Australian pension with US$117 bil looking to buy amid turmoil
07 Apr 2025, 02:34 pm
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(April 7): Aware Super, one of Australia’s largest pension funds, is already preparing to buy cheaper stocks and capitalise on the turmoil that’s wiping trillions of dollars from global equities.

“We will be looking for opportunities to buy into this weakness,” Head of Investment Strategy Michael Winchester said in an interview Monday. While the A$194 billion (US$117 billion or RM520.16 billion) fund would “like to see a few more days go by”, it plans “to be on the front foot to add to risk during periods of volatility”.

Winchester helms a team of 22, part of the superannuation fund’s broader investment staff of 150 people based in Australia and the UK. Aware is well placed with “plenty of liquidity”, he said, fuelled by inflows from the regular contributions of more than a million Australian workers.

“Having that liquidity means that we can be a strong hand when others potentially aren’t able to,” said Winchester. “All of our teams will be on the lookout for opportunistic buys for our members.”

Australians have nervously been monitoring the fallout from US President Donald Trump’s reciprocal tariffs on global markets, and the subsequent stock rout’s impact on their retirement savings. Many funds in the A$4.2 trillion pension industry have more than half of their default investment portfolios invested in international and domestic stocks.

A flight from global equities accelerated Monday and investors piled into haven assets. The S&P 500 last week saw its worst two-day plunge since March 2020 in a selloff that slashed over US$5 trillion in value, while Australia’s benchmark stock index tumbled as much as 6.4% on Monday, its largest drop since 2020.

Rather than trying to pinpoint sectors to load up on, Winchester said the fund would be looking at broad market indexes. He believes that deals may also emerge in the private credit space, though not immediately.

“It’ll take a little while for the economic impact of the tariffs and market shock to filter through into more attractive opportunities on the unlisted side,” he said.

Still, the fund is being more discerning about US unlisted assets in the current environment.

“I think we definitely need to have a think about whether the US is the right destination on that unlisted asset side,” he said, declining to highlight any sectors.

Uploaded by Chng Shear Lane

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