CalPERS to finalise alternative asset classifications

CalPERS’s investment committee is expected to make a decision on its alternative asset classification at a November asset liability management workshop.The $218 billion fund has identified five broad asset classes under the alternative classification: growth, income, real assets, liquidity/hedge, and inflation.

The liquidity/hedge bucket consists of Treasuries and provides interest rate exposure and serves as a risk hedge as well as a source of liquidity; the inflation bucket consists of inflation-linked bonds and commodities, providing tradeable asset exposure to inflation; while the growth bucket consists of public and private equities, providing an exposure to economic growth risk as the key return driver.

These five asset classifications were determined in September, and are a refined version of the March classifications which were: growth, income, government bonds, market neutral, inflation-linked, and liquidity.

The September version does not include absolute return as a strategic asset class as it is being implemented as an active strategy and has some market exposure to other assets, such as equity and fixed income.

At the November workshop, staff will present a more clearly defined description of the role of asset classes in the strategic portfolio so that implementation strategies and decisions are consistent with the strategic roles of the asset classes.

The main intent of the alternative asset classification was to more clearly define the strategic role of asset classes in the portfolio.

Sponsored Content

In a note to the investment committee, investment staff outline the key insights drawn from the process:

* that the current asset class structure masks underlying common fundamental risks across the portfolio;

* the CalPERS portfolio has economic growth-sensitive assets across the current asset classes that sum to a higher percentage allocation;

* nominal government bonds (Treasuries) have a unique strategic role in providing a hedge against equity market draw-down risks, a partial duration match to liabilities and a source of liquidity; and

* the AAC provides a better framework for understanding and managing to these macro risks particularly in light of the “unusual uncertainty” surrounding the economic environment.

Under the direction of the investment committee chair, CalPERS staff have begun to report the asset exposures and returns according to the March 2010 asset classification to the investment committee.

The chair, George Diehr, has also directed staff to advance a factor-based approach, and these recommendations will be presented to the committee in 2011. Staff will then conduct an annual review of economic and capital market conditions along with return expectations so the committee may consider changes as needed.

One response to “CalPERS to finalise alternative asset classifications”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Bulk of pension assets still at top end

The 300 largest funds, and the seven biggest country markets, continue to control the lion’s share of global pension assets, a Willis Towers Watson study has found.

Fundamentally rewiring finance

The better aligned a society’s financial institutions are with its goals and ideals, the stronger and more successful the society will be.

Year in review

Analysing the most read stories of 2016 reveals some interesting trends. Overwhelmingly the most popular investment stories have been about fees and issues of sustainability.

Cyber, financial and climate risks

From quantum computing increasing the risk of damaging cyber attacks to towering global debt levels, pension funds are being urged to adopt clear risk strategies to manage emerging risks.

New investment culture embraces ESG

Investors are intentionally pursuing strategies that tie portfolio-level decision-making to systems level risks but they need more support in identifying opportunities for collective action.

Strength amid global turmoil

Political factors will continue to create uncertainty in investment markets, so now – more than ever – large investors need to play to their strengths.

Previous