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

Infrastructure – fewer fees, please

Public pension funds make up almost a quarter of the world’s 100 largest institutional investors in infrastructure and, while still favouring unlisted funds, they are increasingly investing directly and pushing back on management fees, research reveals. The research by global alternatives research firm, Preqin, shows a record number of funds on the road seeking a

Pensionomics,
a money-go-round

As debate rages in the US about the generous retirement benefits and high cost of state and local defined benefit (DB) schemes, new research sheds light on the role these funds play in stimulating the economy and creating jobs. Pensionomics 2012: Measuring the Economic Impact of DB Pension Expenditures looks at the effect of DB

Total cost shakedown at CalPERS

Up to 8.9 basis points will be slashed from the total cost of managing the CalPERS’ investment portfolio in the next three years, under a new investment resource strategy which could also see internal administration costs increase by $6.5 million next year, and internal staff accountable for internal versus external management allocations. The internal investment

ESG almost an afterthought

Only 26 of 4300 companies surveyed by Governance Metrics International (GMI) have a specific clause that measures executive compensation against a sustainability metric, and institutional investors play a pivotal role in transforming this behaviour. Kimberly Gladman, director of research and risk analytics at the governance research company GMI, says investors should set the expectations that

Broader engagement at UNPRI

The United Nations Principles of Responsible Investment (UNPRI) will expand its focus beyond the micro focus of ESG implementation for its signatories to include thought-leadership research and public and policy debate, writes Amanda White. James Gifford, executive director at UNPRI, said the new strategy came out of its board meeting last week in Australia and

Are hedge fund investors getting what they paid for?

Alternative hedge fund beta allows investors to access the returns generated by hedge funds without the pressures of finding alpha, says Fama family professor of finance at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Tobias Moskowitz. Moskowitz says there are three components to hedge fund returns: unique alpha, traditional market beta, and “something else”,

Previous