Download Investment Strategy for Pensions Actuaries A Multi Asset Class

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Securitization wikipedia , lookup

Land banking wikipedia , lookup

Financialization wikipedia , lookup

Business valuation wikipedia , lookup

Index fund wikipedia , lookup

Modified Dietz method wikipedia , lookup

Debt wikipedia , lookup

Systemic risk wikipedia , lookup

Syndicated loan wikipedia , lookup

History of private equity and venture capital wikipedia , lookup

Financial economics wikipedia , lookup

Beta (finance) wikipedia , lookup

Stock selection criterion wikipedia , lookup

Public finance wikipedia , lookup

Private equity in the 1980s wikipedia , lookup

Private equity wikipedia , lookup

Early history of private equity wikipedia , lookup

Private equity in the 2000s wikipedia , lookup

Modern portfolio theory wikipedia , lookup

Investment fund wikipedia , lookup

Private equity secondary market wikipedia , lookup

Investment management wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Investment Strategy for Pensions Actuaries
A Multi Asset Class Approach
16 January 2007
Representing Schroders:
Neil Walton – Head of Strategic Solutions
Tel: 020 7658 2486
Email: [email protected]
1
Agenda
Where Does Diversified Investing Fit?
The Case for Diversification
Diversified Growth Investing
Case Study: Schroder Retirement Benefit Scheme
Summary
2
Where Does Diversified Investing Fit?
Myners Principles for Institutional Investment
Defined Benefit Schemes
— Asset growth requirements
— Liabilities linked to inflation
— Control funding level and contribution rates
Target medium-term real growth
— Real return above liabilities
Whilst controlling risk/volatility
Clear Objectives
– The Trustees’ best judgement of what is necessary to meet the fund’s liabilities
– Trustees’ appetite for risk
Focus on Asset Allocation
– Strategic decisions should be made in order to meet the objectives
– Consider a full range of investments, not excluding any major asset class
— Less risk than equities
Appropriate Benchmarks
— Smoother, more consistent returns
– Are index benchmarks appropriate
– Is active or passive management appropriate for each asset class
– Managers should be given the freedom to pursue active strategies
3
UK and Global Equities Since 1997
%
30
20
High relationship (correlation) between UK
and world equities
10
0
Globalisation has increased the linkage
between economies and markets
-10
-20
-30
1997
1998
1999
FTSE All Share
Source: Russell Mellon Caps 30 December 2006
Returns are in Sterling
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
MSCI World
2005
2006
4
Which Other Asset Classes Should We Be Looking At?
Commodities
Hedge Funds (Absolute Return)
A physical substance such as oil
or gold, which can be traded on
an exchange (usually through
forwards or futures).
An alternative investment fund investing in a
variety of instruments, possibly including
short selling, leverage, derivatives,
commodities and currencies with the goal of
generating high absolute returns.
Private Equity
Emerging Market Debt
Securities that are not listed on a stock exchange and hence
are generally illiquid and thought of as long term investments.
Typical examples are management buy-outs and new start-up
companies.
Debt issued by an economy in the early
stages of growth or development (an
emerging market) – generally issued by
the government.
Currency Funds
High Yield Strategies
Pooled funds investing in currencies
and short term money market
instruments.
A strategy that invests in higher yielding securities, which are
mainly sub-investment grade fixed interest bonds.
5
Building Blocks for Diversification
Alternative indices since 1997
Annual return and correlation to UK equities
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
-20%
-40%
-60%
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
UK Equity (1)
Property (0.01)
Emerging Market Equity (0.59)
Hedge Funds (0.34)
Global HYD (0.46)
Global EMD (0.53)
Commodities (0.09)
Private Equity (0.74)
Source: Datastream/ Lehman Live/ Bloomberg
Returns in Sterling
Note: Property and Hedge Fund
