Equity risk nears 90 per cent at CalPERS

Analysis of CalPERS’ total portfolio, where equity risk accounts for nearly 90 per cent of the risk allocation and yet the asset allocation to global equities and alternative investments is about 67 per cent, corroborates the trend towards allocating assets according to risk, not asset buckets.

In its quarterly risk report, to the end of December 2010, the fund outlines the “most significant risk” in the CalPERS asset allocation is the equity risk estimated to be nearly 90 per cent total risk.

“The combination of geopolitical instability, rising commodity prices, and inflationary pressure have the potential to negatively impact the improved growth trends and recent equity rally…. Lower growth and inflation will have material impact on returns as they affect equity performance.”

The projected volatility to CalPERS’ total portfolio, as at December 31, 2010, is 15.2 per cent, with policy risk (at 13.8 per cent) significantly larger than the total fund tracking error.

Policy risk refers to the risk in the policy benchmark, while the total fund tracking error is the expected volatility of active returns between the total fund and the policy benchmark, currently forecast to be 2.39 per cent. This is above the total risk budget of 1.5 per cent

Of the total fund tracking error the allocation from asset allocation is below budget (0.68 per cent versus 0.75 per cent) and security and sector selection (2.4 per cent).

Sponsored Content

The selection component increased nearly 40 basis points over the previous quarter, and has prompted staff to review these active risk limits and propose expanding ranges for approval by the committee in coming months.

Total fund forecast total risk is 50 basis points lower than last quarter, in line with declining overall market volatility. All of the asset classes experienced lower total risk over the last quarter, with the exception of global fixed-income.

The risk management unit also monitors total fund concentrations across asset classes including country, industry, currency and security types, the current cross-asset class industry overweights include capital goods, consumer durables and apparel, and diversified financials.

Underweights are energy, food beverage and tobacco, materials and REITs.

Asset type concentrations are an overweight to structured credit and underweight to government bonds. The largest active exposure to a particular country is an underweight to the US

CalPERS total fund

Asset class       Asset allocation           risk allocation

Global equities            53%     66%

AIM                            14        20

RE                               7          7

ILAC                          3          3

Cash                            2          0

Global fixed income   21        4

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Experts mull strategies in slow growth climate

Speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Oxford University’s Rhodes House Fiona Trafford-Walker, director of consulting at Frontier Advisors argues that Australian investors are operating in a changed environment and need to “get used to slower economic growth.” Speaking as part of an expert panel on how the continued environment of slow growth and low

Macro diversification: How do investors diversify risk?

“Geopolitics does matter and how to navigate geopolitical events on a portfolio is challenging,” argues Tom Clarke, partner and portfolio manager at William Blair speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Rhodes House, Oxford University. In a session dedicated to macro strategies for investors to best navigate today’s complex investment universe and diversify risk, Clarke argues that “hiding” from

Oxford Professor urges urgent European reform

The University of Oxford’s distinguished Professor of Economics David Vines predicted the ongoing crisis in Europe will turn into a “train wreck with implications for investors” unless governments undertake significant reforms. He urges for large write downs of the sovereign debt of southern European countries, a loosening of austerity in those countries and a significant

Indexing pressure improves active management

A new study of active and indexed-based mutual funds shows the impact of different countries’ regulatory and financial market environments. The study finds that the average alpha generated by active management is higher in countries with more explicit indexing and lower in countries with more closet indexing. The evidence suggests that explicit indexing improves competition in the mutual fund

Investors need to revamp portfolio construction

Investors should re-consider their investment processes in order to achieve the needed “step-change in efficient portfolio construction” in a low return environment, the chief executive of the A$109 billion ($83 billion) Future Fund, David Neal, says. “It is the investment process that turns the universe of opportunities into a portfolio, and right now that process

Investors need to rethink operating model

A neat little story of investment flows, asset allocation changes, and relationship and service demands is emerging from the third annual Top1000funds.com/Casey Quirk Global Fiduciary CIO Survey. If you’re a CIO of an asset owner what that means is more control but also more responsibilities and the demands of more internal resources. For managers it

Previous