Australian Future Fund piles into debt

The $A51.2 billion ($37.9 billion) Australian Future Fund has quintupled its allocation to debt in the past year, significantly upweighting its exposure to debt securities in the last quarter to 21.9 per cent of the fund.

The fund, which returned -1.32 per cent for the March quarter, had an allocation to debt as low as 4 per cent last April.

In the past quarter, the fund has also constructed a mandate with a Baltimore-based investor in venture capital funds and direct projects, and invested in active domestic equities for the first time.

The Fund’s portfolio update for March 31, 2009 revealed that debt securities exposure jumped to 21.9 per cent from 17.3 per cent in the previous quarter, for the ex-Telstra section of the portfolio.

New mandates with Goldman Sachs Asset Management and mid-market credit specialist Oak Hill Advisors were awarded in the debt securities sector.

JF Capital Partners and Perennial Growth Management were beneficiaries of the Fund’s move into active Australian equities management, with the two firms sharing in the $4.75 billion now allocated to the sector (9.3 per cent of the ex-Telstra component, up from 8.6 per cent last quarter).

Sponsored Content

The lone new private equity mandate was with Montagu Newhall, from Owings Mills on the outskirts of Baltimore, which is an investor in venture capital funds as well as direct VC projects. The Future Fund has not invested in any of its four ‘Global Partners’ funds but rather had a specific mandate constructed for it. Ashton Newhall, a principal of the firm, comes from a family tradition of venture capitalism – his grandfather ran private equity portfolios for the Rockefeller family, where projects included the development of a jet engine.

Two new property mandates were also awarded, to ING Clarion Real Estate Securities and Quadrant Real Estate Advisors.

Asset Owner:Future Fund

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Feeling the force of falling endowments

A number of Ivy League universities – including Yale, Cornell and the University of Pennsylvania (Penn) – are directly feeling the affects of the negative performance of their endowment funds, and are being forced to cut operating budgets for the 2009/10 financial year. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

SWFs experience 18 per cent growth amid global downturn

Despite recent investment losses, sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) collectively grew by 18 per cent in 2008, bringing the sum of assets held by the vehicles to US$3.9 trillion, a report from International Financial Services London (IFSL) found. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Giant Texas plan defers performance pay for execs

Chief investment officer of the US$81 billion Teacher Retirement System of Texas, Britt Harris, has offered to forego an estimated $167,935 in performance incentive pay for 2008. At the most recent board meeting, the TRS board accepted Harris’ offer and also voted to defer all remaining investment division performance pay until the fund experiences a

US endowment slams consultants

The $4 billion Claremont University Consortium (CUC) has criticised the service small endowment funds in the US are receiving from their investment consultants, labelling the solutions as “cookie cutter, boilerplate answers”. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Full transparency of big hedge fund positions from now on: AIMA

The peak body for the global hedge fund industry, the Alternative Investment Management Association (AIMA) has backed a proposal mandating the full transparency and disclosure of ‘stematically significant’ positions and risk exposures held by hedge funds to their national regulators. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Markowitz has plan for gaining insights into complex instrument

At the age of 82, modern portfolio theorist, Harry Markowitz still has a lot to say about the state of play in investment management.

Previous