TIFF shapes new strategy for returns

Jay Willoughby, the new chief investment officer at The Investment Fund for Foundations (TIFF), has set himself the challenge of doubling assets under management at the $10 billion fund that invests on behalf of 750 not-for-profit endowments and foundations from across America.

Willoughby’s arrival at the helm coincides with TIFF celebrating its 25th anniversary, a milestone that he also wants to celebrate with a new era of boosted returns.

“TIFF literally has one of the coolest missions of any asset management firm. Our members are all trying to make the world a better place; by partnering with them and making returns for them, we are also trying to make the world a better place,” he says.

Willoughby joined TIFF, after nearly five years as chief investment officer at Alaska Permanent Fund, at the same time that the institution introduced a new constructed index.

This increased the equity allocation, reflecting the fund’s conviction that it needs to hold sufficient equity to propel returns, but also created a more balanced exposure with the remaining allocation, underscoring its belief that risk needs to be tempered with a range of diversifying strategies.

“We target 65 per cent in equity, 20 per cent in diversifying asset classes and 15 per cent to fixed income. The old target was 13 per cent in cash, 20 per cent in TIPS, break-evens and other things that weren’t really performing. We’re also winnowing down the exposure to commodities and REITs to zero,” says Willoughby.

Sponsored Content

Strategies at the fund include plans to increase the allocation to US energy infrastructure via master limited partnerships.

Willoughby believes this fee-collecting infrastructure for the oil and gas industry is currently undervalued due to the low oil price.

He is also looking at opportunities in China targeting China’s new and fast-growing consumer-facing businesses.

“I’m not interested in China’s old companies or the old economy,” he says, in reference to investments in China’s industrial base like steel and mining.

“I’m focused on the future, looking at companies poised to benefit from China’s consumer base and technological penetration in the country.”

Both these strategies will fit in the fund’s long-only equity allocation and will involve the hiring of new managers.

TIFF only manages its fixed income allocation in house.

Here the strategy is to ensure enough liquidity for the annual 5 per cent pay-out to members.

“The aim of the fixed income allocation is to keep the purchasing power of our clients,” he says.

Another new investment theme at the fund is seeking opportunities in biotech, and Willoughby says TIFF is also in the process of putting together a structure to better tap opportunities by shorting stocks alongside having long-only exposure.

“We want alpha on the long side and to hedge on the short side,” he says. “Right now my goal is to partner with the best managers in the equity and hedge fund space.”

TIFF is also keen to develop alternative income streams in the hedge fund portfolio.

“We have no global macro, no statistical arbitrage and no algorithmic trading either. In fact, we have very little in these new, and strategic, more statistical and less fundamental strategies and my aim is to add more diversified income streams.”

Hiring managers

TIFF currently uses around 15 managers in the long-only space and 10 managers in its diversifying portfolio.

Willoughby says he is in the process of hiring five to six new managers at the fund to fill new allocations.

It won’t amount to an increase in the overall manager head count because of the vacancies created by axing allocations to commodities and real estate investment trusts.

“Very little is actively managed in-house. Our preference is to be with the best managers rather than do it in-house, although, of course, there is nothing to say we couldn’t manage more in-house.”

The current strategy also plays to TIFF’s strengths in manager selection, which Willoughby says is fortified by the institution’s high profile and experienced board.

TIFF charges the charitable foundations whose money it invests a 20 basis-point management fee and runs a “tough but fair” negotiating process with fund managers.

The fund targets returns of 5 per cent return for its clients, but as his tenure gets under way Willoughby is aiming for much more.

“If I can add between 100 and 400 basis points per annum to that benchmark over three, four, five years we are talking about a superior return. My aim is to put in place the managers that can outperform the benchmark and achieve our clients’ goals.”

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

PKA seeks to satisfy its infrastructure hunger

The DKK200-billion ($35-billion) Danish medical professionals pension fund grouping, PKA, wants its government to help satisfy its appetite for investing in major infrastructure projects. Frank Jensen, an analyst on its asset strategy team, says PKA “is eager to get started” on sealing public-private partnerships with the Danish government, but its plans “have not come as

Norway opens a window on its global investment strategy

On March 8 when Yngve Slyngstad announced the annual results of Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, he did more than unveil a routine set of numbers. The chief executive of The Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), which manages the Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG), was also revealing the first results following what he called a “substantial” change

Outward bound from the Finnish

Finnish pension investor Ilmarinen is exploring whether to send a representative to South America as it intensifies its emerging market operations. Timo Ritakallio, who heads investment at the €29-billion ($39-billion) fund, says it is looking to access “more and more emerging market opportunities”. In January Ilmarinen sent a senior portfolio manager to run a “one-man

Super, apart from the REST

Jo Townsend, the chief investment officer at REST Industry Super, says the fund is not only investing according to a long-term horizon, but is also willing to depart from the pack when making investment decisions. “Our fundamental investment belief is that it is possible to add value through active investment management, and we do that

Danica maneuvers towards infrastructure

Danish pension provider Danica is upping the alternatives portion in its roughly $57-billion portfolio as it looks to boost returns within the country’s strict solvency framework. Alternatives already make up over 4 per cent of the $33-billion Traditional Fund, Danica’s largest and most conventional pension pool, double the proportion the asset class took at the

Billion-dollar beef-up at Barclays’ OPAM

If Tony Broccardo, head of Oak Pensions Asset Management, the investment arm of the £23-billion ($35.6-billion) pension fund for employees of London-headquartered bank, Barclays, wasn’t a fund manager he would have been an architect. But Broccardo has applied similar skills of stress testing, planning and making something structurally secure to the return-seeking fund, one of

Previous