Maryland moves to strategic allocations profiting private equity and commodities

The $32 billion Maryland State Retirement System is searching for advisers in real estate and private equity, as it moves toward its strategic asset allocation target that sits signficantly distant from its actual investments at the end of September, requiring a quadrupling of its private equity investments and new allocations to real return assets.

From January next year its strategic target will see substantial increases in private equity (3.4 to 12 per cent), absolute return (2.4 to 10 per cent), real estate (6 to 10 per cent) real return (7.7 to 10 per cent) and debt related strategies (1.3 to 5 per cent).

This will be countered by reductions in public equities (55.4 to 36 per cent), fixed income (18.1 and 15 per cent) and cash (5.5 to 2 per cent).

The system’s policy benchmark was rated in the first percentile according to the June 30, 2009 TUCS study, and a reduction in equities and an increase in real return strategies has helped the fund weather the storm.

The real return asset class is expected to reach its target by the end of the year, with allocations to commodities, infrastructure, energy and timber investments expected this year, in addition to the stable investments of TIPS and global inflation linked bonds.

The fund’s primary consultant is Ennis Knupp and it is now looking for firms to provide non-discretionary real estate, and private equity advice, with a likely contract start date of around May next year.

Sponsored Content

The services being tendered for include strategic real estate consulting, developing goals, strategy and objectives alongside the CIO; deal sourcing and due diligence; monitoring the real estate portfolio; database management; reporting; ongoing board of trustees education; and external relations.

As at September 2009 the fund had about $833 million in REITs, $324 million in the direct real estate program and $762 million in private funds.

It has a further $900 million committed to private real estate funds which has not been drawn down. Once a consultant has been selected it is expected the real estate program will be revamped.

Similarly the fund has issued a request for information for firms wishing to provide non-discretionary private equity consulting services to the fund, with a similar range of services.

As at June 30,2009 the fund had about $3.9 billion in total private equity commitments, of which $1.3 billion is drawn.

In September the board approved the use of futures contracts to create synthetic equity and fixed income portfolios, and the use of futures and other derivatives to develop an overlay program for rebalancing asset allocation targets.

The dedicated debt-related strategies allocation was created in September out of the temporary credit opportunities allocation, and includes corporate and mortgage related credit strategies, government sponsored programs, distressed debt, mezzanine debt, bank loans, convertible securities, high-yield debt, emerging market debt and preferred securities.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Good ESG data requires a framework

Initiatives such as the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board are vital for providing the consistent, regular, high-quality disclosure on the SDGs that investors need, a panel told delegates.

Irish pensions headed for major reforms

Auto-enrolment will put more people into Ireland's public retirement system, while regulatory requirements will include tougher standards for trustees and more disclosure on ESG.

Funds team up on G7 priorities

A group of institutional investors are collaborating to address the G7 priorities of climate change, gender inequality and the infrastructure gap, agreeing to commit resources and expertise.

Trustees answer the tenure question

The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority has given guidance for how long trustees should sit on boards. How well does the theory suit the practice? Stakeholders weigh in.

Whineray takes the reins at NZ Super

New Zealand Super acting chief executive Matt Whineray was named to the position permanently on Tuesday. He replaces long-time fund CEO Adrian Orr and vacates his chief investment officer role.

MSCI leaves out suspended A-shares

A handful of companies halted trading this week, prompting MSCI to drop plans to add them to its emerging markets index as it made the long-awaited inclusion of 229 China-listed stocks.

Previous