Strong internal team powers New Jersey fund

The $68 billion New Jersey Division of Investment (NJDI) has made claims to be the best performing public pension fund in the US in fiscal year 2009. This is made all the more impressive considering the internal investment team, which manages a large majority of assets, numbers only 16. Amanda White looks behind the scenes at the asset allocation and investment moves that benefited the fund.

 

With a financial year return for 2009 of -14.2 per cent, the New Jersey Division of Investment is well above its peer group in performance terms. The Wilshire TUCs average for all public pension funds for that period was -17.06 per cent, and of the 44 state funds that have reported returns the average is -19.6 per cent (although it should be noted North Carolina comes in par with New Jersey at -14.2 per cent).

What also makes NJDI unique is its very lean internal investment team. This team manages about 95 per cent of assets, and yet it numbers only 16, with a number of staff having dual responsibilities. On average each investment professional is responsible for about $4 billion of assets.

Consultant Strategic Investment Solutions says the division employs about half the average (63) and median (56) staff of large internally-managed peers. When analysts, traders, and portfolio managers are taken into account SIS reports NJDI has 32 staff, compared with CalPERS with 77 and Ohio STRS with 113.

There are also a number of asset allocation anomalies when compared with the large public pension peer group. For one, the exposure to alternatives is well below the peer group, as is US equities, and fixed income is well above the peer group. In addition New Jersey has a larger hedge to interest rate risk, with the inflation hedge increasing.

Sponsored Content

But probably the biggest investment play for the division in the financial year was its high strategic and tactical allocation to fixed income.

According to a presentation by William Clark, director, New Jersey Division of Investment one of the most notable portfolio moves during the fiscal year was the purchase of $2.5 billion of investment-grade corporate bonds in August 2008, which has resulted in an increase of 21 per cent from November 2008 to June 2009. Similarly additional investments of $243 million in several bank loans funds in October 2008 in response to margin calls to prevent forced liquidation of nearly $750 million in positions resulted in an increase of 19 per cent until the end of the financial year.

Another positioning investment during the year was a $2.6 billion purchase of Japanese equities as a means to capitalise on a likely global economic recovery. This remains to be tested.

The fund is also watching emerging markets equities closely, noting it was the asset class to rebound the most in 2009. Clark says the fund is evaluating whether it makes sense to increase its small exposure to the asset class (it now has 1.2 per cent allocated).

Going into the financial year the fund was relatively liquid, with a 7 per cent allocation to cash. While the cash allocation whittled down to about 5 per cent at the end of the year, a number of divestments were made to maintain liquidity. In January 2009 the fund cancelled five commitments totalling $365 million to private equity and real estate funds and redeemed $200 million from two hedge fund investments to reserve liquidity and take advantage of better opportunities in other asset classes.

According to SIS if anything, New Jersey was hurt by the J-curve in private equity and real estate and had poor opportunistic real estate returns.

Throughout the year the fund also reduced its allocation to US equities by about 5 per cent, with the allocation sitting at about 25 per cent at the end of June 2009. This was offset by an increase in US fixed income by about the same amount, and an increase in US high-yield by 1.5 per cent.

The other notable asset allocation was the reduction in international fixed income from 2.7 per cent at the beginning of June 2008 to a flimsy 0.1 per cent.

Since June the fund has made very slight increases to its exposure to US equities, international equities and US fixed income, which remains the highest allocation in the fund at 19.2 per cent.

Asset Allocation Comparison

(6/30/09) NJDI Targets large public plan median

Domestic Equities 23.0% 35.0%

International Equities 18.5% 17.0%

(Global Equities) (41.5%) (50.0%)

Total Fixed Income

(incl TIPS, Cash) 41.0% 28.3%

Real Estate 4.0% 9.0%

Private Equity 5.5% 10.5%

Absolute Return 5.0% 6.3%

Real Assets/

Commodities 3.0% 5.0%

Large Plan Sample = CalSTRS, Oregon, Washington, NYSCRF, Florida, IL TRS, Tx TRS, PSERS, North Carolina, Tennessee

Source: Strategic Investment Solutions presentation to the November board meeting

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

OMERS sharpens strategic focus

OMERS Strategic Investments (OSI) is more than the international co-investment arm of Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System (OMERS), it is the vehicle which the system uses to shape and implement several key parts of its strategic plan. OSI is one of five investment groups that fit under the OMERS Worldwide brand. The other four groups

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

Previous