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Pension fund

NPS’ investment return at all-time high in 2019; alternatives lag

Feb 28, 2020 (Gmt+09:00)

2 Min read

The National Pension Service (NPS) achieved its strongest investment return of 11.31% in 2019, led by hefty gains from equities and overseas fixed-income securities, while gains from alternatives slowed to a single-digit rate.


The 2019 result is the highest since the $610 billion pension scheme set up the Investment Management department in 1999 and compares with a negative 0.92% return in 2018.


Global equities returned 30.63%, powered by stock market rallies and as the weaker won boosted foreign-currency translation gains, NPS said in a statement on Feb. 27.


In comparison, returns from alternative investments dipped to 9.62%, from 11.81% a year earlier.


The share of alternatives both at home and abroad was little changed at 11.5% of total assets which grew by 15% to 736.7 trillion won ($610 billion) by the end of 2019.


It gave no breakdown between domestic and overseas alternative portfolios.


200228-nps-2019-result_2


NPS is aiming to increase the proportion of alternatives to 15% by 2024 to 150 trillion won in value.


“We are expecting assets under management to reach 1,000 trillion won by 2024 and 1,700 trillion won by 2041. Given that, we will likely have a ‘golden time’ over the next 10 years during which we can make active asset management without liquidity concerns,” NPS said in the statement.


“Against this background, we are preparing a comprehensive plan for global investments in order to maximize returns by facilitating investment abroad.”


The comprehensive investment plan includes buying equity interests in global asset managers to make strategic cooperation which would lead to co-investment, or dispatch of NPS employees to the global investment houses for training, Korean news outlet edaily said on Feb. 26.


“NPS has been suffering from a chronic problem of continual outflows of investment staff because of its geographical location and low pay and performance bonus,” edaily quoted an unnamed investment banking source as saying. “It may be able to solve the problem with the dispatch program."


NPS was not immediately reached for comment.


This week, it announced a plan to hire 13 investment staff to bolster global and alternative investments.


The world's third-largest pension fund runs three foreign offices in New York, London and Singapore with 28 employees, below the quota of 40, Yonhap Infomax reported on Feb. 20.


By Jung-hwan Hwang


jung@hankyung.com


Yeonhee Kim edited this article

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