Venue: Meeting Room 1, County Hall, Dorchester, DT1 1XJ. View directions
Contact: Joshua Kennedy Email: joshua.kennedy@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk
No. | Item |
---|---|
Apologies To receive any apologies for absence. Minutes: Apologies for absence were received
from Cllr Suttle. |
|
To confirm the minutes of the meeting held on 13 June 2023. Minutes: The minutes of the meeting
held on 13 June 2023 were confirmed and signed. |
|
Declarations of Interest To disclose any pecuniary, other registrable or personal interest as set out in the adopted Code of Conduct. In making their decision councillors are asked to state the agenda item, the nature of the interest and any action they propose to take as part of their declaration. If required, further advice should be sought from the Monitoring Officer in advance of the meeting. Minutes: No declarations of
disclosable pecuniary interests were made at the meeting. |
|
Public Participation Representatives of
town or parish councils and members of the public who live, work, or represent
an organisation within the Dorset Council area are welcome to submit up to two questions
or two statements for each meeting. Alternatively, you
could submit one question and one statement for each meeting. All submissions
must be emailed in full to Joshua.kennedy@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk by 8:30am
Thursday 14 September 2023. When submitting your
question(s) and/or statement(s) please note that: · no more than three minutes will be allowed
for any one question or statement to be asked/read · a question may include a short pre-amble to
set the context and this will be included within the three-minute period · please note that sub divided questions count
towards your total of two · when submitting a question please indicate
who the question is for (e.g. the name of the committee or Portfolio Holder) · Include your name, address and contact
details. Only your name will be published but we may need your other
details to contact you about your question or statement in advance of the
meeting. · questions and statements received in line
with the council’s rules for public participation will be published as a
supplement to the agenda · all questions, statements and responses will
be published in full within the minutes of the meeting. Dorset
Council Constitution Procedure Rule 9 Minutes: No
questions or statements from members of the public were made at the meeting. |
|
Questions From Councillors PDF 112 KB To receive questions submitted by councillors. Councillors can submit up to two valid questions at each meeting and sub divided questions count towards this total. Questions and statements received will be published as a supplement to the agenda and all questions, statements and responses will be published in full within the minutes of the meeting. The submissions must be emailed in full to Joshua.kennedy@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk by 8:30am Thursday 14 September 2023. Dorset Council Constitution – Procedure Rule 13 Minutes: The following question was
received from Cllr Joe Salmon, BCP Council: “I just wanted to ask given there seems to be investment still in fossil
fuels if the fund was invested in any other morally questionable ventures such
as: ·
Pornography ·
Sex
work ·
Gambling ·
The
distribution and sale of arms ·
Businesses
based in countries that use child / sweatshop labour ·
Businesses
based in countries that discriminate against people on the
basis of their sexuality, gender or race (Saudi Arabia, Uganda etc) ·
The
sale of nicotine ·
The
sale of alcohol” The Chairman gave the following
response: “The
Pension Fund Committee agrees the investment strategy for the pension fund but
then engages external investment managers to deliver that strategy. We do not restrict our investment managers
from investing in specific companies or sectors but they must consider all financially
material risks relating to their decisions including environmental, social and
governance factors that may apply to the sectors you have listed. As part of
the government’s requirement for Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS) funds
to pool investments the vast majority of the fund’s
investments are now managed by the Brunel Pension Partnership, who are widely
recognised as a leader in responsible investment. Rather than impose thematic exclusions across
its portfolios, Brunel scrutinises its managers’ investment and risk processes,
including their approach to stewardship and integration of environmental,
social and governance risks throughout their stock selection process. A link to
Brunel’s Responsible Investment and Stewardship Outcomes report will be
