USS takes advantage of dislocations

The largest single pension scheme in the United Kingdom, USS, took advantage of the dislocation due to COVID in 2020 and has bought credit assets and increased inflation and interest rate hedging.

Last year was difficult for many investors, but Simon Pilcher CIO of USS was dealing with the complexities of starting in a new position, alongside the complexities of the market volatility.

“It was a very very challenging time for us as I’m sure it was for everyone else,” Pilcher says. The fund has a modestly levered portfolio so when the crisis hit it was important to be able to maintain its positions in the market rather than being forced into any margin calls, and the team worked “exceptionally well” to maintain those positions and take advantage of some of the opportunities, he says.

In particular the fund acquired some “cheap inflation hedging” at time when the government bond markets were behaving under clear stress.

“We also took advantage of significant widening in credit spreads and bought fixed income and credit assets that give us a combination of hedging and returns,” he says.

Throughout the year the fund continued to increase its allocation to credit and gradually increased some of its inflation and interest rate hedging.

Sponsored Content

“There was a huge trans-Atlantic dislocation that happened. We saw massive outperformance of the US treasury market relative to the UK, we had substantial holdings of US treasuries and US TIPS and were able to make some good trades out of the US and into the UK for the benefit of the scheme at various times during the year,” he says. “Lately we been looking at our currency exposure and whether there are better ways to organise that. So for example in an environment where equity markets tumble which currencies would give us hedging at a total portfolio level. We sold some dollars and are increasing euro and yen.”

 

About 22 per cent of the fund is in private assets where it has been investing for about 12 years. The program started by focusing on funds and making use of the skills and expertise of specialist private equity firms. As the focus changed to include reducing the average cost of investments, co-investment became more prominent. More recently USS has taken large direct stakes in investments, sourcing deals itself and directly managing and sitting on the boards.

“We have taken an ever greater focus on private debt and long income plays,” Pilcher says. “Especially in the last 12 months, where we have been trying to find assets with a combination of cashflow characteristics which link back to our liabilities, inflation linked in nature but at a return premium that significantly exceeds what we could do in the bond and public markets. We have seen a lot of opportunities [last] year.”

The fund made a three year-plan that outlined what investments it could make in different segments. By the end of 2020 it was well ahead of that three year plan with about 40 per cent of that plan completed.

“There is a significant wealth of opportunities coming our way. Some of those we were looking at pre-COVID, some are coming about post-COVID and in some cases it’s because there are less people competing for them.”

As an example he points to a recent £400 million investment taking out a 49 per cent stake in a UK fuel station portfolio owned by BP which is a sale and lease back transaction with cashflows linked to CPI.

“This is giving us a material uplift on the returns we could have got from investing in the debt of the company or other alternative assets,” Pilcher says.

During the crisis it looked carefully at its private market investments.

“We have an obligation to support the companies we have backed. And it was an intense time of attending meetings and advising management and giving them advice around things like liquidity. In a couple of cases we actually provided liquidity to our investments – we were very active in that regard.”

Pilcher says real estate is one of the areas that continues to have some challenges, but he also points out that in the current environment there is not such a thing as one real estate market, with performance of the asset class divergent over the last several years.

“Pre COVID there was significant pressure on retailing assets with smart warehousing doing very well, a lot of that has continued,” he says. “We invest holistically rather than simply saying here’s a real estate allocation, we look at an asset more broadly.”

In the example of the BP investment it was an attractive asset at the scheme level, he says, not as a real estate play per se.

“What we have bought is largely a secured set of cashflows. The vast majority of the value is in the contractual cashflows. This helps us from a liability perspective, and will probably do good in helping the corporate redirect their assets into the overall greening of their investments too.”

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

NOW: Pensions crosses borders

In the city of Hillerød outside Copenhagen in Denmark, a small group of Danes want to teach the United Kingdom’s pensions industry a thing or two. Where UK trustees tend to see fund choice as a blessing, Denmark’s DKK579-billion ($101.6-billion) public pension plan ATP has always viewed picking and choosing between different managers as more

Autumnal Danish fund shows spring growth

Innovation is associated more with bold new businesses than gently declining ones, but Denmark’s Lønmodtagernes Dyrtidsfond (LD) is embracing change as it enters its final years. The pension fund’s inevitable disappearance has nothing to do with any lack of competitiveness or poor investment returns – the 9.9-per-cent net return it generated in 2012 is testament

KLM funds ride out de-risking turbulence

Pension funds can face a lot of turbulence in the course of their investing journey and many funds thrown into shortfalls have found the need to de-risk their portfolios. There might be a few investment officers at those funds casting an enviable eye upwards to the pension fund of Dutch flag-carrying airline KLM. Toine van

Mid-life crisis at West Midlands Pension Fund

The area surrounding the British city of Wolverhampton, near Birmingham, is still called the Black Country although the polluting coal mines and steel mills that sprung up during England’s nineteenth-century explosion of wealth have long gone. Today there is little evidence that Wolverhampton was the cradle of an industrial revolution and the 300-odd public sector

Inhouse target: zero to
$40 billion in 4 years

If everything continues on schedule, the $60-billion AustralianSuper will begin testing its new internal investment-management systems this month, with a view to managing its first money in house in the third quarter of 2013. Within four years the fund expects to manage as much as $40 billion in house, funded primarily from cash flow, and

Belgium’s KBC fund
thrives on LDI

Edwin Meysmans, chief executive of the KBC Pension Fund, sounds extremely relaxed for a man who rises early to avoid Brussels’ clogged roads on the way to the office. Then again, that Meysmans shies away from the madness of commuting crowds should perhaps be no real surprise given that his fund focuses on avoiding being

Previous