Home / Uncategorized / QSuper opens the door to securities lending

QSuper opens the door to securities lending

Uncategorized

Despite initial reticence from the board about securities lending, the A$40 billion QSuper will shortly begin a lending program.

QSuper’s custodian, State Street, is understood to have been awarded the mandate although QSuper head of investment operations, Kyle Ringrose, last week told the ‘Global Investor’ conference in Australia that the fund could not see any significant operational risk in using a provider that wasn’t necessarily the fund’s custodian.

After some initial research into the practice, Ringrose compiled a report to table to the investment committee, but was called into the chairman’s office two days before that meeting.

  • “Our chairman made it quite clear that he was not a fan of securities lending,” Ringrose told the conference.

    Part of Ringrose’s job was to therefore explain the practice, and its potential benefits, to the entire trustee board.

    “QSuper, along with many others, still carries the scars of the GFC,” he said.

    “We did also accept there was now far greater understanding even, god bless them, in the media, about what securities lending was all about.”

    But issues such as what to accept as collateral and how much would be lent out at any one time raised concerns within the board.

    “Convincing QSuper to take anything other than cash (as collateral for the fund’s stock) was a bit of an uphill struggle,” Ringrose said.

    At the May board meeting the fund passed resolutions that enabled it to start the program.

    REST manager, investment operations, Jamie Hwang, was also at the conference and said that some of his fund’s smaller fund managers that stopped securities lending during the GFC, still have those practices in place, but REST has continued its overall scheme.

    “It’s not an income story, the reason we participate in securities lending, it’s incremental revenue,” he said.

    – Penny Pryor

    Investor Strategy News


    Related
    Global pensions sketchy on net zero

    A survey of 50 global pension funds shows that many are losing hope of achieving their net-zero goals, and the sector is still “in the foothills” of the transition.

    Lachlan Maddock | 13th May 2022 | More
    Q&A with IPO hopeful, Gefen

    This week we interviewed Co-founder and Co-CEO Orni Daniel from Gefen Technologies, an Israeli-based digital distribution platform that has been initially aimed at Australia’s insurance market. The company is looking at an ASX listing towards the end of the year. After speaking with Daniel, it was immediately apparent that Gefen Technologies has built what looks…

    Ishan Dan | 28th Sep 2020 | More
    Lendi Listing Looks for Loan Liftoff

    Another fintech is heading for the ASX screens, with online mortgage provider Lendi poised to push “go” on an initial public offering (IPO) that could see it list at a market capitalisation of between $500 million-$550 million. Lendi specialises in the home loan market: its software platform matches borrowers with more than 35 lenders. The…

    James Dunn | 28th Sep 2020 | More
    Popular