San Francisco stays faithful to equities

While some funds move towards more defensive allocations, executive director of the San Francisco Employees Retirement System, Gary Amelio (pictured), says the fund will maintain its belief in equities as it embarks on its five-year asset liability study.

The San Francisco Employees Retirement System has always had a reasonably aggressive investment strategy, with almost half of the fund in public equities (26 per cent of which were domestic equities) at the beginning of the year, private equities comprising another 12 per cent, and real estate a little less than 10 per cent.

Throughout the recent financial crisis this did not change, and post the crisis it is not going to change either.

“We’ve done the analysis on our strategic asset allocation and decided nothing major needs to happen as a result,” executive director of the fund, Amelio says. Although he adds there is a shift to increase international equities and global fixed-income (probably out of real estate).

“We are following the same guidelines and believe there is no reason to do anything dramatic. We believe in equities, when some funds have moved away from those allocations. We don’t believe in investing your way out.”

During 2007-08 the average size of the fund was around $16.5 billion, the market decline took it down to $11 billion in early 2009 and that has been steadily increasing to its position of about $15.2 billion in assets now.

Sponsored Content

“Our assets have come back and I attribute that to a very solid investment policy which has been held to. We didn’t do anything reactionary, we watched the asset allocation, stayed with a long-term focus. So we didn’t ‘lose’ anything because we didn’t sell anything during that time,” he says.

SFERS has a long history, with parts of the fund dating back to 1850 (the Police Widows Fund), and in its current form it’s been around since 1924.

Amelio attributes a lot of the fund’s success, measured in longevity and funded status, to the city and county of San Francisco never failing to make an employer contribution.

“It’s the single most prominent reason for maintaining our funding status,” he says. “We’ve had an aggressive strategy and a prudent and stable investment policy. But the contribution levels are set by the voters of San Francisco, not boards or consultants. The benefits are modest and employee contributions healthy, there is a high level of transparency.”

The fund’s actuarial rate of return is 7.75 per cent and Amelio says a representation of the forward-thinking of the board is that it “went to less than 8 per cent long before the pension industry started talking about it”.

“The SFERS retirement board commissioners are knowledgeable about investments, incredibly well-informed and have maintained an educated, aggressive strategy for a long period of time.”

One of the few changes Amelio plans over the long-term, is to build up and out the investment team, with a number of senior hires to come.

The fund manages an allocation of 8.71 per cent in an S&P500 fund, and 3.7 per cent fixed income internally, under the leadership of deputy director for investments (chief investment officer), David Kushner.

“We have had new job descriptions written up and through the public process, it’s time-consuming but if you spend the time and do it right it is beneficial.”

The hiring of two managing directors, in public and private markets, and five underlying positions, in real estate, and private equity will bring the internal team to 14.

“The internal team’s function includes monitoring current manager performance, asset allocation guidelines and oversight of the current holdings of managers. In addition the staff co-ordinates the independent investment consultants and provides investment information to the board. They are also constantly on the lookout for new opportunities for appropriate fund investments. The fund does not invest in hedge funds and there is no current plan to modify that position.”

 

 

Long-term strategic asset allocation

Asset Class Policy Range %
US equity 22-30
International equity 20-26
Fixed income 20-35
Alternative assets 10-18
Real estate 9-15
Cash 0- 1

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

APG private markets CIO articulates the value of being based in Asia

Dutch investor APG is showing its deep commitment to Asia by installing its chief investment officer of private markets in the Hong Kong office, a prime location from which to proactively source opportunities. The fund outlines its plan to increase allocation in infrastructure and private equity while integrating impact themes.

CPP Investments, NBIM reflect on lessons from a 5-year transparency journey

The Global Pension Transparency Benchmark has been a driving force in improved transparency of disclosures and reporting among global asset owners. As the project comes to its close after five years, two leading funds reflect on why transparency has been a clear focus for their organisations. 

NEST’s private markets strategic review includes manager scrutiny

NEST is conducting a strategic review of its private markets allocation to ensure the program – launched in 2020 – is still capturing a liquidity premium for its young member base. Its private market head explains the key seams including no performance fees and evergreen structures to monitor deployment.

UK corporate DB consolidation: TPT throws its hat in the ring

Trustees and employers overseeing the UK’s 5,000 corporate pension plans, which hold an estimated £1.2 trillion ($1.6 trillion), have another option to help manage their defined benefit assets following TPT Retirement Solutions' proposal for a new superfund that will access managers through a fund-of-funds structure.

Fordham University dials up growth equity, cools on private credit

Fordham University CIO Geeta Kapadia is cutting back on private credit, calling it an asset class “less able to financially engineer returns” in a higher-rate world. She’s instead redirecting the $1.1 billion endowment to venture and growth equity and entrusting larger mandates to a smaller roster of high-conviction managers.

‘So far so good’: Sweden’s FTN bags 150bps equity fund return improvement

In an endorsement of its hard work over the last year, Sweden’s Fund Selection Agency, which procures and monitors the funds on offer on the country’s premium pension platform, is already starting to see improved returns and lower fees from the wave of new equity funds it mandated.

Previous