return excludes December 2006
2006
6
Generic Portfolio of Alternative Assets
Equally weighted portfolio – A ‘blunt’ instrument to investigate diversification
1/7
1/7
1/7
1/7
1/7
1/7
1/7
Source: Schroders
Emerging Market Equity
Company shares listed on the stock markets of
developing countries,
Emerging Market Debt
Bonds issued by the governments of
developing countries
Global High Yield Bonds
Bonds issued by companies and other
organisations that have a lower credit rating
Property
UK property (offices, industrial and retail)
Commodities
Energy, metals and agriculture
Hedge Funds
An alternative investment fund investing in a variety of
instruments which can use aggressive
strategies in order to achieve an absolute positive return
Private Equity
Shares in companies that are not listed on a
recognised exchange
7
Downside Risk: Peak to Trough Analysis
Combining equities and alternative assets
0%
0.0%
-10%
-8.4%
-20%
-15.7%
-22.6%
-30%
-31.2%
-40%
-32.8%
-34.4%
-37.1%
-50%
-60%
-57.0%
-70%
-66.4%
-80%
UK Equity
Global Equity
Property
Emerging Market
Equity
Hedge Funds
Source: Schroder, data from January 1997. Returns are in Sterling
Note
(i) A portfolio comprising of 50% equities, and the remainder split 1/7 Property, Emerging Market Equity,
Emerging Market Debt, Global High Yield Bonds, Commodities, Hedge Funds and Private Equity
Global High Y ield
Debt
Global Emerging
Market Debt
Commodities
Private Equity
Combined
Portf olio (i)
8
Growth of Assets Versus Liabilities
Alternatives could replace some equity exposure
250
200
Equity
portfolio
150
7.0
9.0
Worst 1 year loss (%)
-30.5
-19.2
Worst 3 year loss (% pa)
-16.5
-8.5
Return (%pa)
100
50
Diversified
portfolio
Source: Schroders. Returns are in Sterling and gross of fees
0
Jan 97
Aug 98
Feb 00
Liability proxy
Sep 01
Equity portfolio
Note:
Liability proxy – FTSE Actuaries Over 5 Years Index-Linked Gilts
Equity portfolio – 55% UK Equities, 45% Overseas Equities
Diversified portfolio – 50% Equities, 50% Diversified assets (equal weightings)
Apr 03
Nov 04
Diversified portfolio
Jun 06
9
The Concept of Diversified Growth Investing
Market Return (Beta)
Improve the risk / return profile by including less correlated asset classes alongside core equity investments
Active Return (Alpha)
Active risk can further diversify the portfolio, in addition to adding return
Portfolio Construction
Establish the optimal mix of funds and asset classes based on current investment views (separation of market exposure and active management
decisions)
Asset Allocation
Identify attractive markets and manage risk through the investment cycle
10
Diversified Growth Strategies
Expected performance comparison with an equity portfolio
Performance % pa
18
3 year range of returns (% cumulative)
80
16.3
95%
16
60
14
95%
12
10.1
10
8.6
40
50%
8.6
20
8
75%
75%
6
0
50%
25%
25%
5%
4
2
5%
-20
0
Equity Portfolio
Expected Return
Diversified Grow th Fund
Expected Volatility
-40
Diversified Growth Fund
Equity Portfolio
This forecast is the result of statistical modelling, based on a number of assumptions. There is no assurance or guarantee that the forecast will be achieved and it should not be considered as a prediction of
actual returns that may be realised in the future from the portfolio. Our assumptions may change materially with changes in underlying assumptions that may occur, among other things, as economic and market
conditions change.
Source: Schroders. Expected returns are in Sterling.
11
Financial Markets and the Economic Cycle
Absolute return
Cash
Recession
Recovery
Absolute return
Property
Key: Preferred asset class by stage of cycle
Equity
High yield
Equity
Expansion
Graph for illustration purposes only
Source: Schroders
Asset classes behave differently through the
various stages of the market cycle
Equity
Cash
Slow-down
Commodities
12
Portfolio Construction
Active management where it works
Inefficient
Currency
Japanese Equity
History shows that some benchmarks are much harder to beat than others
US Small Cap Equity
Emerging Market Equity
Use of investor skill - hedge fund and currency management
European Equity
Emerging Market Debt
