April 19, 2024

World’s biggest pension fund hit by $52bn loss

© Lucas JacksonSterling pounded in market bloodbath as UK votes to leave EU, Cameron quits

The value of the fund’s assets dropped $1.3 trillion last quarter, wiping out all the gains GPIF made since October 2014, when it revised its investment strategy and put more money into stocks and foreign bonds.

The decline is another disappointment for the fund after a reported annual loss of 3.8 percent for the year ended in March, the worst performance since the financial crisis in 2008.

Concerns over the US economic outlook as well as UK’s vote to quit the European Union significantly hurt global equity markets, boosting demand for Japanese currency which was seen as a haven for investors in a time of economic uncertainty.

As a result, the yen surged against other currencies, reducing the value of overseas assets by 7.8 percent.

“The results of the UK’s referendum turned out to be different from what the market expected. And US unemployment data in May was much worse than forecast,” said Norihiro Takahashi, the president of GPIF in a statement.

A woman uses a smart phone next to an electronic stock quotation board, as cherry blossoms bloom, outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan © Issei KatoJapan’s central bank shocks markets by keeping stimulus on hold

Moreover, the fund’s domestic shares dropped 7.4 percent in the same period as the Topix index, the leading Japanese stock benchmark, faced a 7.5 percent decline.

Domestic bonds became the only asset with a profitable performance as the Bank of Japan’s negative interest rates sent yields lower.

As for the current quarter, strong US jobs data for June boosted the markets while Brexit turmoil calmed down, according to Shinichiro Mori, the GPIF’s deputy director-general of investment strategy.

“The markets have since restored stability, and I believe stock markets are on a recovery trend. In the meantime, the exchange rate, the dollar/yen rate, is still flat. We are going to carefully monitor its movements going forward,” Shinichiro Mori said, as quoted by WSJ.com.

As of June, 21 percent of the fund’s investments were held in local stocks with 39 percent in domestic bonds. Overseas equities totaled 21 percent of assets, while foreign debt accounted for 13 percent. GPIF targets allocations of 25 percent each for Japanese and overseas stocks, 35 percent for local bonds and 15 percent for foreign debt.

READ MORE: Brexit fears grim US data push Asian shares to 1-yr high

“We invest with a long-term view. Even if market prices fluctuate in the short-term, it won’t damage pension beneficiaries. We are also strengthening risk management and continuing to hire experts,” said the fund’s president.

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/357310-biggest-pension-fund-billions-loss/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Speak Your Mind