…and abolishes $425m hedge fund exposure

The NSW Local Government Superannuation Scheme (LGSS) has pulled its entire allocation to hedge funds – totalling $425 million – and invested half of the redeemed capital in high-grade Australian credit.

The $5.6 billion fund put redemption requests to hedge fund-of-funds (HFoFs) run by BlackRock, Warrakirri and FRM Investment Management in recent months, disappointed by the funds’ degrees of correlation with listed markets.

To date, about half of its mandates had been returned and invested in a discrete mandate targeting high-grade Australian credit, ranging from government, corporate and synthetic debt instruments, run by Macquarie Bank.

“We went into that asset class thinking that hedge funds would be uncorrelated to sharemarkets. Not only the returns, but also the correlations, are not what they were promised to be,” Lambert said.

But the fund would not rule out future investments in hedge funds.

“This is not to say that we won’t return to that space in the future – but we wouldn’t go back to hedge FoFs.”

Lambert said the lack of transparency offered by hedge FoFs was another concern.

 

, , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Top1000Funds.com Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Previous