Posted on 02/09/2005 10:21:27 AM PST by NormsRevenge
GENEVA The booming U.S. private equity market could be heading for a crash as interest rates rise and hedge funds, desperately seeking higher returns, pour money into the sector, the chief investment officer for the biggest pension fund in the United States warned on Wednesday.
"The biggest one (asset bubble) I'm afraid of at the moment is private equity," Mark Anson, CIO for the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS), told the International Fund Management 2005 conference organised by ICBI.
"The current overhang of leveraged buyouts committed but not invested is $182 billion (end-2003 figure). A lot of money is chasing high yield. Hedge funds are competing with buy-out managers and that convergence scares me," Anson said.
CalPERS has $175 billion in assets and Anson has complete responsibility for all assets in which the pension fund invests, including domestic and international equity, global fixed income, high yield, real estate, corporate governance, currency overlay, securities lending, venture capital, leveraged buyouts and hedge funds.
The pension fund has $20 billion in private equity assets.
Anson said the skill sets deployed by hedge funds and buy-out firms are very different, with the funds using their trading abilities to quickly spot and act on mispricing opportunities in markets, whereas private equity companies look to build value long-term in their target investments.
Many private equity deals are also highly leveraged, with buyers borrowing money to magnify returns just as the U.S. interest rate cycle ticks higher with the Federal Reserve raising rates. If too much competing capital pushes down returns in long-term locked-up deals, at the same time as the price of money increases, then there is a danger investments will go sour as investors' calculations are thrown off track.
Hedge funds, which attracted $129 billion in global inflows in 2004, double the previous year, have turned to private equity in the face of falling returns in other markets.
The average returns of funds of hedge funds, the less risky chosen investment route for many institutions, last year was between 4 to 8 percent.
These returns were concentrated in November/December as global equity markets recovered after the U.S. presidential election and were little different from what could have been achieved using index tracker funds at much lower fee levels.
With equity returns in public markets essentially flat for most of 2004 and bond yields near record lows, investors have been flocking to generally higher yielding alternative investments such as hedge funds, private equity, real estate and commodities.
Anson said the best performing sector within CalPERS portfolio over the past five years has been corporate governance investments, in which it now has $3.5 billion.
"Corporate governance has performed extraordinarily well. We started corporate governance five years ago and have had returns in excess of 20 percent despite the performance of the equity markets over that period," he said.
The pension fund builds up concentrated stock positions in companies, or participates in limited partnership pools of capital with other investors to take equity stakes, and implement its corporate governance strategy.
These share positions allow CalPERS access to to the boards of faltering companies and to address issues such as excessive corporate renumeration, lacklustre management, or a failure to listen to shareholders and thereby extract better performance from its investments.
I wonder if California teachers would like it if they knew that CalPERS has $730 million invested in Carlysle.
For sure - I wonder what's really on this guy's mind...
I'm not sure what he is saying, but I don't think that is it. Sounds more bond than stock related.
I just want to know what it means regarding my 401k allocations... should I get out of bonds and fixed incomes or load up on them now?
He is talking about private equity, not stocks. The idea is that too much money will be chasing too few opportunities in private equity thus driving the returns too low to be commensurate with risk and driving money into investments that should have never been made.
Ouch! Don't even mention that dark period. The triple doubles still haunt me -- inflation, unemployment and interest rates. I had to buy a house back in '78 --- 13.5% interest rate.
I don't see that happening again.
Years ago, when my uncle told me that he bought his house at 4% interest, I thought that we would never return to those interest rates! Was shocked when those low rates returned. Never know when we will cycle back.
Didn't people in the 1920's borrow money to invest in the stock market? Hoover tried to warn them not to do it but was told to butt out. Then the crash. Seems that in some ways we are back there -- borrowing mortgages while investing in the stock market. Just wondering.
The late 70s were not part of any cycle that I'm aware of. The economy was falling --- a real recession as opposed to the mild slump we had in 01. Unemployment was soaring, 12% or more, yet inflation was also soaring instead of falling as you would expect as demand fell. They called it "stagflation" at the time and it was counterintuitive to anything you learned in econ-101.
Agree. Hopefully, it will not be in a future cycle.
Seems that financial advisors are stymied by our current conditions.
teachers have their own separate fund, Calstrs.
http://www.calstrs.com/
Thanks!
CalPERS sold 101 properties yesterday, this must be part of them .. a drop on the bucket .
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CalPERS shopping centers sell for $2.7B
http://rds.yahoo.com/S=53720272/K=calpers/v=2/SID=e/l=NSR/R=6/SIG=12pvho9tb/EXP=1108613876/*-http%3A//www.bizjournals.com/sacramento/stories/2005/02/14/daily11.html
BizJournals - Feb 14 5:51 PM
A joint venture, largely bankrolled by the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS), has reached agreement to sell a portfolio of 101 neighborhood and community shopping centers -- including two in Greater Sacramento -- for about $2.74 billion, the sellers said late Monday.
They're like the Red China of Clinton days, they have investments all over the place.
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