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Five ways to optimise end-game portfolios: a practitioner’s perspective 

Mahmoud El-Shaer, CFA, Fixed Income Portfolio Manager
2024-04-30
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The views expressed are those of the author at the time of writing. Other teams may hold different views and make different investment decisions. The value of your investment may become worth more or less than at the time of original investment. While any third-party data used is considered reliable, its accuracy is not guaranteed. For professional, institutional, or accredited investors only.

The magnitude of market volatility and subsequent collateral calls stemming from the large UK fiscal package announced on 26 September 2022 has left many pension schemes in a position where they should now focus on their end-stage or end-game portfolio. However, I think recent events, including the dislocation of the gilt market and the US regional bank turmoil, are symptomatic of a new, more volatile regime, which will have major implications for how schemes should construct and optimise their end-game portfolios.

The backdrop

When building an end-game portfolio, I think it is extremely important for schemes to adjust to the new market regime, where central banks have moved away from their implicit contract with investors to support risk markets pre-emptively as they are forced to continue hiking and keep interest rates high irrespective of the impact on growth. Thus, we can no longer view central banks as volatility suppressors; instead, they have become volatility generators. Technical developments — including shrinking broker balance sheets — are also driving greater market moves. In combination, these factors have contributed to the emergence of a regime of more frequent and volatile cycles, in which both timing the cycle and security selection are key when building an end-game portfolio.

Below, I highlight five aspects that I believe warrant particular attention.

1. Take advantage of this more cyclical regime

As long-term investors, I think schemes can turn this more cyclical regime to their advantage by investing in long-dated assets when spreads are sufficiently wide and yields are sufficiently high to optimise alignment with cash-flow requirements throughout the end stage. 

Figure 1 illustrates why getting this right is so important. It displays the historical option-adjusted spread (OAS) of the Bloomberg Barclays Sterling Aggregate Corporate Index (dark-blue line) as well as the median value (light-blue line) of the monthly OAS numbers below (light-orange line) and above (dark-orange line) 150 basis points (bps), which we believe is a reasonable proxy for the spread range between normal and stressed market conditions. 

Figure 1

five-ways-to-optimise-end-game-portfolios-fig1

The chart shows that the median value below 150 bps was 115 bps, whereas above 150 bps, the median reached 207 bps — an additional 92 bps. This means that, theoretically, investing only during periods of market stress — assumed to be when spreads exceed 150 bps — would push the median up to 207 bps. The majority of this additional 92 bps between the two medians is often attributed to the meaningfully higher liquidity and risk premium of the credit, which investors are able to harvest. In practice, there is no guarantee that this pattern will continue or that investors would we able to capture the full extent of the spread increases, but it underscores the significant potential for spread pick-up during periods of stress.

2. Consider the time horizon

In my view, optimising the potential for spread pick-up throughout the cycle necessitates a far more thoughtful approach than using a 150 bps proxy. In practice, the process should be informed by a broad range of perspectives to ensure the point of market entry is favourable. I think it is also important to build the end-game portfolio over a longer time horizon as this provides greater flexibility to shift opportunistically from short, liquid names into the final holdings. Doing so can allow you to capture higher spreads without the need to move down the quality curve. Another advantage of this longer build-out process is the greater scope for diversification it provides, further strengthening the portfolio.

Adopting this longer-term, more thoughtful approach to the build out also helps to facilitate the active dialogue between a scheme, adviser and asset manager that is needed to ensure all obligations are met and the portfolio is designed with the specific needs of the scheme in mind. Importantly, this includes the effective coordination of the end-game portfolios with the hedging of liabilities. Based on my experience, this requires the portfolio manager to: 

  • Set duration targets that are optimal for the given scheme’s liability hedging strategy 
  • Provide daily analytics on the portfolio, particularly where schemes use another LDI manager for overall scheme analytics
  • Ensure assets are available for collateral use across the scheme’s exposures.

3. Strengthen security selection 

Security selection is another key part of the puzzle. Having a robust, comprehensive and thorough security selection framework should enable end-stage portfolios to be constructed with only stable or improving names. In my view, this greatly reduces the probability of credit-related sales and allows turnover to remain minimal. In practice, I believe matching assets should:

  • Reflect stable-to-improving credit fundamentals
  • Factor in long-term risks (such as sustainability and climate) 
  • Offer optimised spread capture relative to costs 

For each asset, I would advocate considering a diverse set of actuarial, ESG and investment views across all the liabilities of a company/sector prior to purchase. 

4. Focus on liquidity

Events such as the COVID crisis, the fallout of the UK mini-budget and, more recently, the turmoil in the banking sector, have provided a stark illustration of why schemes need to maintain a sufficient proportion of liquid allocations. In my opinion, reduced central bank liquidity is likely to exacerbate the potential for similar events to occur. Having a portfolio of highly liquid, investment-grade, publicly traded names to generate income and match liabilities should enable schemes to retain flexibility in their investment allocations and, if necessary, include the portfolio in contingency planning for part of their collateral waterfall. 

5. Factor in sustainability and climate risk

I believe that the long-term nature of these end-game portfolios requires the systematic incorporation of sustainability and climate risks into the investment framework. Schemes should expect their managers to engage pro-actively with companies held within the portfolio and support them in achieving the desired goals. Because end-game portfolios look to hold bonds to term maturity, I also think it is prudent to consider maturity limits for certain sectors. Energy is a good example of such a sector. Mapping these limits requires knowledge of likely transition paths and the impact of physical risk. In our case, for instance, we have been collaborating with The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to gain a better understanding of peak energy demand. As a result, we have been able to invest intentionally further out the curve and be more differentiated across sub-industry groups.

Key takeaways 

  • Looking ahead, I believe global credit markets will experience more dislocations due to a reduction in liquidity as well as greater cyclical volatility. 
  • It is my conviction that this regime shift creates opportunities for schemes to capture additional yield when building their end-game portfolios. 
  • Careful design is critical. Based on my experience, an optimised approach involves combining a deep understanding of the cycle with security selection expertise informed by multiple perspectives.
  • Thoughtful consideration of liquidity and sustainability risk as well as ongoing engagement with portfolio companies can further enhance long-term portfolio stability. 

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