43 Investment Report PDF 362 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
43.1 The Committee considered a
report providing an update on the investment activities undertaken
by the Fund.
43.2 The Committee’s discussion
included the following key issues:
- Isio is
monitoring Longview’s performance closely, however, their
performance is not unexpected as their portfolio does less well
when technology stocks are high and interest rates are low. The
fund manager has had a couple of senior team changes and a junior
member left too, which is not a problem at the moment, however, if
there are further departures there could be a need for a review of
the situation.
- WHEB has
underperformed due to not holding sectors like oil and gas that
have performed well in the past Quarter. WHEB’s benchmark is
the MSCI World global equity index. Wellington is using the same
benchmark and has not performed as poorly, which shows that despite
both being chosen as global impact funds that tilt away from fossil
fuels, they have different stock selections, which is beneficial
for the risk exposure of the Fund.
- The UBS
infrastructure fund has performed poorly in the past quarter in
part due to the fine imposed on Southern Water, which comprises a
substantial element of the fund in which ESPF has £30m
invested. Since its inception, the performance of the fund has been
4.3%, which is lower than many other funds in the portfolio. The
strength of the secondary infrastructure market at the moment is
very buoyant and the Fund could conceivably sell the UBS
infrastructure fund without needing to provide much of a
discount.
- UBS are
due to set up an index run by Osmosis within the ACCESS pool and
transfer the ESPF’s passive market cap fund into it, as
agreed by the ESPF in June. Osmosis has been working with UBS to
come up with a solution where UBS remains the manager within the
ACCESS Passive offering, in accordance with the requirements of
LGPS pooling, whilst using the Osmosis index to ensure ESPF gets
the exposure it wants. However, there have been delays to this
process and issues remaining between both parties that means that
it will not be completed during October as planned. Further discussions between ESPF, UBS, Osmosis and
Isio may be needed to continue to move the process
forward.
- The ACCESS
pool has commissioned Minerva to develop a high-level set of
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) principles for all of
the 11 LGPS funds in the ACCESS pool to sign up to. There is
confidence these will not be lowest common denominator principles
and that individual funds generally appear to want to improve their
current ESG commitments. ESPF will not
need to replace its own ESG investment principles with those of the
ACCESS pool if they are less robust.
- All LGPS
funds remain sovereign entities but are expected by the Ministry of
Housing Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) to make any new
investments within their pooled fund unless investing in the pooled
fund would compromise the fund’s investment principles, or
prevent it from achieving ... view
the full minutes text for item 43