New Jersey winds back alternatives program

The $59 billion New Jersey Division of Investment, has made several changes to its alternatives investment portfolio including a slowdown in new commitments, on the back of a belief that large institutions with high allocations to alternatives will be forced to sell portions of their portfolios in order to raise liquidity and rebalance their overall asset allocations.

Its investment plan for this year will include a slowdown in new commitments to private equity, real estate and hedge funds; a greater focus on credit-related opportunities within private equity and real estate; and the targeting of potential opportunities to purchase interests in existing alternative investment partnerships in secondary market transactions.

At the end of December a new asset allocation was set which included a reduction in alternatives from 15.22 per cent in November 2008 to a new target for this year of 14.5 per cent. US high yield was the main beneficiary of the rejigged allocation (see table below).

A memo from William Clark, the director of the division of investments at the New Jersey department of treasury, outlined the plan to reduce or eliminate previously announced commitments, with the aim of providing greater flexibility to implement these strategies.

In private equity, the plan will reduce the commitment to three funds by about $115 million. For real estate, the plan will not close on two previously announced commitments totalling $250 million.

Sponsored Content

And for hedge funds it will redeem from one fund, Black River, and another fund which it was planning to redeem, Satellite Fund II, has announced it will wind down its operations. The total of these original investments was $200 million.

At the end of January the plan estimated its performance for the fiscal year was -22.58 per cent versus -24.57 per cent for the council benchmark.

Clark said this was attributable to an overweight position in domestic and international fixed income relative to public equities; an underweight position in commodities relative to benchmark; and an underweight position in financial services stocks in both domestic and international equities portfolios.

The new asset allocation sets ranges for each asset clss instead of target allocations. According to Clark the rationale for this was that given the extreme market volatility, the plan “strongly believes” that strategic asset allocations for institutional portfolios need to become more “market sensitive” than in the past.

He said the use of ranges would reinforce the consensus of the Council that the fund should maintain flexibility to react to rapidly changing economic conditions.

Table: New Jersey FY2009 asset allocation analysis

Asset class Nov 2008  actual % Target AA adopted in 2007 % Proposed FY2009 allocation midpoint %
US large cap equity 25.10 25.65 21.85
US small cap equity 1.32 1.35 1.15
International developed markets equity 14.52 21.00 17.00
Emerging markets equity 1.06 2.50 1.50
Total Public equity 42.00 50.50 41.50
Long-term US FI 29.57 23.75 30.00
US high yield 0.44 4.00 3.00
International FI 0.93 0.00 0.00
Total FI 30.94 27.75 33.00
Commodities and other real assets 1.77 4.00 3.00
TIPs 5.24 3.00 5.00
Total inflation-sensitive assets 7.01 7.00 8.00
Private equity 5.94 3.25 5.50
Direct real estate 3.67 2.50 4.00
Absolute return 5.61 6.0 5.00
Total alternatives 15.22 11.75 14.50
Cash 4.83 3.00 3.00
Grand total 100 100 100

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Big pension funds list their target asset classes for next 3 years

Investment grade bonds, followed by emerging market equities and then diversified global equities, are the asset classes which will best meet the requirements of large pension funds and multi-manager packagers, according to a survey of the fiduciaries of assets totalling more than $5 trillion. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Peter Bernstein: Risk Inverse

Peter Bernstein, an economic consultant and respected investment thinker passed away on Friday June 5 in New York. Widely regarded as an intellectual giant in the investment circles for his ability to translate complex mathematical models into practical applications, he founded the Journal of Portfolio Management in 1974 and wrote a number of respected books

…as consultant assessment initiates changes to internal equity team and technology

CalPERS has reached its capacity to internally manage equities portfolios and would need to make changes to technology and staff resources if the internally-managed equities program is expanded, according to the outcome of the annual consultant review of CalPERS’ internal equity team by Wilshire Associates. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Asset class review inspires opportunistic allocation at CalPERS’

CalPERS is considering adopting an “opportunistic” program seeking to profit from substantially undervalued assets across various asset classes and strategies, and will be limited to 3 per cent of the fund’s total market value. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

The future of risk management: How independent should risk management be?

Barry Schachter, research associate with the EDHEC Risk and Asset Management Research Centre and director, quantitative resources, Moore Capital Management believes the current crisis is a catalyst for change in the conduct of risk management because it has challenged the efficacy of the existing risk management model, but simply imposing regulation is not the change

SWFs struck at financial crisis epicentre: $50b in losses from financials

For their biggest public market investments in the last two years, sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) zeroed-in on the most dogged companies in the worst-performing sector: Western financials. These decisions incurred paper losses of $US56.3 billion, accounting for most of their public market losses for the period. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous