UPS: Risk assets and virtual happy hours

New York, United States- November 24, 2015: UPS delivery van parked at the street. USA New York

The $50 billion pension fund for employees of United Parcel Service is poised to increase its allocation to risk assets. The fund doesn’t time the markets and Ernie Caballero, CIO for the last two years and with the postal group for 28 years, says any shift into risk assets in the wake of recent extreme market volatility will be prudent. But judging the bottom of the market is now his keen focus.

“We should prudently increase risk seeking asset exposure given the recent sell-off in the markets. You can’t time the market, but the environment is ripe for considering this approach.”

The pension fund’s assets are divided across three portfolios comprising a closed management plan which accounts for around $25 billion, with the remainder equally split between two union plans, still in growth mode. Assets in the larger management plan are split between a 48 per cent allocation to risk assets and a 52 per cent allocation to fixed income in a strategy carefully balanced to try and earn a return but protect the 90 per cent funded status.

As for where the fund will invest, Caballero says everything is on the table because all markets are down. He also says UPS has dry powder at the ready, thanks in part to high valuations throughout 2019 which left the fund more focused on reducing leverage in the portfolio than “jumping on assets.” The fund’s managers have discretion on the leverage they can use within set boundaries, and the investment team spent much of last year working with managers to keep leverage at the low end because of high valuations, he says.

Rebalancing within bands

The move into risk assets will also reflect UPS re-adjusting its strategic asset allocation back within its bands for each asset class in the wake of the market sell off. Market falls have left the fund’s equity and fixed income allocations at the lower end of their bands, which Caballero wants back to mid-range.

Sponsored Content

“We are not panicking, the portfolio is built around a strategic asset allocation that achieves expected long-term returns. With that said, I do believe it’s time to optimise and increase our allocations to risk-seeking assets. One could argue that recent market conditions have made the equity risk premium more in your favour to generate a long-term excess return over the risk-free rate. Over the next few weeks, we are planning to implement this approach.”

Equity hedges

The pension fund’s general preparedness for a downturn has helped it withstand the worst of the virus impact. Strategies that have helped protect the fund include equity hedges, he explains.

“We also benefitted from equity hedges we put on when markets were much higher. Although the premium paid for these hedges were a drag on returns, they were relatively inexpensive insurance policies that were monetised as the markets sold-off in Q1 2020.”

Elsewhere UPS bought US Treasury STRIPS in 2018 when rates were higher. As rates fell the investment helped with the hedge ratio and returns.

In a nod to the need to track liabilities, the management plan won’t invest anymore in private markets, taking all private market deals off the table as it matures and prioritises liquidity. We don’t want to lock up funds, he says. In contrast, the union plans will still invest in private assets.

The challenging times have revealed the strength of UPS’s 50 to 60 manager relationships.

“We’ve had a tremendous dialogue with our managers in Q1,” he says. These strong relationships have been fostered by UPS’s increasing focus and bias towards separate accounts. They require “a lot more work” but give the pension fund “a say on what happens” and ultimately produce better returns, he says.

“A good part of our portfolios are customised; this is the direction we are going in. We are very particular about our investment exposures and the managers we choose to work with. We have a symbiotic relationship and we have aligned goals and objectives – this is the core foundation that facilitates a very close and active dialogue with our investment managers,” he says.

UPS selects managers according to the usual filters around due diligence and compliance and Caballero stresses managers are not necessarily dropped for a loss of performance. A first priority is to understand what went wrong; his overwhelming concern is that the fund’s managers stay true to their strategic rationale, and don’t stray from the mandate.

While the investment team continues to work remotely, Caballero schedules a minimum of two daily market and portfolio impact sessions with various members of the 26-strong team.

“We talk about what is going on in markets, how our portfolio is positioned both tactically and strategically, and the impacts we can expect to materialise under certain scenarios. The team is so connected that we have even made time for virtual happy hours a few times at the end of the week after the markets close,” he says.

Leave a Comment

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

A view that the US stock market is overvalued and equity risk premia will be lower over the long term has driven New Zealand Super to lower the return expectations for its reference portfolio following its recent five-yearly review of the benchmark. Co-chief investment officer Brad Dunstan also flags underweight commodity exposure as an area to address and explains why the fund remains sceptical of illiquidity premia despite seeing a growing case for private markets.

Sort content by

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

Dutch fund bolsters bonds, chills on bricks

Things are suddenly looking cheerful again in the world of Dutch pensions. The country’s famous tulip fields might not be set to bloom until April, but investors already have a harvest to delight at from a good year of investing. For instance, Hans de Ruiter, chief investment officer of the €2.5-billion ($3.36-billion) TNO pension fund

How is the Tesco fund faring aged one?

According to the latest figures, an ambitious turnaround plan at the United Kingdom’s biggest supermarket chain, Tesco, has helped reverse falling profits. Last year the retailer, one of Britain’s largest private sector employers and a landmark in every town since founder Jack Cohen opened his first store in North London in 1929, also changed strategy

Previous