Examples of active management in Schroder Diversified Growth Strategies
Global Equities
Active management in US small and mid caps (inefficient market)
UK Equities
European High Alpha Fund (inefficient market)
US Equities
UK Aggregate Bonds
Active currency management (inefficient market)
European Corporate Bonds
US Aggregate Bonds
European Government Bonds
European Money Market
Efficient
13
Example - Diversified Growth Strategy
Allocation
Fund Holdings
Global Equity 47%
Property 12%
Hedge Fund of Funds 10%
Active Currency 5%
High Yield Bonds 8%
Emerging Market Debt 5%
Private Equity 3%
Commodities 5%
Infrastructure 5%
Source: Schroders, for illustration only
* Net position from futures position
Specialist UK Equity 7%
UK Smaller Company Equities 1%
High Alpha European Equities 13%
Core European Fund 4%
US Smaller Company Equities 3%
Japanese Smaller Company Equities 1%
Asia Equity 3%
Passive Equity* 5%
Core Global Equity 3%
Unconstrained Global Equity 7%
UK Property 7%
Global Property Security 5%
Hedge Fund of Funds 10%
Active Currency 5%
Private Equity 3%
Infrastructure 5%
High Yield Bonds 8%
Emerging Market Debt 5%
Passive Commodities 5%
14
Broadening the Sources of Return and Managing Risk
Contribution to Return
0.4%
Contribution to Risk
9.3%
Schroder Alpha
0.8%
0.5%
6.4%
9.3%
6.9%
External Alpha
9.0%
0.8%
1.0%
Equity Beta
Credit Exposure
Property Exposure
2.3%
Estimated Return 5.8% p.a.
in excess of RPI
Other Alternatives
Exposure
59.1%
Estimated Volatility 10.1%p.a.
Based on analysis of the Schroder Diversified Growth Fund
Source: Schroders Multi-Asset Risk Technology (SMART). This is based upon a neutral asset allocation
Case Study: The Schroder Retirement Benefits Scheme
16
Investment Strategy Framework
Clear objectives
Total assets
Growth Portfolio - Return focussed assets
Wider growth portfolios beyond equities
Less constrained investing
Potential Broader diversifiers
— Private Equity
— Property
— High Yield Bonds and Emerging Market Debt
— Hedge Fund strategies
— Commodities
— Separation of active management and market exposure
Liability Portfolio - Liability focussed assets
Remove unrewarded risks
Better fixed income
Interest rate and inflation risk management
— Interest rate swaps
— Inflation swaps
Fund Manager Added value (alpha)
17
The Schroder Retirement Benefits Scheme
Schroders
Size
£480m end December 2005
Type
Defined Benefit
Coverage
UK employees of Schroders Plc
Open/ closed
Closed
FRS 17 Funding
100%
Liability breakdown (Jan 2004)
49% pensioners, 26% deferred, 25% actives
18
The Challenges
What can we do?
Our staff are living longer
Nothing, luckily! Insure in the future?
Our plan sponsor’s time horizon has shortened
Reduce risk by matching part of the liability
The returns on the Scheme’s assets are not sufficiently
linked to future interest rates and inflation
Introduce other asset classes for greater diversification, and seek to focus on
and separate managers’ skill from the market exposure
Timing of revised pension fund strategy implementation
Use rigorous market and investment analysis
19
Agreeing Objectives
Major Priorities
Minimise long term contributions
Schroders
Trustees
2nd
1st
Maintain Funding Level
Avoid sharp 1 year decline in Funding Level
1st
Have fixed level of contributions
–
Company’s willingness and ability to contribute provides opportunity to reconcile preferences
–
£35 million contribution agreed to fully fund pension deficit
Agreed risk preference: minimise long run contributions subject to no
more than 5% chance of a 10% decline in funding level in any individual year
2nd
20
Investment Strategies – Risk and Return vs Liabilities
Excess return (% pa)
5
Schroder Growth Portfolio
Schroder’s Recommended Portfolio
(35% Liability Matched, 65% Growth)
4
3
2
Original
Schroder
Portfolio
Liability Matching
Portfolio
1
0
0
Source:Schroders
2
4
6
8
10
Tracking Error (% pa)
21
Implemented Investment Strategy
Asset Class Exposure
Fund Allocation
Liability-Matched 35%
Liability Matched
Growth Portfolio
35%
65%
Equities 30%
Emerging Debt\High Yield 8%
Property 10%
Total Fund
Private Equity 4%
Hedge Funds 6%
Expected Return
Expected Risk
