Pension fund executives around the world are putting their faith — and assets — into emerging markets to provide more investment bang for the buck.
Pension fund executives around the world are putting their faith — and assets — into emerging markets to provide more investment bang for the buck.
But some consultants and money managers think that pension funds still have a long way to go and need to in-crease those allocations closer to 35% of total assets — or roughly the weighting of emerging markets in the global economy — from the current allocation of about 5% or less for the average fund.
“Where pension funds are [invested in emerging markets], relative to where they should be, is a massive underweight position,” said Jerome Booth, head of research and a member of the investment committee at Ashmore Investment Management Ltd. “This reality has been true for a while, but the credit crunch has made it much more obvious.”
The financial crisis has challenged several historical assumptions about investments in developing nations, including the level of volatility, liquidity constraints and ability to withstand a severe global downturn.
So far, emerging markets generally have fared better than major economies in weathering the storm, helping to attract assets at a record pace.
“We're in the midst of resetting the clock on emerging markets. Going into this crisis, the assumption that many pension plans — even the most sophisticated — made was that emerging markets would do less well than developed countries coming out of it,” said Cynthia Steer, chief research strategist and head of the beta research group at consulting firm RogersCasey Inc.
“A whole new construct is evolving, driven by factors such as higher [gross- domestic-product] growth and a lower impact from the banking crisis on emerging markets.
“This is a presage to a reevaluation of the risk/return relationship between developing and developed markets” by defined-benefit pension fund executives, Ms. Steer said. “I think it is long overdue,” she said.
The Morgan Stanley Capital International Emerging Markets Index climbed 7.2% in the 12-month period after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. declared bankruptcy on Sept. 15, 2008. By comparison, the Russell 3000 Index was down 11.7%, and the MSCI World Index, which tracks stocks in developed markets, returned -9.6%.
Emerging markets now account for about 12% of the MSCI All Country World Index, which tracks companies in both developed and developing countries, compared with 5% at the beginning of this decade. However, the average exposure for pension funds investing in emerging-markets equity is between 3% and 8% of the total equity portfolio, and the average range for the emerging-markets fixed-income allocation is from 2% to 5%, according to estimates from consultants.
Alternative investments in emerging markets probably total less than 2% of the total portfolio even for the most sophisticated pension funds, they said. Depending on individual funds' risk/return targets, many should be doubling those exposures within the next five years, consultants said.
"FORWARD-LOOKING' FACTORS
If considering other “forward-looking” factors such as future purchasing power of emerging economies combined with their outlook for the GDP, the allocation could go as high as 50% of total assets, said Mr. Booth of Ashmore, which had $31 billion in assets as of Sept. 30.
Some funds that have added exposure to emerging markets in the past year include the 2.5 trillion Norwegian-kroner ($448 billion) Government Pension Fund-Global; the 64.25 billion Australian-dollar ($59.3 billion) Future Fund; the Ilmarinen Mutual Pension Insurance Co. of Finland, a 21.6-billion-euro ($32.2 billion) multiemployer pension fund; the $23 billion Arizona State Retirement System; the 7-billion-pound ($11.6 billion) West Midlands Pension Fund; and the Vermont Pension Investment Committee, which oversees the state's funds, including the $1.5 billion State Teachers Retirement System and the $1.3 billion State Employees' Retirement System.
The $201.1 billion California Public Employees' Retirement System is in the middle of a broader review of its global-equity portfolio, which accounted for 51.7% of total assets as of July 31.
Part of the plan is to shift the custom benchmark further from the United States and will likely include a higher allocation to emerging markets, said sources familiar with the fund.
Clark McKinley, spokesman for the fund, wrote in an e-mail: “Joseph Dear, our chief investment officer, has said more than once in recent days that emerging markets continue to be the most promising part of our global-equity portfolio.”
CalPERS officials have been increasing allocations to external managers running emerging-markets equity assets, Mr. McKinley said. Information on how much was added to each manager wasn't available, but overall, about $3.5 billion in emerging-markets assets are managed externally by AllianceBernstein LP, Batterymarch Financial Management, Dimensional Fund Advisors, Genesis Investment Management LLP, Lazard Asset Management LLC and Pictet Asset Management.
“Clients have been spending more time considering what the drivers of global [emerging-markets] economic growth are and how to potentially target that growth” in their asset allocation model, said Craig Mercer, a senior investment consultant within the global manager research team at Watson Wyatt Worldwide.
