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World’s largest pension fund loses Us$165bil

Japan’s GPIF posts record loss in first quarter

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TOKYO: The world’s biggest pension fund posted a record loss in the first three months of 2020 after the coronaviru­s pandemic sparked a global equity rout in the period.

Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund lost 11%, or 17.7 trillion yen (Us$164.7bil), in the three months ended March, it said in Tokyo.

The decline in value was the steepest based on comparable data back to April 2008, reducing the fund’s total assets to 150.63 trillion yen. Foreign stocks were the worst performing investment, followed by domestic equities. The results come just months after the fund revamped top management and revised its asset allocation to focus more on overseas debt.

The loss, which wiped out gains for the fiscal year, may attract political attention as social security remains a major concern for tens of millions of Japan’s retirees.

Overseas bonds were the only major asset to generate a positive quarterly return. The securities gained 0.5%, compared with losses of 0.5% for domestic bonds, 18% for local equities and 22% for foreign stocks.

In April, GPIF raised its asset allocation to foreign bonds by 10 percentage points to 25%, while keeping the target for foreign and domestic stocks unchanged at 25%.

Under the new guidance of GPIF president Masataka Miyazono and Chief Investment Officer Eiji Ueda, the fund must navigate a volatile market torn between an ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic and promises of economic stimulus measures. Fears of a second wave of outbreak are already hampering the global equity markets recovery. During the January-march quarter, the MSCI All-country World Index of global stocks slumped 22% and the S&P 500 Index fell 20%, while Topix also dropped 18%. Yields on the 10-year US Treasuries slumped 125 basis points during the same period, while benchmark Japanese government bond yields rose about 3 basis points. The Japanese yen gained 1% against the dollar, and rose almost 3% against the euro.from April, GPIF set a general target to keep 25% of its basic portfolio in all four asset classes, with the allocation of each allowed to deviate by different ranges.

The fund allows domestic equities to deviate from the 25% allocation by eight percentage points, compared with seven for stocks abroad. Domestic debt can deviate by seven percentage points, versus six for foreign bonds. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Plunge in value: Signage is displayed at the entrance to the GPIF office in Tokyo, Japan. The decline in the fund’s value was the steepest based on comparable data back to April 2008, reducing the fund’s total assets to 150.63 trillion yen. Foreign stocks were the worst performing investment, followed by domestic equities.— Bloomberg
Plunge in value: Signage is displayed at the entrance to the GPIF office in Tokyo, Japan. The decline in the fund’s value was the steepest based on comparable data back to April 2008, reducing the fund’s total assets to 150.63 trillion yen. Foreign stocks were the worst performing investment, followed by domestic equities.— Bloomberg

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