AustralianSuper rethinks hedge funds

The A$28 billion ($25.5 billion) AustralianSuper, has reduced its allocation to hedge funds from 3.5 per cent to 1.5 per cent, as part of a process of analysing the sources of beta within the overall investment portfolio.

Chief investment officer of the fund, Mark Delaney, said many important implications about diversification had been revealed in the investigation of the beta sources in all portfolios.

“It’s encouraged us to think that we have to be very conscious of what are the implicit market risks in each of these asset classes and how they relate to each other in different circumstances to get a better understanding of their key drivers,” he said.

As a result of the financial crisis, Delaney said the fund had “found out that hedge funds are a mixture of equity and fixed income strategies, one thing they are not is absolute return vehicles”.

However, overall AustralianSuper is not against hedge funds, with Delaney citing them as another vehicle for investment skill.

Sponsored Content

“We think there are people out there who are really good investors, but our decision will be made on how skilful they are rather than which strategies they run.”

However the fund is unlikely set up a hedge fund program and find funds to fill it, rather each investment, and manager will be assessed on its own merit.

When the sub-prime crisis hit, the fund directed all its inflows into cash, in April this year it started investing inflows again.

The market value of the fund’s assets invested in absolute return funds was just over $1 billion at June 2008, and the same time a year later it was half of that. It reduced the number of managers from nine to six, with funds managers FRM and Aurora losing mandates.

The funds have been re-allocated to global and domestic equities.

The fund made a radical move earlier in the year to reduce the exposure to active management within its domestic equities to half of the portfolio, which saw nearly two thirds of funds managers lose mandates.

Asset Owner:AustralianSuper

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

European distressed debt: investors divided by volatility

Last month conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com hosted a thinktank with a group of influential Australian investors to discuss the opportunities in European distressed debt. Participants included the Australian Government’s $80 billion sovereign wealth Future Fund, the $68 billion QIC, and leading asset consultants, with guest speaker sir David Cooksey, former board member of the Bank of England, chairman

Governance, Gonski style

Since becoming chair of the $80-billion Future Fund in March, David Gonski has set an agenda to act like a public company chair. An element of that vision is to very clearly delegate to management. “The general manager has been elevated to a managing director and the six-monthly announcements will be his,” he says. Another

Risk parity manages risk regret

The risk parity approach to portfolio construction might not deliver results in a “bull stockmarket,” but remained a “robust and rigorous” methodology which also “managed risk regret over time.” These are the views of Wai Lee, chief investment officer of quantitive investment at New York-based fund manager Neuberger Berman, who was recently named winner of

African countries come to the sovereign wealth fund party

Many of the countries with the largest oil reserves also boast the largest sovereign wealth funds (SWFs). And yet African producers, like newcomer Ghana, Angola, and Nigeria which has been pumping oil since the 1950s, haven’t saved much of their oil revenue. Now, in an effort to replicate the long-term growth of funds like Norway’s

Regulatory risk in Europe a factor for infrastructure investment

The head of infrastructure at Australia’s $80 billion Future Fund has cited regulatory risk in Europe and the United Kingdom as reasons to be wary about infrastructure investment in the region. Raphael Arndt, the Future Fund’s head of infrastructure and timberlands, told a Sydney conference this week that he was particularly concerned with the situation

Europe’s credit rating crunch

It has been a bad month for credit-rating agency executives who thought they were winning the legal and regulatory arguments about how they conduct their business. In Australia, the Federal Court ruled on November 5 in favour of 12 local councils in New South Wales which claimed that Standard and Poor’s had misled them into

Previous