Chicago Police fills alternatives allocation

The Policemen’s Annuity and Benefit Fund of Chicago has appointed GMO and PIMCO to global tactical asset allocation mandates boosting the fund’s alternatives allocation by 10 percentage points.

At the end of September this year the fund had 2.7 per cent allocated to alternatives, against a strategic benchmark of 23 per cent.

The new mandates are worth a combined $300 million, split roughly 60:40 between GMO and PIMCO, with the funding coming from US equities.

Chief investment officer of the fund, Sam Kunz, says the fund aims to increase its alternatives allocation next year, and in the second or third quarter of 2012 an RFP for fund of hedge-fund managers should be issued, worth about $200 million.

Real assets and commodities allocations will round out the final 4 per cent of alternatives.

Sponsored Content

The fund is only about 35 per cent funded, and needs to meet an estimated 17 per cent return target simply for that to remain flat.

In the past, Kunz has said investments are not a solution to increasing the funding level, and instead his focus is on building an efficient portfolio, with benchmarks, strategies and asset allocation all focused on efficiency.

The fund made quite dramatic asset allocation shifts following the appointment of its new consultant, NEPC, last year.

The most dramatic change was the increase in alternatives from 9 per cent to 23 per cent. This includes tactical and alpha strategies, as well as real assets.

There is also a separate allocation to private capital – private equity, infrastructure and real estate – which has been decreased from 18 per cent to 14 per cent.

Within private capital, 7 per cent is allocated to private equity, 5 per cent to real estate (down from 7 per cent) and 2 per cent to infrastructure (down from 4 per cent).

Of the fund’s 41 per cent allocation to equities, split fairly evenly between domestic and international, 100 per cent is allocated to active managers.

This is also something Kunz wants to address, looking to allocate some money passively, while appointing the active mandates to those managers with high tracking error.

The fund, which serves more than 12,500 active members of the Chicago Police Department, has been in existence since 1887 and was codified in Illinois statutes in 1921. According to funding projections based on December 31, 2009, actuarial valuations, the fund will run out of assets during 2025.

Perhaps one of the more critical changes to be made to ensure this doesn’t happen is a fiduciary and governance review, with the board issuing a request for information for a fiduciary services consultant which will be tasked with reviewing the plan’s organisational structure, evaluating its transparency, accountability, fees, and legal issues.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Is the financial services sector serving the public interest?

Fiduciary law, which creates the boundaries and rules for asset owners managing other people’s money, is evolving. The short-termism, misaligned incentives and complex and over-supply of services that characterises financial services, is under fire. Regulators around the world are increasingly looking at how to change the behaviour and supply chain dynamics in the industry, and

The impact of the mega manager

The impact of size is a delicate point for asset managers. For specialist asset classes, and boutique managers, being small and nimble can be a source of alpha. On the other hand, being large can reduce fees and increase innovation and product offering. But now there is evidence to show that the emergence of the

The contested role of asset consultants

Asset consultants are a key part of the investment chain, providing small funds with services that include decision making processes and strategic asset allocation, and for larger funds traditionally playing a key role in manager and strategy selection. But a study by Gordon Clark and Ashby Monk, which is part of a broader look by

Demystifying private equity

US public pension funds, on average, have around 9.4 per cent allocated to private equity but for many public funds monitoring the firms that manage these investments – including the transparency of underlying investments, fees, performance and benchmarking – as well justifying these investments to boards and stakeholders, takes up more than 10 per cent

Why investors employ smart beta strategies

The common view is smart beta is used to side step expensive active equity managers or hedge fund managers whose processes are on the surface opaque, but on close investigation turn out to be largely beta like in approach. As investors have gained experience and familiarity they have also learnt about how it offers greater

Managing culture with risk management techniques

The interaction between governance, culture and performance is increasingly a topic around asset owner board tables. But little has been written about the relationship between culture and the financial crisis, and how to change culture in financial services organisations. Andrew Lo, professor of finance at MIT, has come up with a proposal to change culture

Previous