Australia’s DC funds take on more risk than OECD peers

Pension funds in Australia allocate a higher proportion of assets to shares than pension funds in any other country, according to a survey which looked at the asset allocation of pension funds in selected OECD countries.


According to the OECD’s Pension Markets in Focus report, released in October, Australian funds allocate around 60 per cent to shares, while their US counterparts allocate about 46 per cent, Canadians 31 per cent and those in the Netherlands 37 per cent.

According to the report, strategic asset allocation changes in the past couple of years have been most noticeable in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands, where there is evidence that defined benefit pension funds are reducing their target allocation to listed equities.

It also said there have been some investment developments common to defined benefit and defined contribution pension funds over the past decade that appear to have been maintained and, in some cases intensified, by the financial crisis. They included:

-Increased international diversification of equity portfolios;

-Increased use of derivatives to hedge both asset and liability risks; and

Sponsored Content

-Continuing exposure to alternative asset classes, including hedge funds, private equity and infrastructure.

Some of the highest exposures to international assets were observed among pension funds in the Netherlands. High exposures to assets denominated in foreign currencies were also found in other countries such as Hungary, Iceland, Japan and Switzerland.

Download the full report here

Leave a Comment

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

Singapore’s two largest asset owners, GIC and Temasek, see attractive opportunities in climate adaptation solutions – a relatively underfunded area compared to decarbonisation. The former has already made selective adaptation investments and said the opportunity set across public and private debt and equity could increase to $9 trillion by 2050.

Sort content by

Demystifying equal weighting

The idea of accessing risk premia through the use of index-based funds and ETFs has been gaining momentum in recent years. Risk premia indexes aim to reflect the equity premia of stock characteristics such as value, size or momentum. Among the risk premia indexes, equally weighted indexes are some of the oldest and most well

Tail risk and hedge fund returns

This paper by academics at Erasmus University and the University of Chicago shows that hedge funds exhibit persistent exposures to extreme downside risk, and that tail risk is an important determinant of the time-series and cross-section variation of hedge fund returns. Further it concludes that these results are consistent with the notion that a significant

Risk Factors as Building Blocks for Portfolio Diversification

The Callan Investment Institute explores portfolio construction using risk factors in its latest paper. The research finds that while building purely factor-based portfolios is challenging and largely impractical for most asset owners, using factors to understand traditionally constructed portfolios can be very useful. The paper, from the research arm of Callan Associates, looks at ways

EDHEC puts CDS under the spotlight

In recently released research, Dominic O’Kane, affiliated professor of finance at EDHEC Business School, challenges the assumptions about the operation of the eurozone sovereign-linked credit default swaps (CDS) market. The European Parliament decided to permanently ban so-called “naked” CDS in October 2011 on the back of claims that their speculative use caused or accelerated the

Paper weighs the shift to DC

On the back of a continuing shift in corporate pension plans away from defined benefit to defined contribution, Northwestern University’s Joshua Rauh and Indiana University’s Irina Stefanescu look at what causes the resultant freezing of these corporate plans. The paper takes the further step of looking at the consequences for both employees and plan sponsors,

EDHEC-Risk: reform retirement

  EDHEC-Risk Institute has released a study highlighting the need to reform retirement systems and pension funds. The study Shifting Towards Hybrid Pension Systems: A European Perspective also looks at the need to adopt professional management structures and to considerably improve the product offering of defined-contribution funds. To read the paper click here mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content

Previous