included in the written response to this question.” |
|
Urgent items To consider any items of business which the Chairman has had prior notification and considers to be urgent pursuant to section 100B (4) b) of the Local Government Act 1972. The reason for the urgency shall be recorded in the minutes. Minutes: There were no urgent items
raised. |
|
BRUNEL PENSION PARTNERSHIP QUARTERLY REPORT PDF 3 MB To consider the quarterly performance report of Brunel Pension Partnership, the pension fund’s Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS) investment pooling manager. Minutes: The Committee considered the quarterly report of Brunel Pension
Partnership (Brunel), the pension fund’s Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS)
investment pooling manager. Markets appeared to have ‘priced in’ the belief that
inflation had been controlled and that recession had been avoided. Although this scenario was plausible there
was still a high chance of a return of high inflation and/or of recession. Listed markets were now driven by a few very large stocks,
namely the so-called ‘magnificent seven’ of Alphabet, Apple, Meta, Nvidia and
Tesla. The key determinant of the
performance of each of Brunel’s listed markets portfolios had therefore become
how much the portfolio was over or underweight the benchmark index in these
companies. This trend also meant that
‘market capitalisation’ indices had become very concentrated. An error made by the index provider for the Paris Aligned
Benchmark (PAB) and Climate Transition Benchmark (CTB) had led to inaccurate
rebalancing in the passive portfolios that tracked these indices. Officers and the independent investment
adviser would need to be confident that this error would not reoccur before
recommending to Committee any further allocations to these portfolios. Brunel’s annual private markets reviews had just been
published. The first cycle of
commitments to Brunel’s private markets portfolios was now largely invested and
had performed well. It was too early to
judge the second and third cycles of commitments but
they were likely to have been adversely impacted by the rising cost of debt
finance. The consideration of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) factors in public markets was primarily for the purpose of mitigating or avoiding risk. Private markets generally offered more opportunities to benefit from ESG considerations, such as financing the transition away from fossil fuels, as they were typically earlier in the capital formation cycle of companies. |
|
BRUNEL GOVERNANCE / SCHEME ADVISORY BOARD UPDATE To receive a verbal update from Cllr John Beesley in his capacity as the Committee’s representative on the Brunel Oversight Board and as a member of the Scheme Advisory Board (SAB) for the Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS). Minutes: Cllr John Beesley, the pension fund’s representative on the Brunel
Oversight Board (BOB), and also a member of the LGPS
Scheme Advisory Board (SAB), updated the Committee on governance matters
relating to investment pooling. He
reported back from meetings of SAB on 17 July 2023 and BOB on 7 September 2023. The main items of discussion at SAB had been the next steps for the
McCloud remedy following the end of the consultation, the new regulations
proposed for survivor benefits and the consultation on next steps for LGPS
investments (an item covered later on the agenda). BOB considered a suggestion from Dorset for the pool to seek cross pool
performance data. Brunel’s Chief Investment Officer felt that a wider
comparison against the peer group of investment managers would be more
beneficial. This was because Brunel was
not a ‘stock picker’ but instead appointed underlying investments managers to
make individual stock selection decisions.
Dorset’s suggestion was not currently supported by the other client funds
due to concerns about the further burden of reporting this could lead to with
no obvious end result. The independent investment adviser was disappointed and surprised by the
lack of support for Dorset’s proposal as there was very little transparency of
performance data between pools which was believed necessary for raising
standards across the pools. This could
be raised through Dorset’s response to the government’s consultation on the
next steps for LGPS investments covered later in the agenda. BOB had also considered the draft response from
Brunel to this consultation which was not dissimilar to Dorset’s proposed
response. The request from Brunel to make changes to their people strategy to
include benchmarking of salaries against other LGPS investment pools had now
been agreed by all shareholders as required.
