Skip to content
largeleaderboard
  • Asset Owner Directory
  • CIO Sentiment Survey
  • GPTB
  • Investor Profile
  • Events
    • 2026
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Singapore
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Harvard
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Stanford
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Oxford
    • 2027
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Singapore
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Harvard
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Stanford
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Oxford
    • Previous years
    • Sustainability in Practice
  • Podcasts
  • Research Hub
  • Risk
  • Sustainability
  • Memberships
  • Partnered Content
    • Content Hubs
      • CFA Institute
      • Goldman Sachs Asset Management
    • InFocus
    • Podcasts
    • Webinars
Subscribe Login
Become a member and subscribe Login
  • Asset Owner Directory
  • CIO Sentiment Survey
  • GPTB
  • Investor Profile
  • Events
    • 2026
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Singapore
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Harvard
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Stanford
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Oxford
    • 2027
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Singapore
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Harvard
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Stanford
      • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Oxford
    • Previous years
    • Sustainability in Practice
  • Podcasts
  • Research Hub
  • Risk
  • Sustainability
  • Memberships
  • Partnered Content
    • Content Hubs
      • CFA Institute
      • Goldman Sachs Asset Management
    • InFocus
    • Podcasts
    • Webinars

Login with account details

Or

Send me a login link

Forgot password?Click here

No membership?Register here

onebyone
skin-left
skin-right
billboard

Home > Investor Profile

Investor Profile

Swiss set to risk for security

Amanda White

February 09, 2011

Save Article

A mindset change that sees assets allocated according to risk, not capital, as well as the physical splitting of the three separate funds it manages, is setting up the Swiss Federal Social Security Fund for a stimulating year. Amanda White spoke to managing director, Eric Breval.The end of 2010 was a busy tactical, strategic and operational time for the CHF 25 billion ($26 billion) Swiss Federal Social Security Fund. This culminated in the separation of the three funds it manages, as well as a change in its approach to allocating assets with risk now the leading determinant.

From an investment point of view, it also had to weather the euro bashing throughout the year, although as managing director, Eric Breval points out Switzerland is “an island in a stormy sea”.

Nevertheless the currency movements in that part of the world couldn’t be ignored last year, no matter how isolated the government and monetary structure.

Managing director, Eric Breval, says the Social Security Fund will probably report a return on invested assets of 4.9 per cent for the year.

mrec4

The fund has set a principle of an 80 per cent hedge against all the major currencies.

“We got a whack over the head on all sides,” he says, but most Swiss institutional investors were hedged against the US$ but less so against the euro, so the Social Security Fund’s performance was relatively good.

inarticleinline
Sponsored Content
scnative1
scnative2
scnative3

“We hedge against all major currencies, including the euro as a principle, not as a tactical currency play. That principle hasn’t changed.”

Essentially a buffer fund, the Swiss Federal Social Security Fund manages the funds of the federal old age and survivors’ insurance (AHV), the federal disability insurance (IV), and the income compensation scheme (EO).

On September 27, 2009 the Swiss people voted on the supplementary financing of the disability fund. The vote was two-fold: to increase the value added tax (one of the income contributors to the fund) from 7.6 to 8 per cent, and to form a separate fund for disability insurance.

The AHV, which has been the chief lender to the IV (which still owes it $15 billion) gave the disability fund a one-off launch capital a gift of about $5 billion.

In addition to this one-off funding, the disability fund gets the additional 0.4 per cent VAT as part of its inflow over the next seven years.

This means the three funds will be separated for the first time, and while still managed by the same team, they will be steered according to their individual risk and liability profiles.

The funds each have different sources of income, and the reasons for paying benefits are all, also, variable. And this variability, as well as legal constraints on its investment style, dictates that all three fund typically invest in more liquid and conservative investments than some other institutional investors.

“The buffer fund has a shorter time horizon than most pension funds, and typically invests in less risky and more liquid investments,” Breval says.

Because the income is not always sufficient to cover the benefits and the federal disability insurance and income compensation scheme deficits, and to avoid the costs of frequent investment changes, an operating liquidity of around CHF 2-4 billion is maintained.

About half of the assets are managed in-house including bond and commodity portfolios, as well as tactical derivative overlay programs, including about half the currency overlays.

The internal staff has relative freedom when it comes to making investment decisions, and moving allocations around its strategic benchmark.

Coinciding with the splitting of the three funds, is a new approach to asset allocating, with a focus on risk, so that now each fund can potentially have a different risk budget, that varies according to its liability status.

“When we moved to this new approach on January 1, we didn’t make many transactions. The allocations didn’t change much but so far but our mindset has changed,” Breval says.

Staff management has a strategic asset allocation with set boundaries for the asset management. Given that risk exposure varies according to market volatility, these boundaries are used to increase or decrease exposure to risky assets. The overall allocations (all three funds combined) are approximately: Swiss franc loans 10 per cent; Swiss franc bonds 20 per cent; foreign currency bonds 40 per cent; equities 20 per cent; real estate 5 per cent; commodities 3 per cent; and cash and other tactical investments the remainder (this can be as much as 20 per cent).

“The asset allocation is constantly changing,” says Breval, a Swiss-American who has worked for the fund for seven years. “The risk budget is a ‘variable variable’ in a way.”

While the internal management has discretion to make fairly substantial allocation changes at will, Breval is quick to point out these are not tactical, but decisions made based on risk.

“These are risk-driven decisions, or volatility-based decisions. They are not tactical by looking at asset class outlooks, even though we have opinions, they are not opinion-driven decisions.”

The AHV, for example, tends to have a higher risk budget, while the disability fund, which has $15 billion debt, has a more conservative allocation.

