ACERA eyes global, more active approach for $6.6b equity portfolio

The Alameda County Employees’ Retirement Association (ACERA) is preparing a significant overhaul of its $6.6 billion public equity portfolio, shifting towards a more global and actively managed strategy.

The potential restructure would require up to four manager terminations and up to three global equity searches (core, growth, and value styles with 20 per cent allocated to each).

“We’re not getting a lot of bang for our buck – our tracking error is below 1 per cent,” investment officer Stephen Quirk said at an investment committee meeting in July.

The $13.2 billion fund, which provides retirement benefits for public employees in Alameda County, California, has run a largely passive approach since 2018. About 80 per cent of the US equity portfolio is indexed by BlackRock. But in 2024, the US equity portfolio underperformed the Russell 3000 benchmark (22.8 per cent versus 23.8 per cent) thanks to some active, large cap managers underperforming.

The fund’s analysis, in conjunction with investment consultant NEPC, found that many of its current managers have not produced significant positive net excess composite returns since inception, with excess returns ranging from zero to 3.2 per cent. It found only one if its current six managers were high conviction.

The review led to the fund adopting the MSCI ACWI IMI global equity benchmark as its main benchmark, replacing the Russell 3000 for US equities and the MSCI ACWI ex-US IMI benchmark.

Sponsored Content

“When you implement a global benchmark that’s acknowledging [that] strategically you’re going to recognise the entire [set of global investment] opportunities – that you’re not trying to tilt one way or the other,” Quirk said.

“Then, the benefit of hiring a global manager is you’re outsourcing that decision to them, saying, ‘Hey, we’re not smart enough. We’re paying you active fees. If you guys have a view, you can implement that’.”

The shift recognises the increased globalisation of the economy, markets, and companies, which creates new excess return opportunities for skilled active global managers, according to the fund.

While the new strategy was not made in response to the market turmoil unleashed in April by President Trump’s Liberation Day tariffs, the move aligns with the more bifurcated world that investors are now grappling with.

Active management versus passive

There has been a longstanding trend across the industry towards passive strategies, with institutional investors swayed by lower costs and the difficulty active managers have had in consistently beating benchmarks.

However, ACERA’s research showed a greater dispersion and outperformance in the global equity manager universe than in the US and international large cap equity manager universe, implying an environment more suited to successful active management.

Quirk said its preferred active equity strategy would double tracking error to around 2 per cent, but this would require mitigating underperformance risk by picking the right managers and building a diversified equity portfolio.

“All these analyses shows excess return,” he said of the three different models the fund assessed. “The reality is, when you take on risk, you can underperform by a lot as well.”

ACERA’s preferred option (the only option to take tracking error to around the 2 per cent level) involves lowering the current passive allocation from 64 per cent to 20 per cent. A back test showed it would have delivered a 10 per cent annualised return over the decade ended March 31, 2025 compared to its current equity portfolio return of 8.6 per cent.

The equity portfolio represents a substantial shift, although the fund has yet to finalise the decision.

“I understand the transition might be complicated, but the goal is the end product is simpler, higher conviction, and ultimately greater excess returns,” Quirk said. “That’s the number one goal we’re trying to achieve.”

ACERA’s 50.2 per cent portfolio allocation to global equities is slightly overweight compared to its long-term policy target of 48 per cent. It also has an overweight to absolute return strategies (7.9 per cent versus a target of 6 per cent) and an underweight to private credit (4.3 per cent versus 6.8 per cent).

At its most recent August board meeting, the investment team discussed plans to bring its entire portfolio more closer to those targets by redeeming about $174 million from its most liquid absolute return strategies and reallocating it to Loomis Sayles’ fixed income strategy, which it views as having the most similar risk-return characteristics as ACERA’s private credit program.

Leave a Comment

Temasek likely to miss 2030 climate target dragged by aviation, energy investments

Temasek likely to miss 2030 climate target dragged by aviation, energy investments

Temasek chief executive Dilhan Pillay says the sovereign investor is likely to miss its 2030 interim climate target, as exposures to the aviation and power generation sectors are crimping the investor’s ability to reduce portfolio target emissions. But the $339 billion fund is sticking to its net zero by 2050 goal, stressing the slower decarbonisation pace "reflects the realities of the broader global economy."

Sort content by

How leading asset owners maintain TPA discipline

Rolling out a total portfolio approach is rarely a linear process, as even its most experienced practitioners warned that without careful resistance to old language, culture and structure, asset owners can easily slide back into the “comfort” of strategic asset allocation. A new report unpacks how leading funds stay disciplined.

South Carolina lifts private equity and credit as cashflow turns positive

The South Carolina Retirement System Investment Commission's improved liquidity position has allowed the plan to tilt its portfolio towards unlisted asset classes, including private equity and private credit. The fund grew fast thanks to funding reform, improved salaries, and positive investment returns and is now looking to boost long-term performance.

Debt beats equity in data centre boom as scarce capital lifts credit yields

Asset owners continue to weigh up the shifting risk-return attributes of the booming data centre sector including deal structures, refinancing, energy requirements, and the future of AI.

Why CalPERS doesn’t want to miss the climate revolution

If CalPERS had put more money into the Silicon Valley companies in its own backyard earlier it might be fully funded by now, jokes its sustainable investment head. But it won’t miss the same opportunities in climate investing.

AI beyond the black box

The artificial intelligence revolution is taking place against a backdrop of rising fiscal deficits and a realignment of the geopolitical order. Applying cutting-edge AI technology to navigate markets is helping asset managers such as Bridgewater make sense of a shifting landscape.

Chicken, beef or vegetables: assessing the real environmental impact of AI

The inexorable rise of AI is increasing energy demand around the globe, but the technology itself is also enabling greater efficiencies. Assessing its real impact requires an understanding of both its “footprint” and its “handprint”, and its impact may not be as dire as we’ve been led to believe.

Previous