West Midlands welcomes pooling

The United Kingdom’s local government pension scheme, the £11.5 billion ($16.2 billion) West Midlands Pension Fund, runs a diversified portfolio of assets consisting of equities, fixed income and alternatives; nearly three quarters of the fund is managed by an in-house team with a clear, return-seeking strategy.

Current priority areas include boosting internal management as well as allocating more to infrastructure.

West Midlands is also focused on meeting the mid-year submission deadline around asset pooling with other local authority schemes, part of government policy to create half a dozen wealth funds in place of the current 89 local authority schemes.

“There’s a lot to do,” says Geik Drever, strategic director of the fund which she joined from West Lothian in 2012.

The fund dates from 1972 and provides pensions for some 450 public and private-sector employers in the region.

One strategy, still in its “early stages”, is to develop an in-house actively managed equities portfolio.

Sponsored Content

Drever, who describes the West Midlands as “a strong believer in the benefits of internal management,” says the decision is motivated by cost cutting and follows on from West Midlands withdrawing from various management relationships it believed didn’t offer the best value through the course of last year.

“We have generated savings of almost £25 million a year on investment management fees,” she says.

“We have looked at all our mandates and rationalised and renegotiated fee structures.

“We are grateful to our managers for rising to the challenge of helping us reduce costs.”

West Midlands has a 48 per cent allocation to equity which it will maintain until an actuarial evaluation later this year.

“Our equity exposure is diversified and not as huge as other local government schemes,” she says.

The global active portfolio has also been inspired by the success of the fund’s internally run UK and overseas passive equity portfolios.

Costing less than 2 basis points and therefore a fraction of what it would in outsourced mandates, the strategy is characterised by investment in five regional index funds that involves frequent monitoring and tracking errors to ensure the minimum deviation from target.

“The benefits of internal passive management include a fixed fee that doesn’t increase in an ad valorem manner and the ability to extract further value through being able to have stock available for stock lending,” says Drever, adding that West Midlands’ passive managers are currently exploring smart beta strategies too.

Along with its public equity allocations, West Midlands runs private equity and fixed income allocations in-house.

The fixed income allocation is split between stabilising assets and an allocation to return-seeking fixed income including high-yield and corporate bonds and unsecured loans.

Another area Drever is keen to build is infrastructure, underweight at 3 per cent versus a strategic 6 per cent allocation.

“We are mindful of the need for yielding assets that will closely match the liabilities of the fund, particularly if they have an inbuilt linkage to inflation,” she says.

“Finding opportunities is difficult and we are not alone in this as the desire for such assets is strong not just in the pension fund world but in the wider investor universe.”

One opportunity will come through West Midlands membership of the Pension Infrastructure Platform, PIP, a government initiative to encourage funds to invest more in infrastructure, which has secured more than £1 billion in commitments from pension schemes so far.

Drever has overseen a buoyant year at the fund which returned 15.1 per cent in 2015, outperforming its benchmark return of 11.6 per cent.

The main contributors were US equities and private equity, with the fund’s 12 per cent allocation to private equity returning 24.6 per cent over the year – the best-performing asset class.

“We have been a long-term investor in private equity and the higher weighting in this area combined with a number of good funds has paid dividends,” she says.

Now Drever’s priority is to ready the fund to join the £35 billion pool of eight other local authority schemes across the Midlands, in accordance with government pooling policy.

The process is going well, she enthuses.

“We’re really pleased with progress so far and we’re excited by the prospect of having a much wider resource to call upon as well as the potential cost benefits arising from economies of scale.”

The pool benefits from a regional fit and has already clarified common values like the role ESG will play across the portfolio.

The eight separate funds will decide their own asset allocations, and then delegate management to the pool, she 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

Bavarian fund bales on Berlin bonds

Bavaria is known as the most independent-minded of Germany’s regions, and the pension fund of Bavarian chemical multinational, Wacker, has shown definite divergence from the norm by shedding its holdings of German government bonds. It is not just German paper – which has seen yields on 10-year bonds below 2 per cent for more than

Irresistible opportunity in Nigeria

The offices of Nigeria’s biggest pension fund manager sit at the end of a quiet side street on Victoria Island, Lagos’s bustling financial capital. Inside Stanbic IBTC’s aptly named Wealth House, indicative of Nigeria’s growing savings culture, a throng of customers jostle to query staff on pension matters. Four flights up, 48-year-old chief executive Demola

Diversification key for pioneer of fiduciary management

For someone whose ideas have revolutionised the Dutch pension industry and carried significant international clout, Anton van Nunen strikes a humble tone. Widely credited with pioneering fiduciary management from its infancy, Van Nunen confesses with a chuckle that it is “quite a surprise” that the concept has grown to win over a significant proportion of

Deutsche Bank’s carefully engineered fund

You would expect one of the biggest names in global finance to have a sophisticated pension fund, and on that measure the €7-billion ($9.2-billion) contractual trust arrangement (CTA) for Deutsche Bank’s German employees does not disappoint in the slightest. It has carefully engineered a diversified bond-led liability-driven investment (LDI) strategy that is supported by a

The Co-op’s equally split strategy

The United Kingdom’s Co-operative Group, a chain of food, funeral and financial services outlets, markets itself on a popular loyalty scheme whereby customers earn points that are converted into a profit share, or dividend, directly linked to the group’s annual profits. It’s a founding philosophy that can trace its roots back a hundred years and

Danish real estate charity builds balance

Gert Poulsen, chief investment officer of the €3-billion ($3.9-billion) Danish charity Realdania, likes both property and the risk of earthquakes. The connection, Poulsen quickly adds, is not because he welcomes natural disasters, but due to Realdania’s distinctive history. Based in Copenhagen, Realdania was founded in 2000 when Danske Bank, the country’s largest lender, bought the

Previous