Two-portfolio balancing act

Swiss asset manager Compenswiss was established in 1948 to manage the assets of three Swiss Federal Social Security Funds: Old Age and Survivors’ Insurance (AHV), Disability Insurance (IV) and the Income Compensation Scheme (EO). Almost 60 years on, Compenswiss is continuing the development of a sophisticated strategy, investing assets of CHF34.8 billion ($34.8 billion) in a way that provides returns but is also low risk and has a high level of liquidity.

“By law, we must be fairly liquid and ensure our treasury has enough cash to deploy during the year. Building up a portfolio within these confines that delivers both returns and liquidity is a fine balance. We sometimes liken it to squaring a circle,” says Frank Juliano, head of asset management, speaking from Compenswiss’s Geneva headquarters. After deductions for hedging, the fund posted a return of 3.93 per cent in 2016, in spite of nearly a quarter of the return-seeking portfolio lying in negative-yielding bond investments.

The three schemes are managed on a pooled basis to keep costs low. Yet each scheme’s different asset and liability projections are met via an innovative structure that moves assets between a market (or return-seeking) portfolio, and a basis portfolio in cash and money markets.

Two portfolios are better than one

“The scheme’s assets are invested in a combination of the market and basis portfolios, according to their own risk/return profiles. We realised that the different schemes were facing different futures and that each had a different risk tolerance and cash needs.”

The vast majority (93 per cent) of the funds’ assets are in the market portfolio, half of which Juliano’s internal team manages. The interplay between the return-seeking and basis portfolios becomes particularly important during spikes in market volatility. The asset liability management (ALM) unit has developed a volatility tracking process, which means that a sharp market move triggers a decrease in risk according to the needs of each portfolio.

Sponsored Content

“When markets are volatile, we sell part of the market portfolio and invest in cash, bringing the risk portfolio back into a defined band.” The last time the volatility tracking was triggered was the summer of 2015.

Assets in the market portfolio are split between a 21 per cent allocation to Swiss bonds and loans, a 44 per cent allocation to foreign bonds – including high yield, credit and senior loans – a 24 per cent equity allocation, an 8 per cent real-estate allocation, and a 1 per cent allocation to commodities. The remainder of the market portfolio is in cash.

The allocations within the market portfolio have changed over time in a dynamic process that Juliano says is essential because of the confines of the local investment universe.

“Switzerland is a small country, with a strong currency and negative interest rates. We have to diversify the portfolio to find returns.”

Last year, the fund added an allocation to European high-yield and local currency emerging-market debt; it already had an allocation to hard currency emerging market debt.

Real estate grows in importance

Other recent allocations include foreign real estate, accessed via core real-estate funds in Europe and Asia. In the real-estate allocation, Juliano is also contemplating investments into value-add and opportunistic, and diversifying the portfolio across geographies and time spans. Such flexibility means real estate has become an important portfolio for delivering Compenswiss’s need for both returns and liquidity.

“We can invest only a limited portion into less liquid assets and, at this stage, can’t do the long time horizons of private equity and infrastructure. Increasingly, real estate has become a priority.”

Most allocations at the fund were managed externally until 2009. Today, half the portfolio is managed externally and half by Juliano’s internal team, in a decision-making process shaped by the extent to which internal management of an allocation can reduce costs, the ability to hire the right staff, and the operational risk of Compenswiss running the allocation itself.

“The availability of skills is an important consideration around internal and external management,” Juliano explains. “In Geneva, we have some good equity managers, but it is hard to find credit and high-yield managers. Also, the further you are from the market, the more difficult internal management is. For example, we have very limited access to the primary US credit market here.”

Currency risk becomes priority

As the fund diversified its asset base and invested outside Switzerland, managing currency risk at a portfolio level became another priority. Compenswiss’s Treasury Department runs a currency overlay program that covers roughly three-quarters of the fund’s currency exposure, through a dynamic and systematic process. It is not a full hedging program because of cost constraints, Juliano explains.

“We still keep some risk because hedging is costly. The Swiss base rate is -0.75 per cent. To hedge any currency involves paying the interest rate differential, so there is that trade-off between the currency risk and the cost of hedging.” In a recent example of the strategy at work, the investment committee took the view that hedging the fund’s Euro/Swiss currency risk ahead of the United Kingdom’s vote to leave the European Union last June was worth it.

“We increased our hedging ratio on the euro/Swiss exchange rate. Our fear was that should Brexit happen, the euro would fall and the Swiss franc would become a safe haven currency,” Juliano says.

Eleven elected members sit on the Compenswiss board, mostly drawn from representatives of the funds’ employers and employees. The investment committee prepares scenarios and proposals, which the board then scrutinises before approval.

“The board approves the risk budget, the asset allocation, the fluctuation bands of each asset class and the managers, and we then manage and execute investments according to their guidelines. It is a very transparent process and the universe is well defined,” Juliano says.

 

Leave a Comment

PGGM: Impact begins at home

PGGM: Impact begins at home

PGGM is preparing to build out the third element to its impact strategy targeting biodiversity. By focusing on food and the circular economy, PGGM aims to create most impact at home. Top1000funds.com looks at the fund's impact journey.

Sort content by

India’s NIIF gathers steam

India’s new sovereign development fund has raised a further £1.3 billion, on top of the government's $3 billion, to finance domestic infrastructure and growth. Key to its success is the unique investor-owned structure, similar to Australia's IFM Investors, and generous co-investment terms.

Future Fund sticks with hedge funds

Australia’s A$168 billion Future Fund is looking to add more money to its A$22.6 billion hedge fund program where it can find managers with spare capacity, to help protect the portfolio against a sell-off in the equity market.

Brunel’s plan for a new financial system

The UK’s £30 billion Brunel Pension Partnership is taking investing in a carbon zero future to a whole new level. It has just published a far-reaching Climate Change Policy filled with actions and deadlines linked to the goals of the Paris Agreement.

External equity: A worry at Wellcome

The £26.8 billion Wellcome Trust continues to reduce its allocation to external equities managers as the investment committee focuses on currency exposures, ESG and hedge funds,the impact of low interest rates and the position of the credit cycle in 2020.

CalPERS board’s divestment dilemmas

The merits of tracking divested dollars, and the value of data illustrating what the pension fund has missed out on was the topic of much debate at the December CalPERS board meeting. In 2021 the fund will review six divestment programs across tobacco, firearms, coal, Iran, Sudan and emerging market equity principles.

Insurance giants push for more impact

The experience of the collaboration between six large US insurers to successfully invest in affordable multi-family rental housing is a lesson for any institutional investor looking to impact investing.

Previous