UTIMCO gets ready for 2024

University of Texas Investment Management Co (UTIMCO), the $69.2 billion asset manager and one of the largest public endowments in the US, is hoping for a soft economic landing but planning for a recession. That means honing a playbook that ensures the investor has ongoing liquidity to make distributions; is not over its skis in terms of capital calls and commitments and has the firepower on hand to invest in opportunities.

In a worse-case scenario, given UTIMCO’s correlation to equity, if the stock market declines 20-50 per cent that could equate to an $11-24 billion decline in the value of assets under management. “It’s a lot of money,” said Richard Hall (pictured), president, CEO and CIO in a recent board meeting at the fund’s Austin headquarters.

Against the backdrop of contrasting analysis from UTIMCO’s trusted advisors – JPMorgan and PIMCO, for example, predict a soft landing but analysis from BlackRock and Bridgewater Associates is skewed to a hard landing – the investor is maintaining a neutral position but modelling how much the S&P could potentially decline should corporate earnings take a pounding.

“We will get through it, even if bad things happen next year,” he said.

Rebalancing in action

In an example of UTIMCO’s determination to invest in opportunities (and classic rebalancing strategy) Hall detailed how the fund pocketed a $2.3 billion gain out of the sharp fall in equity markets at the end of 2022.

UTIMCO steadily bought around $2 billion of stocks, continuing to buy even though the market’s continued fall exposed losses on earlier purchases. At the bottom, that collective purchase program had lost a negative P&L of about $200 million, he said.

Sponsored Content

The subsequent rally provided a $450 million total uplift on that basket of purchases which the team have gradually unwound overtime to maintain its neutral position.

“We sit today with a $238 million gain from having done that,” he said, underscoring the importance of staying neutral when clear market signals are absent and demonstrative of classic rebalancing and buying assets as they get cheaper in the belief that markets recover.

Under the hood of UTIMCO’s rolling asset allocation the team have introduced modest changes. For example, UTIMCO has bought down bonds by 3 per cent and is slowly adding real estate and infrastructure. “That stability doesn’t mean not doing anything. We rebalance month to month, selling expensive assets,” he reiterated.

In another corner of the portfolio, Hall has an eye on the interplay between cash and bonds. If rates stay higher for longer the fund will continue to hold cash. But if recession comes into view and the Federal Reserve begins to lower rates, the environment will become better for bonds and worse for cash and UTIMCO will position to benefit from the price appreciation in bonds.

Hall said that the recent performance in the equity market could hold clues as to what lies ahead. Struggling fundamentals in many smaller companies could be “the canary in the coalmine,” flashing trouble ahead.

Still, the team shared that the recent outperformance in the equity market (driven in the main by 10 stocks) underscores the importance of fundamentals; reaffirming that corporate sales, growth and margins bring the best returns – and that investors in a cap weighted index will do well as long as large companies pull returns higher. “What the market did was reward fundamentals,” said Hall. “Fundamentals matter and companies with better fundamentals appreciate more in value, most of the time.”

Looking into recent returns

Hall said that UTIMCO’s returns have been knocked by legacy portfolios in emerging markets and poor returns in natural resources, where although oil and gas did well, metals and mining worked against the portfolio. In contrast, public equity supported the portfolio once it reverted to solid trend.

“Long-term we try to run the portfolio at 100 basis points of alpha,” he said.

The bulk of UTIMCO’s assets are in an endowment funds portfolio which returned 6.7 per cent.

Public equities, one of UTIMCO’s biggest portfolios, experienced strong returns in developed markets and good returns in emerging markets. Private equity performed “slightly negatively” because although buyouts and private credit did well, venture and emerging markets allocations dragged.

In private markets, Hall predicts tougher times ahead for venture capital as companies seek to raise cash against the backdrop of lower valuations. In contrast, he said buyouts will remain stable.

Turning to hedge funds, he said managers are finding good spread opportunities between companies they are long and companies they are short. In real estate, UTIMCO is long-term bearish on office, more bullish on industrial and multi-family with a focus on US growth markets.

Still, as a contrarian investor, the team has begun to explore opportunities in office which might just be the right point in the cycle to go back in.

 

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

Japan’s Noritz fund talks asset manager gripes and why comparisons are bad

Japan's Noritz Pension Fund combines active management with a large allocation to cash. CIO Kyoshi Iwashina opines on his frustrations with the asset management community, his concerns about ESG and the dangers inherent in comparisons between corporate pension funds.

ATP returns hit again by large allocation to bonds

The $102 billion Danish pension fund, ATP, returned just 3 per cent in its return-seeking allocation in the first half of this year, buoyed by its foreign and Danish equity portfolios but pulled down by rising interest rates negatively impacting the large allocation to bonds.

KLP continues the fight to get Chinese mining companies to change

As growing geopolitical tension and government control has caused some investors to exit China, Norway's $78 billion pension fund KLP has stepped up engagement with Chinese mining companies at risk of breaching labour rights and responsible extraction.

Alecta doubles down on governance, risk management and culture

Sweden’s largest pension fund, the $126 billion Alecta, has spent much of the last year continuing to work on improving governance, risk management, competence and culture in the wake of a $2 billion loss in 2023 attributable to investments in US regional banks, including Silicon Valley Bank, turning sour.

How the tech surge has hit active management at Denmark’s AP Pension

The active equity strategy of Denmark’s €23 billion AP Pension – which focuses on a narrow exposure to a small set of high conviction, quality companies - has been hit by the surge in tech stocks, none more so than Nvidia. Investment director Pernille Jessen explains the problem.

USS swings into surplus but flags re-think after Thames losses

USS says losses in Thames Water have led to deep reflection on how it will invest in regulated assets in the future, flagging the need for consistent regulation to support pension fund investment. As the fund celebrates its 50th year it records a surplus for the first time since 2008.

Previous