Home / Institutional / The Firemen’s Annuity & Benefit Fund of Chicago Sounds Alarm for Private Credit and Infrastructure

The Firemen’s Annuity & Benefit Fund of Chicago Sounds Alarm for Private Credit and Infrastructure

Fund seeks to deploy 3% of assets into each sector.

By David Barry

Seeking to diversify its
portfolio, The Firemen’s Annuity & Benefit Fund of Chicago is for
the first time adding managers focused on private credit and infrastructure.

The $1.1 billion FABF has issued request
for proposals
for investment advisors to manage a $30 million mandate for
private credit and a $32 million mandate for infrastructure. Both mandates
individually represent 3% of the total fund. FABF said multiple managers will
be considered for each mandate.

To be considered for the
credit fund, a manager had to be raising at least a $1 billion fund with a
closing date through December 31. Targeted strategies could include direct lending,
structured credit, distressed/special situations, specialty finance and
multi-strategy. Fund-of-funds products are not being considered. The board is
seeking to select a manager or managers in the July/August timeframe.

For the infrastructure
mandate, the manager should have assets under management of at least $2 billion
and be diversified. Like with the credit mandate, a fund-of-funds product will
not be considered. The board will seek to select an infrastructure fund or
funds to invest in during the May/June period.

The fund’s consultant, Callan
LLC
, is overseeing these processes with FABF’s staff. The decision to add private
credit and infrastructure segments came after the fund’s board participated in
education sessions on the segments in 2021.

As of December 31, FABF had a
policy target of 35% to U.S. equities, 25% to non-U.S. equities; 20% to total
fixed income; 8% to real estate; 4% to both private equity and liquid diversifying;
and 2% to both commodities and
Treasury inflation-protected securities. FABF’s board
did vote to change the allocation in December, but the new allocation was not
spelled out in minutes from that meeting. Lorna Scott, the fund’s chief
investment officer, did not return a message seeking further clarification.

 In 2021, FABF saw its
investments rise 14.2% net of fees and add approximately $129 million to its
balance sheet. 

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