Credit overweight pushes Texas to top spot, performance pay reinstated

The 108 investment staff of the Teacher Retirement System of Texas (TRS) have had their performance incentive awards reinstated, and will receive $9.7 million between them, after a year which saw the fund outperform its benchmark by 240 basis points making it the best performing public pension fund in the US.

The TRS board approved the payment of the first half of the performance incentive awards for the 2010 plan year, as well as the deferred awards from the 2008 and 2009 plan years, a total of $9.7 million, as a result of “this exceptional performance”.

For the three-year period (2008-2010) TRS employees added $2.3 billion in excess of the incentive award benchmark established for the plans.

According to the attribution breakdown, of the 240 basis points added, 110 basis points were due to asset allocation and 140 basis points from security selection.

The $100.3 billion fund had a 4.8 per cent overweight position to credit and an underweighting of 5.5 per cent to long treasury bonds, the largest risk position at an asset allocation level, according to chief investment officer Britt Harris.

“This is a trade we have had on for the past year, and it is our biggest exposure relative to the benchmark,” he said at the December board meeting.

Sponsored Content

At the end of the year the fund also had a 2 per cent overweight to global equities primarily in emerging markets, a 2 per cent underweighting in the inflationary area and a small overweight to commodities.

Overall the return for the 2010 plan year (to the end of September) was 12.6 per cent, which translates to an $11 billion investment gain.

Harris said the value added by TRS versus the median US public pension fund with more $10 billion was about $2 billion.

He acknowledged some specific teams within the investment management division, including the internal investment management team, the trading area and private markets teams.

By managing the global best ideas portfolio inhouse, the internal investment management team, which re-engineered its process three years ago, the trust saves about $50 million a year, Harris said.

He also acknowledged the external public team, the portfolio strategies and risk groups, all of which did not exist three years ago.

Since the inception of the fund, 60 per cent of all contributions have come from investment earnings, 20 per cent from member contributions and 20 per cent from state contributions.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Maverick Series video: Gonski part I

In the first of a new series of video interviews featuring thought leaders in global institutional investment, chair of the $80 billion Australian Future Fund, David Gonski, outlines his views on governance. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

ATP reunites alpha and beta after 6 years

Alpha and beta rely to a large extent on exposures to systematic risk factors, so goes the “2013 thinking” of ATP in reversing the decision to separate alpha and beta in its investment portfolio six years ago. ATP has separate hedging and investment portfolios, with the hedging portfolio significantly larger at around DKK 670 billion

State Street’s Probyn into 2013

The current equity rally is not predicated on a shift in economic performance, according to chief economist at State Street, Chris Probyn, who says it would be reasonable to say the market may “pause for thought”. Probyn says the move from fixed income to equities has been fostered by some of the “economic areas for

CalPERS’ sustainability initiative drives investment beliefs

Launched this week, CalPERS’ Sustainable Investment Research Initiative (SIRI) will drive the development the $250-billion fund’s first set of investment beliefs. While difficult to believe a fund of its size, reach and history could invest without a set of investment beliefs, it is encouraging to see that sustainability will be a core part of that

Finnish pension reform a lesson for all

The findings from the first review of the Finnish pension system, commissioned by the Finnish Centre for Pensions, were handed down by Nicholas Barr from the London School of Economics and Keith Ambachtsheer from the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management last month. Although Helsinki in January is far from a party Ambachtsheer and Barr

European investors stay on the offensive

2012 was a year of battles for European pension funds. An ongoing war was waged against a severe regulatory challenge from the European Commission in the shape of Solvency II-style legislation. Aside from the uncertain struggle of that campaign, major European investors gained plenty of credit from standing up to corporate boards in the “shareholder

Previous