USS gets strategic and explores global

Taking over from Peter Moon, chief investment officer of the £27 billion ($44 billion) Universities Superannuation Scheme, Roger Gray is the first new CIO at the fund in 17 years. He speaks with Amanda White about viewing the fund through fresh eyes and his ideas for staffing and investment developments.

In the British pension environment, the £27 billion ($44 billion) Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) is in a privileged position. It is one of very few pension schemes that is still open, contributions positive and a relatively immature plan.

From an investment point of view, and for the fund’s new CIO, Roger Gray, this allows its investment allocations to be more aggressive relative to its more liability-driven peers, and the opportunity for more exciting investments to be explored, including alternatives.

The fund has a broad strategy to move to 20 per cent alternatives, and Gray started the job in September with plans to work “with USS’ investment team and with the trustees to generate the required long-term returns from a broad and judicious mix of asset classes and strategies”.

Only about six weeks into the job, Gray is new enough so that some of his ideas haven’t been taken to the investment committee yet. However he has already identified areas of focus for both investment opportunities and expanding the inhouse team.

Sponsored Content

The London investment office of USS employs 68 people including some settlement staff and administration, and Gray credits his predecessor Peter Moon with creating an environment which is collegial, friendly with no politics.

“There are a lot of good things environmentally,” he said.

The fund manages the majority of its investments inhouse, with the exception of about 10 per cent in alternatives and about 10 per cent in external equities.

Gray says the largest pools of talent are with the public equity desks, property, and alternatives, with a small fixed income and some cash management.

“Peter deserves a lot of credit for many things, I have come to a place that has some good professionals in situ,” he says.

He believes the area most lacking internally is a strategy role, which would cover medium-term asset allocation and manage the rebalancing process.

“The area I think we have a gap and is important to fill is this strategy area,” he says. “There is no strategy unit for that, no ongoing continuous activity.”

In addition Gray will expand on an initiative underway to build risk and quantitative tools at the fund, and move more attention to performance analytics and improve the oversight function in that area.

Gray started with USS in September, having previously been chief investment officer at Hermes Investment Management, and before that working in a private sector career including UBS Brinson and Rothschild Asset Management.

One of the more philosophical issues front of mind for Gray is the regional rather than global equities allocation. The UK traditionally has invested on a regional basis, unlike other parts of the world which allocate globally, and the equity investments at the USS London investment office are divided into five regions, with teams specialising in the UK, American, European, Japanese and Asian ex-Japan markets.

Gray believes there may be some room to debate this regional versus global allocation.

“I’m globalist by heart but a regionalist or pragmatist by head. It seems difficult to pull together a true global fund,” he says. “Global equities on a quant basis is plausible. You have to think hard about how to pull it together but it is ripe for experimentation.”

While the UK traditionally has had a regional focus, it was a nuance of Moon’s not to make a distinction between developed and emerging market equities. So the internal team has to make a call, for example, within the Americas, to allocate between US and Brazil.

So Gray says global emerging markets is an area the fund may also look at.

“We haven’t got an emerging markets focus per se. Mandates are set up as all-country, regional mandates, it’s an area to look down.”

 

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

BpfBOUW: The importance of hedge funds

Hedge funds are getting a bad press again, but for Dutch fund BpfBOUW the latest skirmish simply underscores their importance in a portfolio as Erik Hulshof, trustee and chair of the investment committee explains.

CalSTRS takes on ExxonMobil

The $255 billion Californian pension fund, CalSTRS, has embarked on a new era of “activist stewardship” which will see it take on large companies such as Exxon Mobil which have not responded to shareholder engagement.

Behind OTPP’s net zero 2050 plan

Ontario Teachers' has launched its plan to reach net-zero portfolio emissions by 2050, the culmination of a decade of work by the fund in addressing climate change. Amanda White looks at the fund’s climate journey, which has significant lessons for other funds looking to move to net zero.

CalPERS: Lessons from CIO departure

The CalPERS board is considering whether to require a new CIO to transfer all of their personal stock holdings into a blind trust while they are a CalPERS' employee. The move follows the resignation of Ben Meng as CIO last year after an ethics investigation related to some of his personal investments.

Previ invests abroad as pandemic bites

Brazil's largest pension fund has been planning to invest more overseas for a while. Now economic travails in its home market due to the pandemic have stepped up the pressure to diversify.

Alecta sees real estate opportunities

Alecta’s head of real assets Axel Brändström took the helm a year ago. Charged with building out the real estate allocation in one of the most tumultuous years for the asset class on record, his eye is on e-commerce opportunities and allocations to assets not linked to GDP.

Previous