Overall the Federal Social Security Fund has 30 staff, about half of which are investment staff, which are now managing these three different funds on a risk budget basis.

The fund has separate teams for investment policy and active management, portfolio construction, internal and external mandates, as well as forex and cash management.

“Return is not the single key factor for us, the number one priority is paying the pensions, and maintaining a level of risk commensurate with the desired level of volatility for each social insurance,” Breval says.

Eric Breval, risk asset allocation, Swiss Federal Social Security Fund

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Login
More from this fund
Investor Profile

Sampension: Why there are many reasons to be optimistic

Sarah Rundell

June 25, 2026

Investor Profile

France’s Banque des Territoires looks for data centre opportunities

Sarah Rundell

June 25, 2026

Partnered Content

How private credit investors are preparing for software’s AI reckoning

Brendan Swift

June 24, 2026

Investor Profile

Why NYC pensions CIO hasn’t drunk the ‘TPA Kool-Aid’

Darcy Song

June 23, 2026

Investor Profile

Sampension: Why there are many reasons to be optimistic
Investor Profile

Sampension: Why there are many reasons to be optimistic

Now is not the time to reduce risk, argues Henrik Olejasz Larsen, chief investment officer of Sampension, Denmark’s $50 billion pension fund for public and private sector employees. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, he says corporate profits have not deteriorated, and although the market has been tested from multiple directions, the underlying optimism driving equities is strong enough to overrule the negative impact of geopolitical risk.

Sarah Rundell

June 25, 2026

Investor Profile

France’s Banque des Territoires looks for data centre opportunities

Sarah Rundell

June 25, 2026

Investor Profile

Why NYC pensions CIO hasn’t drunk the ‘TPA Kool-Aid’

Darcy Song

June 23, 2026

Investor Profile

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

Amanda White

May 28, 2026

Investor Profile

URS bets on nuclear to power AI and lower emissions

Sarah Rundell

May 26, 2026

Sort content by

Investor Profile

Innovation brings results at Austria’s APK

Austria is a country with a strong tradition of innovation. That can be sensed through its nineteenth century industrial emergence to Gustav Klimt’s secessionist art movement in turn-of-the-twentieth-century Vienna and the Austrian school of economics that later spawned monetarist pioneer, Friedrich Hayek. The APK pension fund is these days adding to the list of those

Dan Billingham

November 30, 2012

Investor Profile

Calming the waters of uncertainty at UK seafarers’ fund

The UK’s £3.3-billion ($5.6-billion) Merchant Navy Officers’ Pension Fund (MNOPF) is poised to offload the final portion of its defined-benefit liabilities in the old section of the scheme. The fund, which has provided pensions to the shipping industry since 1937, comprises a $3.2-billion new section and a $2-billion old section, closed since 1978 and with

Sarah Rundell

November 23, 2012

Investor Profile

Controlling strategy inhouse at UK coal scheme

Until a few years ago, every aspect of the investment strategy at the UK’s £20-billion ($32-billion) coal industry pension scheme was outsourced. The main inhouse task at the pension fund was benefit payment but now, in a fresh approach spearheaded by straight-talking 38-year old New Zealander, Stefan Dunatov, the new chief investment officer of the

Sarah Rundell

November 21, 2012

Investor Profile

Swiss powerhouse: the Sulzer pension fund

Sulzer is a Swiss manufacturer with a proud past. From pioneering the diesel engine to making the specialist pumps that drive power production around the world, it has been around for 178 years. Perhaps leveraging off such a rich history, the company’s pension scheme is very much looking into the future thanks to solid returns

Dan Billingham

November 16, 2012

Governance

Railpen, the open DB fund with locomotion

Despite the constant pull on Railpen chief executive Chris Hitchen’s expertise in other directions, most recently helping to run NEST, the UK government’s new low-cost pension scheme, he is resolute that his primary task is ensuring Railpen, inhouse manager of the £19-billion ($30.4 billion) pension scheme for Britain’s rail industry, successfully delivers on its monthly

Sarah Rundell

November 07, 2012

Investor Profile

USS powers into diversity

In the past few years the £34-billion ($54.7 billion) Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) has substantially diversified its asset allocation, including a large alternatives allocation, and extended its investment team from 65 to 105. In the latest chapter of the fund’s investment department reincarnation, from October this year a separate but fully owned USS company, USS

Amanda White

October 31, 2012

Previous
1 … 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 … 159
Next
Load more
Asset Owner Directory

California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS)

AUM ($B): $563
Country: United States
View Articles

PGGM / PFZW

AUM ($B): $298
Country: Netherlands
View Articles

Future Fund

AUM ($B): $163
Country: Australia
View Articles
See more
scnative1
scnative2
scnative3
mrec1
mrec2
mrec3
mrec4
halfpage

Fiduciary Investors Podcast Series

Listen to Podcast

Subscribe now to

Become a member and subscribe

Join Now
Our partners

Top1000funds.com is the market leading news and analysis site for the world’s largest institutional investors. It focuses on leading the global investment industry to continuous improvement through case studies of best practice in governance and decision making, portfolio construction and efficient portfolio management, fees and costs, and sustainable investing.

The publication pushes the industry to question whether status quo processes and behaviours to tackle risks and opportunities will be sufficient in the future, and actively campaigns for diversity, sustainability, transparency, innovation and better alignment of fees in the investment industry.

Top1000funds.com is read by investment professionals in more than 40 countries.

  • Asset Allocation
  • Asset Classes
  • CIO Sentiment Survey
  • Organisational Design
  • Strategy
  • Sustainability
  • Investor Profile
  • About
  • AI Editorial Policy
  • Events
  • Our Authors
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Cookie Policy | AI Editorial Policy

Login with account details

Or

Send me a login link

Forgot password?Click here

No membership?Register here