ATP reunites alpha and beta after 6 years

Alpha and beta rely to a large extent on exposures to systematic risk factors, so goes the “2013 thinking” of ATP in reversing the decision to separate alpha and beta in its investment portfolio six years ago.

ATP has separate hedging and investment portfolios, with the hedging portfolio significantly larger at around DKK 670 billion ($122 billion) versus DKK10 billion ($1.82 billion), and the investment portfolio has been separated into alpha and beta. The separation was so distinct that the beta team was run from the head office, but ATP alpha was on another site, and was based on a small number of independent risk-taking teams.

The beta portfolio is split into five main risk classes or factors and the alpha portfolio will now be taken into this framework within beta.

“In the main, we conclude that alpha and beta are a question of exposure to systematic risk factors. We therefore see alpha and beta together in the same portfolio. It’s a development of our thinking,” chief investment officer Henrik Jepsen says. “It’s more like smart-beta risk factors. We are internalising these deliberations and want a more coordinated framework.”

ATP alpha will now be restructured and, while it is still to be determined which strategies will be pursued and which risk factors the fund wants exposure to, it will lose half of its 35 staff.

Jepsen acknowledges that having a small number of independent risk-taking teams was both a strength and a challenge.

Sponsored Content

One of the challenges was that with a large number of small teams it is difficult to scale the size of the total risk in the alpha exposure. In this way it was difficult to scale the investment efforts, and there was also a risk of over-diversification.

“In addition, the difficulty of scaling the efforts meant it was an expensive operation to run. We think it is important to have a focus on cost because we are in a low expected-return environment,” he says. “And thirdly, and most importantly in the long term, we think we can achieve better portfolio coordination.”

“The alpha group has been a success, after all costs and taxes, but while alpha has been $310 million, the fund is $120 billion, so we want to scale even more. It’s a challenge.”

This presents a conundrum for many large pension funds that use scale for cost reduction and negotiation. This may mean that these funds can not manage such strategies internally and achieve those aims, in light of the fact that the success of some of these strategies depends on being small and nimble.

ATP will continue to use the multi-strategy investment platform it has developed in the alpha business, where it managed long-short equity, equity market neutral, global macro, foreign exchange and currency.

 

Asset Owner:ATP

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Over the industry? Change it

The pension and funds management industry is self-serving. There are too many players, there’s too much jargon, too much leakage and too much patting each other on the back. And that’s not just my opinion: the results of a 12-month research project, across 60 countries and more than 3000 investors concur. The research by State

Bit of a bubble in the property pool

In a landmark project, the £11-billion ($17.5-billion) Greater Manchester Pension Fund (GMPF), a scheme for 10 local councils and hundreds of small regional employers including schools and charities, will invest in a series of residential housing projects with local authorities. Lauded as a completely new way of funding house building in the city, Manchester council

Inversion therapy:
the investor as benchmark

The pension and funds management industry needs to redefine performance to an absolute return measure, according to The Influential Investor: How Investor Behaviour is Redefining Performance, a paper that is the result of 12 months of research with more than 3000 investors and investment providers across 68 countries. The report, which sought to uncover the

Will Christmas be the final blow for Spain’s Social Security Reserve Fund?

The Spanish Social Security Reserve Fund is set to be depleted by another €7 billion ($9.05 billion) before the end of 2012, according to IESE Business School pension expert, Javier Diaz Gimenez. The $90-billion fund has already been asked by the government for $3.8 billion, which is likely to go towards a raise in state

Fiduciaries’ top concern is US gridlock

Endowments and foundations in the United States are more concerned with the US political and fiscal gridlock than the uncertainty caused by the European debt crisis, according to a survey of non-profit organisations by Mercer Hammond. Partner at Mercer Hammond, Russ LaMore, says the US situation dominated the global macroeconomic concerns of these investors, followed

UK’s NAPF conference focuses on three issues

The agenda at the United Kingdom’s National Association of Pension Funds (NAPF) annual shindig in Liverpool’s Echo Arena on the banks of the Mersey couldn’t have been broader. From early analysis of auto-enrolment, the biggest shake-up of the industry in a generation and just days old, to life expectancy, Britain’s role in the European Union,

Previous