Korea National Pension to Put $8.9 Billion in Stocks
By Kyung Bok Cho
July 29 (Bloomberg) -- South Korea's National Pension Service, the country's biggest investor, will buy as much as 9 trillion won ($8.9 billion) of the nation's stocks this year to boost returns, the fund's new president said.
President Park Hae Choon told reporters in Seoul today he wants to raise yields by 2 percentage points by early 2010. National Pension earned an average 6.1 percent in returns in the past three years, half that of the California Public Employees' Retirement System, the biggest U.S. public pension fund.
This year is also ``a window of opportunity to boost overseas assets'' as the U.S. subprime crisis triggered a stock slump, he said. Park, appointed last month, is the first president of National Pension to come from the private sector and was picked to speed up change at the state-run agency, the welfare ministry said at the time of his hiring.
``Our returns are much poorer than the major pension funds in other countries,'' Park said. ``The difference stems from asset allocation. We will actively increase our higher-risk assets such as stocks and alternative investments.''
National Pension will increase holdings of domestic and overseas stocks to about 40 percent of total assets by the end of 2012, while cutting the weighting of bonds to 50 percent. Bonds accounted for 78.9 percent of the fund's 230 trillion won in assets as of the end of June.
The fund will invest between 4 trillion won and 9 trillion won into South Korea's $867.7 billion of equities in the second half of 2008 ``depending on market conditions,'' Park said.
Positive Return
Calpers had more than 60 percent of assets in global equities as of the end of April, according to its Web site. This helped give it a three-year average return of 12.3 percent, according to materials provided today to reporters.
Still, bonds helped the Korean fund post a positive return for the first half of 2008 despite a 10.7 percent loss from equities, said Ohn Kisun, acting chief investment officer.
To boost holdings of overseas equities, National Pension plans to buy mostly developed-market stocks while also increasing its holdings in emerging markets such as China, India, Brazil and Russia, according to the press release.
The fund may buy stakes in global financial firms, possibly by teaming up with Asian sovereign wealth funds, Park said, declining to give more details. National Pension is also considering investing in overseas power-plant construction, resource-development projects and grains, Park said.
Woori, Korea Development Bank
The pension fund said in March it will invest $300 million in U.S. and European financial firms by participating in a fund led by TPG Inc., a U.S.-based private equity firm.
So-called alternative investments, including possible purchases of shares in state-owned South Korean banks such as Woori Finance Holdings Co. or Korea Development Bank, are projected to account for 10 percent of the fund's assets by the end of 2012, from 2.5 percent in 2007, Park said. South Korea plans to sell part of its stake in Woori this year, while Korea Development Bank's initial public offering is planned for 2009.
``The financial crisis that started with the U.S. subprime problems will persist through the end of this year,'' Park said. ``This year is going to be the right time for the fund to invest overseas. After that, the window might close.''