The fund behind London’s tube shifts

Transport for London, the organisation behind the network of buses, underground or “tube” trains, trams and bicycles that keep the United Kingdom’s capital city on the move, has a reputation for its generous employee benefits. But of all the staff perks on offer, including 30 days holiday a year and subsidised travel expenses, membership of the gold-plated, defined benefit Transport for London Pension Fund (TfL), is the biggest. Investment strategy at the thriving £6.9-billion ($10.5-billion) scheme, grown from $7.6 billion in 2010, has recently shifted with the fund nurturing a growing $1.5-billion alternatives portfolio comprising hedge funds, infrastructure, real estate and private equity in its bid to diversify and improve the scheme’s risk-adjusted returns over the medium to long term.

Strategy shift

The shift in strategy comes despite equities being TfL’s best performing asset this year. United States small cap and global equity mandates have led the field, says Padmesh Shukla, investment officer at TfL (pictured right), based in London’s Borough of Westminster. “Listed real estate has also seen a strong performance, and bonds and emerging market currencies fared well, but for the recent market pullback,” he says. padmesh-120The fund runs a large foreign exchange overlay program to hedge currency risk in the equity portfolio and active management has also helped boost returns, with 60 per cent of the equity portfolio actively managed. Active investment mandates include global unconstrained, US small cap, Japan, emerging markets and Asia, lists Shukla. “These markets are generally under-researched and have of late seen dispersions widen, making active management more optimal.” Passive investments are in markets widely regarded as efficient such as Europe, North America and the UK.

The current portfolio is split between equities (55 per cent), bonds (25 per cent), all actively managed bar a “very small holding” for rebalancing purposes, and alternative investments (20 per cent). The expanding allocation to alternatives will increase to 25 per cent over the course of 2013, primarily funded from equities. Additional allocation will be made to unlisted real estate, one or two new hedge fund strategies, “possibly” renewable energy and private equity, says Shukla.

Private equity

It’s a private equity allocation that is supported by the scheme’s “negligible” liquidity requirements, he explains. “Private equity is a way for us to extract illiquidity premium and earn higher returns, but at the same time try to reduce the market-to-market volatility of public markets,” he says. “Our private equity allocation is driven by a strong fundamental understanding of less efficient segments in the market and less desire to time the markets.” Going forward, the scheme will likely increase its allocation via a separate account format, investing in primaries, secondary and co-investments, diversified “but not overly” by sectors, managers, vintages and regions. Unlike the scheme’s hedge fund program – where it makes direct investments – in private equity, fund of funds is TfL’s preferred approach to better access more specialist and small-to-mid-size managers outside the known big names.

The fund also lacks the resources to build its own private equity specialists. TfL has an internal team of seven covering investments, accounting, finance and compliance, although it is in the process of beefing up its investment and compliance capabilities. “We aren’t FSA-authorised; all investments are done through external managers,” says Shukla.

Hedge fund portions

TfL’s hedge fund allocation is portioned to commodities, structured and distressed credit, emerging market currencies, reinsurance and global macro trends.

Sponsored Content

“Hedge funds in the distress and event driven space have performed well, both in absolute and risk-adjusted terms,” says Shukla. Over the last year new allocations have gone to Arrowgrass Capital Partners, Och Ziff Capital Management and the world’s largest hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates and its Global Macro Systematic Hedge Fund. Over half of the 4 per cent infrastructure allocation is invested in mature PPP projects predominately in the UK and with limited construction risk in an allocation managed by Semperian PPP Investment Partners.

TfL does run an LDI program, but only plans to expand its strategy to hedge out inflation and interest rate risk if “real rates go up; we believe the current levels are very low.” Although investments are also made in liability-matching proxies such as infrastructure and real estate, the fund’s long maturity profile – it boasts 83,000 members comprising 23,000 contributing members, 18,000 deferred pensioners and 42,000 dependants – means it is still cash positive. “We expect to remain cash positive for a significant period of time – an important consideration in both hedging and investment decisions,” says Shukla. Nor is the scheme weighed down by a huge deficit, with a funding level of 91 per cent compared to 73 per cent at the last triennial valuation in March 2009. “The aim is for a 100-per-cent funding level by 2020 and staging-post targets between now and then,” says Shukla.

Asset Owner:TfL Pension

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

Alternative benchmarks attractive for Strathclyde

For many trustees, fundamental indexing is still too much of a leap to risk any serious asset allocation. But the £11 billion Glasgow-based Strathclyde Pension Fund, one of the largest UK local authority schemes, plans to invest in the strategy. The idea is to track an equity index that weights companies according to their economic

Modern portfolio theory drives Volkswagen Stiftung

The €2.3-billion ($3-billion) assets at the Volkswagen charitable foundation in Germany are powered by portfolio theory and diversification. The foundation is so keen on modern portfolio theory that its founder Harry Markowitz gets a mention in its annual report. Chief investment officer Dieter Lehmann says he is sure “that his correlation analysis isn’t correct at

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

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

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

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

Previous