Aidan Dunn was thanked by Cllr Beesley for the key role he played in
reaching this agreement, which at one point had looked unlikely. Brunel’s chair was stepping down in 2024. The process for appointing a replacement had
begun and good progress had been made. The Chairman was grateful to Cllr Beesley’s for his role in the
relationship with Brunel and also for keeping
Committee members aware of matters considered by SAB. |
|
LGPS INVESTMENT CONSULTATION PDF 247 KB To consider the pension fund’s response to the
government’s consultation on next steps for Local Government Pension Scheme
(LGPS) investments. Additional documents:
Minutes: In July the government published a consultation seeking views on the
“next steps on investments” for the LGPS in England and Wales with a deadline
for responses of 2 October 2023. The
consultation sought views on proposals covering asset pooling (particularly the
speed of transition of assets to pools, collaboration between pools, the
optimal size of pools), levelling up, opportunities in private markets,
investment consultancy services and the definition of investments. The Committee considered a draft response to the consultation from
officers based on a number of discussions with the
other Brunel client funds and the pooling company itself. The aspiration was for as far as possible a
common response from all ten client funds and the company, as it was hoped this
would carry more weight than 11 disparate responses, but it was recognised that
each client fund would need to respond as it saw fit from its own perspective. The Committee was supportive of greater collaboration between pools
(especially in private markets) but sceptical of the benefits of reorganising
the pools into fewer, larger pools which seemed to lack supporting
evidence. The Committee did not agree
that government should be directing pension funds to invest a defined amount in
‘levelling up’ or any other asset class as this could lead to a conflict with
their fiduciary duty. A
number of changes to the response were agreed including support for the
use of consistent benchmarks for the comparison of performance between pool. Decision That officers update the draft response to the consultation to reflect
the changes agreed and the circulate for comment prior to submission. |
|
INDEPENDENT INVESTMENT ADVISER'S REPORT PDF 677 KB To consider the quarterly report
of the pension fund’s independent investment adviser on the outlook for the
pension fund’s investments. Minutes: The Committee considered a report from Steve Tyson, Apex Group (formerly
MJ Hudson), the pension fund’s Independent Investment Adviser, that gave his
views on the economic and market background to the pension fund’s investments,
the outlook for different asset classes and key market risks. |
|
FUND ADMINISTRATOR'S REPORT PDF 388 KB To consider the quarterly report on the funding position, the value and performance of investments and other related issues Additional documents: Minutes: The Committee considered a report from officers on the pension fund’s
funding position, asset valuation, investment performance and asset allocation
as at 31 March 2023. The value of the pension fund’s assets at 30
June 2023 was £3.6 billion compared to just over £3.5 billion at the start of
the financial year, with just over three quarters of assets by value now under
the management of Brunel. The total return from the pension fund’s investments over the quarter to
30 June was 1.4%, equal to the combined benchmark return. The total return for the 12 months to June
was 4.3% compared to the benchmark return of 5.0%. Over the longer term, annualised returns for
three years were 5.8% compared to the benchmark return of 6.2%, and for five
years 4.0% compared to 4.7%. The independent investment manager felt that the report was missing
attribution analysis showing whether performance was resulting from stock
selection decisions by underlying managers or from markets. Some of the factors that needed to be taken into consideration in the
forthcoming ‘deep dive’ review of the pension fund’s equity investments were
highlighted by officers: (1) how we see beyond the ‘noise’ from the magnificent
seven, (2) how we ensure that the pension fund’s assets are well managed and
well positioned for the longer term without missing early warning signals in
quarterly data, (3) the concentration risk of traditional market cap passive
investing and (4) an appropriate response to the climate emergency. |
|
PENSIONS ADMINISTRATION REPORT PDF 318 KB To consider the quarterly report on pension fund administration. Additional documents:
Minutes: The recruitment of new staff had had a positive impact on performance
against Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). Recruitment and retention had
stabilised, and the administration team were in a good position to deal with
the additional work associated with the McCloud remedy, although there were
difficulties with the software solution resulting in more testing and
checking of data and calculations. Annual Benefit Illustrations
(ABIs) were issued to scheme members in August, ahead of the statutory
deadline. Scheme members receive paper
copy ABIs as this gives an annual opportunity to communicate key messages to
all members which are focused on member benefits not investments or other
matters due to limited space available.
Detailed information on investments can be found in the pension fund’s
annual report and other online publications on both the pension fund’s website
and on Brunel’s website. The LGPS Annual Report for 2022
had been published which showed a largely positive picture for the scheme
collectively. The importance of this was
that total scheme performance could lead to potential changes to scheme member
benefits and/or contributions as opposed to the triennial valuation which
dictated fund specific employer contributions only. |
|
Dates of Future Meetings To confirm the dates for the meetings
of the Committee in 2023/24: 29 November 2023 26 March 2024 Minutes: 10am Wednesday 29
November 2023 - County Hall, Dorchester. 10am Tuesday 26
March 2024 (to be confirmed) - County Hall, Dorchester. |
|
Exempt Business To move the exclusion of the press and the
public for the following item in view of the likely disclosure of exempt
information within the meaning of paragraph 3 of schedule 12 A to the Local
Government Act 1972 (as amended). The public and the press will be asked to
leave the meeting whilst the item of business is considered. There is no exempt business scheduled for this meeting. Minutes: There was no exempt
business. |