Taiwan’s BLF still diversifying

Taiwan’s Bureau of Labor Funds (BLF), one of the largest public-sector funds in Asia, will increase its global multi-asset allocation through 2018 and boost alternatives and overseas equity. The NT$3.54 trillion ($120 billion) fund also plans to invest in an absolute return global equity allocation for the first time, to manage volatility and downside risk.

These latest strategies reflect the steady diversification BLF has pursued since it was established in 2014. That year, the bureau replaced the Labor Pension Fund Supervisory Committee as investment manager of the island state’s six labor funds, which include the Labor Pension Fund (the New Fund), the Labor Retirement Fund (the Old Fund) and the Labor Insurance Fund (LIF).

“With the ongoing growth of the labor funds, we will gradually increase overseas equity and alternative investment, not only by innovating with new mandates but also by placing additional amounts with existing ones, to diversify our mandate strategies and obtain long-term stable returns,” BLF director-general Feng-Ching Tsay says.

Developing the multi-asset strategy will be a core theme throughout 2018.

“We use ETFs [exchange-traded funds], funds and external managers to implement our multi-asset strategy, which seeks to maximise the total return and reduce volatility,” Tsay says.

Investment will focus on global equity and short-term government and corporate debt, he says, adding BLF has “no prescribed limits” but will emphasise dynamic and flexible allocations in response to markets and economic trends.

Sponsored Content

The alternatives allocation has grown from 3 per cent of AUM in 2014 to today’s 10 per cent; liquidity and transparency are priorities in the growing portfolio.

“We are allocating more assets to non-traditional territory, such as real estate, commodity, infrastructure, multi-asset funds, hedge funds and private market funds,” Tsay says. “According to our long-term strategy, the non-traditional target allocation is not less than 10 per cent of total assets.”

To date, allocations have included listed infrastructure and real estate investment trusts; BLF introduced a private equity allocation managed in-house within its alternatives portfolio in 2016, that year’s annual report states.

Assets at the fund are divided between bank deposits (19.85 per cent), domestic and foreign equities (39.37 per cent), domestic and foreign fixed income (30.68 per cent) and alternatives (10.1 per cent). Domestic investments make up 52 per cent of the portfolio, down from 60 per cent in 2014. BLF assets are divided between core and satellite investments. The core comprises global equities and bonds, satellites consist of regional investments and alternatives. In 2016, the BLF returned 3.58 per cent.

Diversification through outsourcing

Another aspect of the fund’s pursuit of diversification is the outsourcing of its allocations. The bureau is keen to build its manager roster for domestic and overseas investments.

The current search for an offshore equity absolute return manager will lead to the fund’s third new mandate in the last 12 months. At the end of 2016, BLF invested in an absolute return fixed-income strategy that was allocated to four managers, and portioned $2.4 billion in a combined ESG and multifactor strategy. Here, investments exclude certain companies and combine quality, value and minimum volatility strategies.

“Not only can we bring in private asset management’s professional skill and vast research resources, we can also reduce risks and enhance fund investment returns and benefits,” Tsay says.

The fund may also build on its smart-beta assets. These include allocations to fundamental indexation, minimum volatility, high dividend and quality, and to an index blending ESG and quality.

“Smart-beta investment earns better risk-adjusted return and diversifies investment risk in the long run,” Tsay says.

To encourage managers to win bids and assemble “the best investment and research teams”, BLF is open to increasing mandate amounts across all allocations and reviewing its terms of investment management.

“During regular evaluations, the bureau will review overall account performance and reward outperformers by renewing contracts or increasing mandate amounts, thus building long-term partnerships with excellent institutions and enhancing mandate performance,” Tsay says.

What stays in-house

The bureau also runs a dynamic internal team. All tactical adjustments are done in-house. The bureau uses an asset allocation simulation system to calculate risk limits for each fund in relation to day-to-day market risk monitoring. The in-house team also invests in hold-to-maturity bonds, mutual funds and ETFs; it is responsible for all foreign exchange management. In 2014, 43.5 per cent of the portfolio was with managers versus 56.5 per cent managed in-house. Today, in another reflection of the diversification trend, about 44 per cent of the biggest fund, the Labor Pension Fund, is managed internally and 55 per cent is invested with managers, the 2016 annual report states.

Since 2014, BLF has also prioritised ESG themes, Tsay says. The fund invests in ESG-themed mutual funds and ETFs and sets out its related priorities with managers; BLF also issued a social responsibility report in July 2016. To promote shareholder activism, the bureau signed the Stewardship Principles for Institutional Investors, initiated by the Taiwan Stock Exchange, and has urged all 12 of its domestic mandated institutions to follow suit.

 

Leave a Comment

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

As Finland's pension funds prepare to increase their equity allocations to unprecedented levels compared to global peers, they must also navigate a new and unfamiliar risk. Elo's chief investment officer Jonna Ryhänen explains the fund's investment approach going forward and how it will manage stakeholder and media scrutiny as they react to swinging volatility and returns.

Sort content by

The Pension Trust: many schemes, one trust

“We are slightly unusual,” admits David Adkins, chief investment officer of The Pensions Trust (TPT), the £5.5-billion ($8.7-billion) pension fund founded after the end of World War II to provide retirement benefits for social workers. Talking from the trust’s Moorgate headquarters in London, Adkins explains how its umbrella structure has grown to provide pensions for

BT scheme treads carefully in emerging markets

Sunil Krishnan, head of market strategy at $62-billion British Telecom Pension Scheme Management Limited (BTPS), the United Kingdom’s largest pension fund for employees of global telecoms operator BT Group, has sage advice for investors contemplating their exposure to emerging markets. Examining the pros and cons of the asset class, Krishnan counsels caution. Speaking at a

Steady defense turns the wheels at Vervoer

Patrick Groenendijk, chief investment officer of €14-billion ($18-billion) Dutch fund Pensioenfonds Vervoer, seems to be well aware of the value of stability to investors, having striven to find the fund’s ideal fiduciary manager, keep faith in a defensive investment strategy and stay at an arm’s length from government investment initiatives. The Vervoer fund has been

CalSTRS asset liability study recommends…

The investment staff of the $170-billion Californian Teachers Fund, CalSTRS, will present new asset allocation recommendations to the board next week, with a reduction in fixed income and the adoption of a new “absolute return” category the likely outcome. The fund is in the final stages of the long process of its 2012 asset liability

Long-term social investment, Milan style

Italy boasts relatively few institutional investors, but the Milan-based Fondazione Cariplo shows that new investing standards can still be set in the home of the renaissance. The €7-billion ($9.3-billion) foundation’s most coveted investment work is its pioneering Italian funds in social housing – an asset area that has been touted in larger markets as an

Full throttle, part time at BP fund

Sally Bridgeland, chief executive of BP Pension Trustees, the £18.5-billion ($28.7 billion) pension fund for employees of one the world’s biggest oil companies, only works part-time. She made the decision after a near-fatal skiing accident when she says her life passed before her. She is BP’s first group leader to do so and is evangelical

Previous