* Measured relative to the liabilities
Source: Schroders
3.0% p.a.*
5.9% p.a.*
Other 7%
22
Manager Skill (alpha) exposure
‘Unconstrained’ Equities
High ‘alpha’ benchmark mandated equities
Private Equity
Active High Yield/ Emerging Market Debt management
Property
Hedge Funds
Active Currency
Active asset allocation and portfolio construction
23
Evolution of the Investment Strategy
end year, % of benchmark
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2002
Defensive assets (bonds, cash)
Source: Schroders
2005
2006
Listed Equities
Alternatives
24
Diversified Growth Investing
Summary
Diversified Growth Investing exploits three sources of return
—
Market return – inclusion of many lowly correlated assets
—
Active return – specialist management within markets
—
Asset allocation – actively position portfolios for return and downside risk purposes
This approach is geared towards achieving the long term performance objectives of real growth
Not necessarily benchmark driven
Risk and Reward balanced in portfolio construction
25
Important Information
Past performance is not a guide to future returns. The value of investments can fall as well as rise as a result of market movements. Investments in smaller
companies may be less liquid than in larger companies and price swings may therefore be greater than in larger company funds. Exchange rate changes may cause
the value of overseas investments to rise or fall. Less developed markets are generally less well regulated than the UK, they may be less liquid and may have less
reliable custody arrangements. Investors should be aware that investments in emerging markets involve a high degree of risk and should be seen as long term in
nature. The Portfolio will invest in some higher-yielding bonds (non-investment grade). The risk of default is higher with non-investment grade bonds than with
investment grade bonds. Higher yielding bonds may also have an increased potential to erode your capital sum than lower yielding bonds. The Portfolio will invest in
Property Funds and Property Investment Companies. It may be difficult to deal in these investments because the underlying properties may not be readily saleable
which may affect liquidity.
This document is not an offer or a solicitation to acquire or dispose of an interest in securities or other investment instruments described herein. This document
contains outline, indicative terms for discussion purposes only and is not intended to provide the sole basis for evaluation of the instruments described. Terms are
purely indicative and may change in line with market conditions. Any recipient of this document agrees that the appropriateness of any described structure to its
particular situation will be independently determined, including consideration related to the legal, tax and other related aspects of any transaction. The information
and opinions and associated estimates and forecasts contained in this document have been obtained from or are based on sources believed by us to be reliable, but
no responsibility can be accepted for error of fact or opinion. Schroders has expressed its own views and opinions in this presentation and these may change. This
does not exclude or restrict any duty or liability that Schroder Investment Management Limited (SIM Ltd) has to its customers under the Financial Services and
Markets Act 2000 (as amended from time to time) or any other regulatory system.
For your security, communications may be taped or monitored. For the purposes of the Data Protection Act 1998, the data controller in respect of any personal data
you supply is Schroder Investment Management Limited (SIM Ltd). Personal information you supply may be processed for the purposes of investment administration
by the Schroders Group which may include the transfer of data outside of the European Economic Area. SIM Ltd may also use such information for marketing
activities unless you notify it otherwise in writing.
Schroder Investment Management Limited
31 Gresham Street, London, EC2V 7QA
Telephone
+44 (0)20 7658.6000
Fax
+44 (0)20 7658 6965
Authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority