Asset allocation
NPS logs positive H1 return led by fixed incomes, alternatives
By Aug 28, 2020 (Gmt+09:00)
1
Min read
The National Pension Service eked out a 0.5% return on financial investments in the first half of this year, supported by solid gains from fixed-income and alternative investments, the South Korean pension fund said on August 28.
A strong rebound in stock markets during the April-June quarter sharply narrowed losses from equities portfolios, which suffered a more than 30% plunge in March alone in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak.
In the first three months to March, NPS reported a negative return of 6.08%, offsetting its 2019 return of 11.31%, that was its highest in history.
“During the first half of 2020, NPS reported a negative return at one point as the global spread of coronavirus brought an unprecedented shock to financial markets,” NPS said in a statement. “But thanks to our diversified portfolio and risk management, we recovered and achieved a positive return as of the end of June."
A string of stimulus measures unveiled by developed countries and loosened monetary policies provided a support to stock markets, while pulling interest rates lower. Lowered bond yields and the firmer won against the dollar boosted valuation gains from fixed-income securities.
By asset type, both domestic and global fixed-income securities reported positive returns during the first six months to June, outperforming their benchmark indices.
Investment gains from alternative assets are based on their interest and dividend incomes, without reflecting mark-to-market assessments, which occur annually at the end of the year.
The world’s third-largest pension scheme managed 752.2 trillion won ($634 billion) in assets as of the end of June, up 15.5 trillion won from the end of last year.
Write to Jung-hwan Hwang at jung@hankyung.com
A strong rebound in stock markets during the April-June quarter sharply narrowed losses from equities portfolios, which suffered a more than 30% plunge in March alone in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak.
In the first three months to March, NPS reported a negative return of 6.08%, offsetting its 2019 return of 11.31%, that was its highest in history.
“During the first half of 2020, NPS reported a negative return at one point as the global spread of coronavirus brought an unprecedented shock to financial markets,” NPS said in a statement. “But thanks to our diversified portfolio and risk management, we recovered and achieved a positive return as of the end of June."
A string of stimulus measures unveiled by developed countries and loosened monetary policies provided a support to stock markets, while pulling interest rates lower. Lowered bond yields and the firmer won against the dollar boosted valuation gains from fixed-income securities.
By asset type, both domestic and global fixed-income securities reported positive returns during the first six months to June, outperforming their benchmark indices.
Investment gains from alternative assets are based on their interest and dividend incomes, without reflecting mark-to-market assessments, which occur annually at the end of the year.
The world’s third-largest pension scheme managed 752.2 trillion won ($634 billion) in assets as of the end of June, up 15.5 trillion won from the end of last year.
Write to Jung-hwan Hwang at jung@hankyung.com
Yeonhee Kim edited this article
More to Read
-
Sovereign wealth fundsKorea Investment Corp. appoints Park Il Young as its new CEO
Sep 26, 2024 (Gmt+09:00)
-
Mergers & AcquisitionsMBK ups Korea Zinc bid price as management feud intensifies
Sep 26, 2024 (Gmt+09:00)
-
Mergers & AcquisitionsHanwha, LG to support Korea Zinc in battle against MBK
Sep 23, 2024 (Gmt+09:00)
-
Leadership & ManagementSamjong KPMG reappoints CEO Kim Kyo Tae for 4th term
Sep 20, 2024 (Gmt+09:00)
Comment 0
LOG IN