“Many of our clients are underweight emerging markets relative to the market capitalization of global markets. If you look at it from a GDP-weighted perspective, some clients are quite significantly underweight,” Mr. Mercer said.
Emerging economies account for about 35% of the global economy on a GDP-weighted basis. Emerging markets' real GDP growth is expected to reach 5% next year, from 1.75% in 2009, powered by China, India and Brazil among others, according to the World Economic Outlook report published last month by the International Monetary Fund.
The real GDP growth in the United States is expected to hover around 1.9%, while Japan's is about 1.4%. Eurozone advanced economies will probably grow at a rate of 0.9% next year, according the report.
Pension fund executives are heeding the call to put more money in developing nations.
One of the more aggressive moves into emerging markets oc-curred at Ilmarinen, which raised its target exposure to 14% of the 6.5--billion-euro ($9.6 billion) equity portfolio, from 10% earlier this year. Also, emerging-markets fixed income doubled to 4% of the bonds portfolio, from 2% at yearend 2008, said Timo Ritakallio, Ilmarinen's deputy chief executive and head of investments.
Fund officials are considering emerging-markets alternative investments, including private equity and real estate, next year.
MORE POTENTIAL
“Emerging markets are set to have a higher growth rate [than developed markets], and therefore, we see more potential to find good investments there,” Mr. Ritakallio said. “We're just waiting for the right opportunities and the right managers.”
Judy Saunders, chief investment officer of Britain's West Midlands Pension Fund, said that the fund's target allocation to U.K. equity was reduced by 10% of total assets — or about 700 million pounds — this year. Fund officials are shifting 2 percentage points to emerging-markets equity and 8 percentage points to an absolute-return portfolio that also contains a $50 million long-short emerging-markets-debt strategy run by BlueBay Asset Management.
“We were underweight emerging-markets equities, and as the expected GDP [in emerging markets] is stronger than the developed economies', it was considered a sensible move,” Ms. Saunders said.
At the Arizona State Retirement System, officials decided last month to carve out 3% of the fund's total assets — or about $690 million — to be dedicated to emerging-markets equity. Funding will come from an international-equity portfolio that accounts for about 18% of the portfolio, of which about 1 percentage point is in emerging markets.
The strategy, which will be implemented next year, is the fund's first dedicated emerging-markets mandate, according to Paul Matson, executive director.
He added that “a modest allocation is prudent” due to several factors specific to emerging markets, such as higher expected productivity, population growth and a jump in discretionary income.
Total institutional pension fund asset inflows into emerging-markets strategies globally aren't available, but several indicators point in the same direction — that growth in the asset category still has a long way to go, consultants and managers said.
According to EPFR Global, which tracks flows into emerging-markets mutual funds, asset inflows for emerging-markets-equity strategies totaled $52.6 billion for the nine-month period ended Sept. 30, which is “within striking distance” of the $54.3 billion record set in 2007. Last year, net asset outflows in the same funds totaled $49.4 billion.
However, due to massive post-Lehman outflows, most active emerging-markets managers are still hovering below their peak levels of assets under management reached last year.
“In general, there is a resumption of a longer-term trend in which investors are gradually reallocating toward emerging markets,” said Brad Durham, managing director of EPFR Global.
Some experts invoke a cautionary note.
George Hoguet, managing director and global investment strategist specializing in emerging markets at State Street Global Advisors, said that though emerging-markets opportunities are set to broaden at least in the next five years, valuations are becoming more unattractive.
“One has to bear in mind that valuations in emerging markets are not particularly cheap,” said Mr. Hoguet, whose firm manages about $34 billion in dedicated emerging-markets strategies.
Nicola Ralston, director of independent consultant PiRho Investment Consulting, warned against overweighting emerging markets simply because those nations are deemed to be growing at a faster pace. Any additional investments should be based on the fund's own risk-adjusted return target.
“This idea that emerging markets are growing fast and that investors can easily access that growth through overweighting emerging markets is not helpful,” she said. “What [investors] might be overlooking are the additional risks — for example, volatility remains an issue.”
In certain nations, including China, access remains a constraint as a large part of the economy isn't available for purchase by overseas institutional investors. And if investors seek diversification through emerging-markets exposure, they need to consider that larger companies within emerging-markets nations are often more correlated to global — rather than domestic — growth.
Ms. Ralston added: “Investors may not be getting what they're after.”
Thao Hua is a reporter for sister publication Pensions & Investments.