Danish pension fund ATP expands to UK

Danish pension fund ATP will expand its operations into the United Kingdom, and the new head of its UK operations, Morten Nilsson, says they can offer a more diverse range of investments and better risk controls than what is currently available to many British pension fund members.

It is ATP’s first foray into a foreign market and Nilsson (pictured) says the expansion is timed to coincide with reforms to the UK pension system. One of these changes will require employers to auto-enrol their workers into a chosen scheme.

Currently, members who don’t enrol themselves are at risk of missing out on pension benefits.

“The UK is interesting for many reasons, but also because it is a huge reform process and both private and public pensions are being reformed quite significantly,” Nilsson says.

“What got us interested is that it is a big country and a stable country, but it is in a huge reform process; and when we then started to dig with our market analysis we found there are more than 46,000 DC [defined contribution] schemes and there is clearly a need for consolidation.”

ATP will aim to provide lower cost pensions with the economies of scale advantages of a larger pension fund, says Nilsson.

Sponsored Content

“We have seen a lot of interest from the market and that is part of it, and we are seeing the same trend; and there is a need for simple, cost-efficient products and handling some of the risk for the individuals,” he says.

“Looking inside our fund, we have a lot of scale advantages to offer clients in the UK and as we are successful we will be able to bring that scale back to our Danish operations.”

Titled “Now:Pensions”, ATP’s pension fund will be an independent, multi-employer fund.

Administratively, Nilsson says that ATP is used to handling a large number of employees, ranging from both large companies to small business employers in Denmark.

Other than some sovereign fixed-income investments that will remain British, the members of the new UK-based fund will have access to the same full suite of investments as the 45 million members of ATP.

Nilsson says many British funds have conventional 60 per cent equities/40 per cent bond portfolios that are not benefiting from the new financial instruments and investment approaches that could provide a better risk/reward structure.

“Our core investment portfolio is highly diversified and is based on risk allocation, so we don’t have a portfolio where equity dominates,” he says. “It is a portfolio where we are invested in five different risk classes going from commodities, credit, inflation, rates and equities – so it is broadly diversified.”

ATP has two main portfolios: a hedge and an investment portfolio.

The hedge portfolio is designed to hedge ATP’s pension liabilities as efficiently as possible to offset changes in interest rates. The portfolio mainly comprises interest-rate swaps and long-dated bonds.

The investment portfolio is split into two: an alpha portfolio and a beta portfolio.

Most of the assets in the investment portfolio are held in the beta portfolio, which is divided into these five so-called risk classes.

The fund has a total risk budget for the beta portfolio, which it uses to review the various investments as often as daily.

As of June 30 this year, ATP allocated 13 per cent of the total beta portfolio to equities and calculated this represented 36 per cent of its total risk budget.

Credit had a 12 per cent allocation and made up 7 per cent of risk; interest rates had a 43 per cent allocation and 21 per cent of the total risk budget. Commodities represented a 2 per cent allocation and 9 per cent of risk; and inflation 29 per cent asset allocation and 27 per cent of the total risk budget.

“In an economic environment as we have now, where the key word is uncertainty, in our view the best thing you can do is diversify and really focus a lot on preserving your capital,” Nilsson says.

ATP also uses an absolute return target that is linked to the liabilities of the fund.

The approach differs from conventional benchmarking that can tend to over emphasise risk in relation to the adopted benchmark and not focus enough on the risk in relation to reserves.

Nilsson says this absolute return approach also makes the fund more agile in its decision-making processes.

“What we have seen is that we are not bound by benchmarks and we can focus on very robust processes and shift our portfolio very quickly; and we saw in 2008 we were liquid enough to do some really interesting investments when most pension funds were completely unable to do things like that,” he says.

The board of trustees will begin operating in 2012 and consists of former Sainsbury’s group human resources director Imelda Walsh and John Monks, who is a member of the House of Lords and former General Secretary of the European Trade Union Confederation and the Trades Union Congress.

Other members of the board of trustees include former government actuary, Christopher Daykin, former shadow pensions minister Nigel Waterson and ATP Group chief executive officer Lars Rohde.

 

Asset Owner:ATP

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Six ways to satisfaction, SEC told

The Securities and Exchange Commission should reinstate the investor advisory committee it abandoned in 2010 as part of a wider commitment to address near-term financial market reform, a group of institutional investors from across the globe have stated. The investors, who represent combined assets of $1.6 trillion, wrote to SEC chairman Mary Schaprio calling for

Proposed benefit plan to provide marginal savings

A cost-risk analysis of a proposed hybrid defined contribution/defined benefit plan proposed for California shows that it would provide marginal overall cost savings to government, CalPERS analysis has revealed.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Minimising currency exposure

Ron Liesching, chairman of Mountain Pacific Group, an investment firm that contributed to the development of the FTSE Wealth Preservation Unit, examines a new solution to managing currency risk. Global investors struggle with one central issue, currency risk. Now there is a new solution: the FTSE Wealth Preservation Unit (WPU). The WPU is a diversified

Infrastructure comes of age in low returns environment

As cash-strapped governments around the world come under pressure to sell public assets, capital-intensive investors are searching for stable yielding investments, bringing the maturing infrastructure asset class back into the framework. Sam Riley looks at examples from around the world. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

A new card for an old infrastructure hand

      With more than $A5 billion ($5.3 billion) invested in infrastructure through some 120 different types of assets, AustralianSuper is examining whether diversity is all its cracked up to be when it comes to infrastructure investing. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

TRS told innovative partnerships will drive returns

The Texas Teachers Retirement System (TRS) continues to build innovative relationships with its managers, the latest of which has seen it take a $250-million equity stake in asset manager Bridgewater Associates LP.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous