Pension funds increasing alternative asset allocations, says study |
Date: Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Author: Emily Perryman, HedgeWeek
The 2012 Global Alternative Survey
notes the number as a five per cent increase from 15 years ago.
The research, which was conducted by Towers Watson, and which included the
diverse ranges of figures and asset calculation, showed that pensions fund
representing 36 per cent of the top 100 manager assets figured into the
“alternative” category.
Also noted is the wealth managers holding 19 per cent, insurance companies
holding nine per cent, sovereign wealth funds sitting at six per cent, and
banks holding at five per cent, with funds of other sub-funds sitting at
three per cent. Endowments and foundation funds were in last at two per cent
of the overall tallies.
Craig Baker, who headed the Towers Watson Investment research, says pensions
have always been a large investor group for alternative managers and that
the trend will persist for the foreseeable future.
"For almost all of the past ten years of this research we have seen
increasing allocations to alternative assets by a wide range of investors,”
he says. "Not only has the appeal of alternative assets broadened to include
insurers and sovereign wealth funds, but the range of alternative assets has
also increased beyond the likes of real estate and private equity to include
direct hedge funds, infrastructure and commodities. It is therefore not
surprising, that allocations to alternative assets by pension funds for
example now account for around 19 per cent of all pension fund assets
globally, up from five per cent 15 years ago."
Such assets increased nearly eight per cent from 2012 numbers and reached
USD1.3trn, according to the ranking of top 100 asset managers pension funds.
Regarding alternatives, the largest share of pension was held in real estate
managers with 39 per cent. This was followed by private equity funds of
funds at 20 per cent and private equity at 14 per cent. Hedge funds sat at
nine per cent overall, tied with infrastructure, and edging out funds of
hedge funds at seven per cent. Commodities were at one per cent overall.
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