experience and UK presence, he says.

“It is also about finding heterogeneous skill sets that blend together,” Williams says. “There are lots of hurdles to jump through and we would like to do more initiatives like Capital Constellation, but only time will tell if we do. It won’t be for lack of intention.”

Preparing the ground at the beginning of a collaboration in case things grow tricky and parameters shift in the future is important as well, he says.

“It is a little bit like a prenup [prenuptial agreement],” Williams says. “If it doesn’t work out, all parties need to know how they can separate without it getting too acrimonious. I’m not suggesting the best marriages have to have a prenup, but sometimes love isn’t enough.”

Sponsored Content

For more on Railpen’s strategy see our profile Railpen reaps benefits of in-house team.

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

Hedge funds appeal at Ilmarinen as volatility returns

For years Central Bank bond buying has supressed the volatility on which hedge funds thrive. At Finnish pension fund Ilmarinen hedge funds are back in favour, particularly volatility, momentum, and macro strategies that don't correlate to equities.  

WSIB gears up for social and environmental push in private equity

Washington State Investment Board has seen the impact of its expansive private equity program through investee-company employee schemes and climate-focused impact funds. Now WSIB is set to put much more pressure on private equity to integrate ESG in portfolio companies. Sarah Rundell spoke to chief executive, Allyson Tucker.

Beyond traditional asset allocation

Today’s challenging climate has led diversified investors like GIC, Singapore's sovereign wealth fund, to explore different approaches to portfolio construction to build resilience. Grace Qiu and Ding Li, both senior vice presidents in total portfolio policy and allocation at GIC discuss their new research.

$1 trillion funds need new incentives and investment styles: CPP

Funds of enormous scale will require a new cross-disciplinary approach, and innovative incentive and rewards schemes to foster the organisational culture needed, according to chief investment strategist at CPP Investments' Geoff Rubin, as it looks to move beyond a total portfolio approach to a "one fund" approach.

CalPERS gearing up for global push into private markets

Building the expertise for direct investment in global real estate and infrastructure is a priority for the new CIO of the United States’ largest pension fund. Nicole Musicco spoke to Amanda White in an exclusive interview at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium.

Culture, purpose and empowerment pay in the battle for talent

As the battle for talent intensifies, one CIO reflects on the best way to recruit and retain staff; elsewhere investments in dollars and real assets provide ballast in a challenging investment environment.

Previous