Mass PRIM Allocates More Than $2B to Credit Managers in New Commitments

The pensions board approved $3.5 billion in total commitments, and saw its assets grow to $104.2 billion. 



The Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Management Board, which manages the state’s pension reserves investment trust fund, announced at its May 30
board meeting that it achieved a 3.7% return in the first quarter of 2024.

Assets of the fund reached $104.2 billion at the end of the quarter, which PRIM CIO Michael Trotsky noted was the  largest balance in the history of the fund. 

The PRIT fund returned 11.4%, 6.0%, 8.9%, and 8.0% annualized over the past one, three, five, and 10 years, as of March 31, 2024. 

In the first quarter, U.S. large cap equities were the best performing asset class, returning 10.6%. U.S. small and mid-cap equites returned 6.9%, and developed international equities returned 4.6%. Emerging markets equities returned 4.3%.

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The fund’s private debt assets returned 3.4%, while portfolio-completion strategies and private equity returned 3.1% and 2.7% respectively. Emerging market debt and U.S. high yield assets both returned 2.4%.

Timberland and short-term fixed income returned 0.3%, while real estate returned a negative 2.3%, and U.S. Treasury STRIPS negative 6%. Inflation linked bonds also had negative returns, as did core fixed income, returning negative 0.2% and negative 2.3%, respectively.

Manager Selection 

The PRIM board approved $3.5 billion in new commitments, with about $2 billion in commitments to credit managers and more than $400 million in follow-on commitments to existing managers. The board also approved $600 million in commitments to private equity managers, and $175 million to portfolio-completion strategies. 

Global Equities 

The board approved $1.2 billion in commitments to global equities managers, approving initial allocations of $400 million each to C WorldWide Asset Management, PineStone Asset Management and Walter Scott & Partners as part of a world ex-U.S. growth equity mandate.

Funds for the commitments will be sourced from the existing $9.7 billion developed international equity portfolio, specifically its actively managed portion, which comprises 78% of the portfolio. In total, 12.3% of the portfolio will be reallocated to the three managers. 

Multi-Asset Credit

The board also approved $2 billion in allocations to several managers as part of a multi-asset class credit strategy, which will be a strategy under the value-added fixed-income portfolio of the fund.

Initial allocations of $300 million were approved to Anchorage Capital Advisors, $600 million to HPS Investment Partners, and $500 and $200 million to two KKR credit funds, Multi-Asset Credit and Global Credit Opportunities.

Another $400 million allocation was approved to Shenkman Capital Management as a part of the multi-asset class credit strategy.

The board also approved an initial allocation of $200 million to Morgan Properties’ Morgan Properties Separately Managed Account as part of a separate credit opportunity. The fund’s strategy is to acquire Freddie Mac B-piece securities, which are the most junior tranche of Freddie Mac mortgage loan securitizations.

The funds for the multi-asset class credit strategy will be sourced from the existing public value-added fixed-income portfolio. The fund will reduce its allocation to high-yield bonds by 1 percentage point and bank loans by 1 percentage point to fund a 2-percentage-point increase in allocation to multi-asset credit.

Portfolio-Completion Strategies 

A commitment of up to $175 million was approved to Eidos Partners’ Eidos Italian Distressed Loan Fund III, which was a follow-on recommendation, PRIM had previously allocated to fund II. 

Eidos’ strategy is to acquire small pools of non-performing loans which are secured by residential and commercial real estate located in Italy. This is the only commitment made to the fund’s portfolio completion strategy portfolio, which is a pool of hedge fund and real asset allocations. 

Private Equity 

The PRIM board approved an investment recommendation to allocate $100 million to Five Elms Capital Five Elms Fund VI, a growth equity software private equity investment. Five Elms is a new manager for PRIM. 

The fund also approved three follow-on investments, two of which will be allocated to Thoma Bravo. The board approved $200 million to Thoma Bravo Fund XVI, and $125 million to Thoma Bravo Discover Fund V. PRIM has previously allocated to 17 prior Thoma Bravo funds. 

The third follow-on investment will be allocated to Stone Point Capital’s Trident X fund, which will receive a commitment of up to $175 million. The fund has a focus on investing in middle market financial services companies in North America. 

Requests for Proposals

The board of PRIM approved the issuance for a request for proposal for REIT investment managers. The goal of the RFP is to select one or more managers to provide long-only U.S. REIT exposure for PRIM, which would fall under the fund’s real estate and timberlands portfolio. 

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Church Commissioners for England Appoints Poppy Allonby as Endowment CIO

Allonby’s appointment as investment chief of the $12.74 billion fund is effective September.  

Poppy Allonby has been named as CIO of the Church Commissioners for England, the endowment of the Church of England. Allonby will succeed Tom Joy, who left the Commissioners to become CIO of an unnamed family office.  

“I am really excited to welcome Poppy as our new Chief Investment Officer. This is a key appointment for us at the Church Commissioners, since the wise stewardship of the Church of England’s permanent endowment fund is at the heart of what we do–allowing us to support the Church now and for generations to come,” said Gareth Mostyn, chief executive of the Church Commissioners for England, in a statement. 

Allonby’s appointment as the investment chief of the 10 –billion pound ($12.74 billion) fund will be effective at the end of September. The Church Commissioners began its search for a new CIO in February, following Joy’s announcement that he would step down in April.  

“I am delighted and honored to join the Church Commissioners as its CIO, an organization globally recognized as a leader in sustainable investment,” said Allonby in a statement. “My focus will be on delivering strong, consistent returns to meet the Commissioners’ core purpose, which is to support the mission and ministry of the Church of England – and to do so in an ethical, sustainable way.” 

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Allonby has been the head of ESG enablement at T. Rowe Price since June 2022. She has been a member of the board of the Church Commissioners for England since 2014 and sits on the assets committee of the endowment. Allonby was named a young global leader of the World Economic Forum in 2016 and sits on the external advisory board of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Energy Initiative.  

Previously, Allonby spent 21 years at BlackRock, most recently as a managing director and head of global product group in Europe and Asia between 2017 and 2020, based in London. At BlackRock, she has also worked as head of the global energy team and a portfolio manager. Allonby holds a Bachelor of Science in physics from Imperial College London.  

Related Stories: 

Church of England Searching for New CIO 

Anouk van der Boor Appointed CIO of The Directors Guild of America Pension 

NYU Appoints Michelle Knudsen as CIO of $5.9B Endowment 

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