Australia’s UniSuper launches first internal capabilities

The $A25 billion ($23 billion) UniSuper will ramp up its internal funds management capabilities, with four of its own portfolios set to be running by the end of the year, in conjunction with a project that will see its defined benefit and defined contribution sections adopt differing investment strategies for the first time.

The first internally-run investment portfolio was seeded with $93 million and went live roughly three months ago, overseen by senior investment analyst for Australian equities, John Hood.

The portfolio has been dubbed a ‘manager conviction’ strategy internally. According to UniSuper’s chief investment officer, John Pearce, the model-based approach uses proprietary information sourced from the fund’s custodian, which relates to the real-time portfolio holdings of all underlying Australian equity managers.

UniSuper’s internal investment team has developed an algorithm which, in Pearce’s words, “supports the bets” that emerge from the aggregated Australian equity portfolios.

The external managers were assured that UniSuper was not able to see their real-time holdings, Pearce said, with the information from the custodian being delivered on a collective basis only. The managers took extra comfort from the fact UniSuper was not a public-offer fund, Pearce said, and therefore not competing with them in any way.

At 50-plus stocks, Pearce added there was a “natural capacity constraint” on the amount of money managed under the ‘manager conviction’ algorithm.

Sponsored Content

While the strategy overseen by John Hood forms part of UniSuper’s Australian equity portfolio, three other internal funds management strategies are intended to help match the liabilities of UniSuper’s $9.3 billion defined benefit section, which remains open to new members.

Recently joining UniSuper on a contract basis after being restructured out of Queensland Investment Corporation last year, Simon Hudson is putting together a model-based Australian equity strategy (Pearce eschews the word ‘quantitative’) which will require new systems and more people, conditional on investment committee approval. At the same time, an internal property securities strategy (overseen by Kent Robbins) and internal fixed income strategy (overseen by Dennis Sams) are being developed. Pearce said these three would be directed toward liability matching, following Pearce receiving investment committee approval to take different approaches to the fund’s defined benefit and accumulation sections.

Pearce said the approach would not threaten UniSuper’s ability to derive scale, pointing out that many mandates would continue to stand behind both sections of the fund. He added that “the overwhelming majority” of the fund’s assets would continue to be managed by external managers.


Asset Owner:UniSuper

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Swiss referendum: funds’ headache or investor utopia?

The idea of referendums setting the agenda for institutional investors may be a frightening pipe dream in much of the world, but Switzerland’s unique brand of direct democracy is set to revolutionise its funds’ priorities. Swiss funds are due to be anointed as no less than the country’s official guardians against “rip-off” executive salaries. That

Siguler: buy good quality companies

As the world and companies globalise, George Siguler, managing director and founding partner of private equity firm, Siguler Guff, has a simple recommendation for investors. “My recommendation for stock investors is to look at great global companies,” he says. “Look at companies like Johnson and Johnson, Unilever or Boeing. They all have great balance sheets

A series of shorts
don’t make a long

It is easy for long-term investors to avoid short termism, and the solution lies in avoiding momentum and conducting risk analysis using cash flows – not market pricing. “Diversification is a joke. Diversification and risk analysis relies on pricing, but pricing is distorted because it’s driven by momentum,” says Paul Woolley, chairman of the Paul

ShareAction mainstreams responsible investment

“ShareAction has become the premier organisation to give voice to those who wish to invest their values as well as their assets,” enthused former vice president of the United States Al Gore, speaking to a packed audience at ShareAction’s annual lecture in London’s Guildhall last week. ShareAction is only a tiny pressure group but Gore’s

Cass creates principles
for DC model

As almost every market in the world looks to move from defined benefit to some sort of defined contribution model, academics at the Pensions Institute of the Cass Business School, City University London have developed a set of 15 principles for designing a defined contribution model. The principles, consistent with the recently published OECD guidelines, are based

Pension funds reject EU financial transaction tax

When the European Commission announced plans on February 14 to introduce a Financial Transaction Tax (FTT) by the start of 2014, it planted a bomb under Europe’s pension funds. That is not, of course, the view of Algirdas Šemeta (pictured below right), the EU’s commissioner for taxation. He says the proposed tax is “unquestionably fair

Previous