AP2 appoints another new CIO

The SEK 204 billion ($28 billion) Second Swedish National Pension Fund/AP2 has appointed its fourth chief investment officer in four years, as the fund reports its best annual return since inception.

Hans Fahlin will take up his post in mid-April following the resignation of Johan Held who is leaving to head asset management at insurance firm AFA Forsakring.

Fahlin has 25 years’ experience in the financial industry, the past 17 years in asset management, with senior positions at Alfred Berg/ABN AMRO, including a position as chief executive for Alfred Berg Kapitalfovaltning.

He is a member of the Scientific Advisory Committee at the Institute for Financial Research and chairman of Inquire Europe, both organisations are engaged in building bridges between financial research and business practice within the financial industry.

He is the fourth person to fill the post since 2006 with Petter Odhnoff, Poul Winslow and Held all preceding him in that time.

Sponsored Content

AP2 made some internal asset management team changes last year and from January it decided to have fewer in-house mandates and less active in-house management of the global equities portfolios.

From that time portfolio management has been organised according to: equities management, fixed-income management, quantitative management, external mandates and strategic exposure and trading.

There are also two forums relating to tactical allocation and decisions about larger and more long-term deviations from the strategic portfolio.

The fund’s strategic portfolio as at June 2009 was 34 per cent foreign equities, 18 per cent Swedish equities, 5 per cent real estate, 40 per cent fixed income, and 3 per cent private equity.

It made a number of adjustments to its strategic portfolio during 2009 which were primarily a reallocation from global government bonds and global equities to credits and convertibles.

The fund returned 20.3 per cent for the year net of expenses, the best result since its inception in 2001, and the fund’s active management generated an active return of 1.2 per cent.

Asset Owner:AP Fonden 2 (AP2)

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Academics and industry unite

The gargantuan impact of systemic risk in global financial markets has been corroborated by a consortium of industry and academics collaborating to provide independent quantitative research, insight and leadership on systemic risk. Driven by director of MIT’s Laboratory for Financial Engineering,  Andrew Lo, senior managing director at State Street Global Markets, Jessica Donohue, and managing

Rethink remuneration

Institutional investors around the world have been lobbying for the right to have a say on pay, a right to have an input into the remuneration of the executives in the companies they invest in. In June the UK’s business secretary, Vince Cable, laid out new plans that will give shareholders three-yearly votes on executive

Endowments fall
from grace

US college and university endowments have gone from pioneers in the adoption of socially responsible investing (SRI) to markedly trailing the rest of the investment industry in integrating environmental social and corporate governance (ESG), new research reveals. The Boston-based Tellus Institute, an independent not-for-profit think-tank, looked at 464 endowments and was damning in its findings,

Kay Review recommendations tackle short-termism

Co-head of responsible investment at the £32 billion Universities Superannuation Scheme, David Russell, says asset manager engagement with companies should move away from its “almost myopic focus on remuneration” to other issues that impact value and strategy. His comments come on the back of the final report of the Kay Review of the UK equity

POLL: Which strategy within emerging markets debt do you find the most compelling?

mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalPERS: “opaquely transparent”

A Columbia Business School case study on CalPERS has criticised the fund for being “opaquely transparent”, with a computation of investment expenses revealing the fund pays three-to-four times its peers in fees. Written by Columbia professor of business Andrew Ang and Columbia CaseWorks fellow, Jeremy Abrams, Californian dreamin’: The mess at CalPERS examines the political,

Previous