….as TRS reports its largest ever return

An overweight position to global equities and credit has contributed to the Teachers’ Retirement System of Texas recording its best ever investment return: 35 per cent for the year to March 2010.

Of the 260 basis points of value added, 300 basis points was added by asset allocation, with a small reduction from security selection, chief investment officer Britt Harris said.

The fund has an allocation of 60 per cent to global equities, 20 per cent to stable value and 20 per cent to real return assets.

Throughout the past year Harris said the portfolio was up to 3 per cent overweight global equities, with its maximum range at 5 per cent, and within the stable value portfolio it was underweight treasuries and overweight credit.

“That is probably our largest bet right now,” he said.

Sponsored Content

The fund benefited from the rally in global equities, with its listed global equities returning 57 per cent and emerging markets 83 per cent.

The best performing asset class for the fund was listed real estate, which was up 103 per cent, despite real estate overall still performing dismally at -24 per cent.

Harris said the return was the fund’s largest ever annual return, provided the greatest dollar gain ($25 billion), and the largest value added (2.6 per cent).

“This is the most positive report that’s ever been given in the history of Texas Teachers and also the most positive report I’ve ever given in almost 30 years,” Harris said.

“In the dark days we stressed that things would improve, now I’d like to stress that things won’t stay this good. The long term outlook will be more subdued.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Gunning for diversity, dynamism and due diligence

The new low-return, high-volatility environment requires broadly diversified portfolios, dynamic decision-making and rigorous due diligence, which is beyond the internal capacity of most small funds under $10 billion, warns Russell Investment’s global chief investment officer Peter Gunning. He says smaller funds must decide if it is cost effective and even possible to internally manage investment

ESG here to stay

Anyone who thought ESG was a passing fad can think again. The announcement this week that Mercer, which has led the consulting industry on standalone ESG ratings, will now integrate those factors across its ratings process has cemented ESG as an important investment risk and return consideration. The consultant rates more than 20,000 investment strategies

Mercer integrates ESG

Mercer will integrate its proprietary environmental, social and governance (ESG) ratings across all of its manager-search and performance data, cementing ESG as a key investment consideration. The consultant rates more than 20,000 strategies, oversees more than $5 trillion of assets under advice and has $60 billion in its multi-manager products. Mercer has led the consulting

Modern portfolio theory, risk and fiduciary duty

It was only a few decades ago that trustees in many jurisdictions were restricted from investing in certain assets. Fiduciary duty has evolved as the thinking about investments has changed. This is true, then, of how trustees should be applying fiduciary duty to current day investment challenges, including systemic risk and climate change risk. Ed

Singapore’s GIC stashes cash

The Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC) is stockpiling cash as it positions itself to take advantage of any potential opportunities, lifting its cash allocation from 3 per cent at the start of 2011 to 11 per cent of its total portfolio by the earlier part of this year. The sovereign wealth fund’s chief investment

GMO boss warns of food crisis

Global investors should have as much as 30 per cent of their portfolios exposed to natural resources, more than double the current market average, because of a burgeoning worldwide food crisis, GMO’s Jeremy Grantham says. The droughts afflicting farmers in the US and the subsequent spike in food commodity prices are just forerunners to the

Previous