Hedge Funds and Pensions explains the growing connection between pension investments and hedge funds – examining the many reasons why public and private pension plans invest with hedge funds, including portfolio diversification, risk management, and reliable returns. And, with demographic challenges, many pensions face growing hurdles to meeting their financial obligation.
This educational presentation features data from industry provider Preqin outlining the growing relationship between pensions and hedge funds. Learn more about why pensions invest with hedge funds and how endowments, foundations, and other non-profit organizations utilize hedge funds to manage their portfolios.
Learn more about the global hedge fund industry at: www.hedgefundfundamentals.com.
2. Hedge Funds and Pensions
Contents
Overview
Table of Contents:
Hedge funds originated as an investment vehicle to help
diversify portfolios, manage risk, and produce reliable
returns over time. While hedge funds’ investor base has
evolved though the years – from individuals to institutions
such as pension plans, universities, and foundations –
their core goals have not.
Overview
3
Why Institutions Invest with Hedge Funds
4
•
Public and State Pension Plans
5
Institutions face mounting challenges toward meeting their
financial obligations. Pension plans, in particular, face
demographic challenges resulting in a funding shortfall.
•
Corporate Pension Plans
7
•
University Endowments
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•
Foundations
As a result, pension plans have shifted investment
strategies in recent years to alternative investments including hedge funds - which have helped place
institutions on firmer ground over the long-term. This
presentation details the growing partnerships between
hedge funds and public and corporate pension plans.
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3. Hedge Funds and Pensions
Overview
Hedge funds’ investor base has evolved significantly
over the years, with 66% of assets under management
currently coming from institutional investors such as
pensions, endowments, and foundations.
Many institutions are currently working to cope with
major demographic and fiscal challenges, including
funding shortfalls, which impact corporate and public
pensions’ abilities to fulfill their funding obligations. As
a result, institutions are increasingly seeking ways to
diversify their investment portfolios to produce reliable
returns.
*Source: 2014 Preqin Global Hedge Fund Report, January 2014
FACT: 66% of hedge fund assets are
held by institutional investors.
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4. Hedge Funds and Pensions
Why Institutions Invest with Hedge Funds
Sample Corporate Pension Asset Allocation Table:
Pension funds have realized that a simple
mix of stocks and bonds will no longer
provide the returns required to meet their
obligations to pensioners.
This reality has produced an industry
evolution that has led to more pensions
investing in allocations and thereby growing
the universe of individuals who benefit from
hedge fund investments.
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5. Hedge Funds and Pensions
Public and State Pensions Invest in Hedge Funds
Public and state employee pension plans offer retirement security for millions of workers,
retirees, and their families nationwide. These pension plans have increasingly partnered with
hedge funds to help diversify their investments and help to provide economic security to their
beneficiaries.
A recent study estimated that a
modest allocation to hedge funds
could improve returns of U.S.
public pension plans by
approximately $13.67 billion
annually.*
*Source: The Changing Role of Hedge Funds in the Global Economy, Everett Ehrlich, pp. 1 (September, 2011)
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6. Hedge Funds and Pensions
Public Pensions Invest in Hedge Funds
Hedge funds’ investor base in the U.S. at the
state and public plan level is diverse.
Investors in hedge funds range from unions
such as AFL-CIO to local retirement plans in
Louisiana to teachers in Illinois.
Examples of public pension plans investing in hedge funds include:
Public pension funds are one of the most
prominent groups of institutional investors
allocating investments to hedge funds. Public
pensions currently represent over 22% of all
institutional capital invested in hedge funds. *
The number of public pension funds investing in
hedge funds in the U.S. alone has increased
significantly over the past five years from 196
known to be allocating to hedge funds in 2007 to
approximately 377 today. *
*Source: 2014 Preqin Global Hedge Fund Report, January 2014
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7. Hedge Funds and Pensions
Corporate Pensions Invest in Hedge Funds
Examples of Corporate Pension plans investing in hedge funds include:
Many of the largest employers in the U.S.
view hedge funds as an essential tool in
their investment toolbox in their efforts to
provide reliable, risk adjusted returns that
enable their plans to pay the retirement
benefits to millions of Americans.
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8. Hedge Funds and Pensions
Corporate Pensions Invest in Hedge Funds
The partnership between hedge funds and corporate pension plans has
continued to expand in recent years.
Studies indicate corporate plans are looking to increase their
allocations to hedge funds in the coming years as well. According to the
2014 Preqin Global Hedge Fund Report, nearly 19% of institutional
investor capital in hedge funds is currently held by private sector
pension funds.
Corporate pension plans investing in hedge funds include:
*Source: 2014 Preqin Global Hedge Fund Report, January 2014
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9. Hedge Funds and Pensions
University & College Endowments Invest in Hedge Funds
University and college endowments
were among the first institutions to
partner with hedge funds in the early
1990’s, and this relationship has
strengthened in recent years.
A recent study estimated that a modest
allocation to hedge funds could improve returns
of U.S. college and university endowments by
approximately $1.73 billion annually.*
Endowments investing in hedge funds include:
*Source: The Changing Role of Hedge Funds in the Global Economy, Everett Ehrlich, pp. 1 (September, 2011)
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10. Who Invests in Hedge Funds?
Foundations and Non-Profit Organizations Invest in Hedge Funds
Non-profit foundations and charitable organizations around the world partner with hedge funds to help
establish the financial resources needed to fund critical projects in local communities.
For example, The Nobel Foundation recently announced plans to invest more money in hedge funds to
boost returns to restore the award to its previous size after having to reduce its cash prize by 20% in 2012.
Here are additional, specific examples of types of Foundations that have benefitted from their investment in the
hedge fund community:
Source: Nobel Prize to Get Hedge Fund Boost After Awards Sink 20%, Bloomberg News, December 2012.
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11. Hedge Funds and Pensions
Summary
The partnership between hedge funds and
pensions continues to grow. Pension funds are
seeking reliable returns and diversified portfolios,
with many plans increasing existing allocations
with hedge funds. These plans use a variety of
asset allocation techniques and most call for a
significant allocation to hedge funds and other
alternative investment options over the next few
years.
Hedge funds are not a silver bullet for the
challenges facing public pensions, but they are
increasingly part of a comprehensive and
responsible approach toward meeting financial
obligations.
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