
NJ Pension Fund Allocates $1.7B to PE, Real Estate
The New Jersey Division of Investment (NJDI), which oversees the $71 billion state pension fund, has approved $1.7 billion in investments aimed at strengthening diverse private equity programs and expanding real estate allocations.
With private equity returns hovering at an annualized 3.34% through Q1, trustees endorsed four new commitments to existing managers during the April 30 quarterly meeting, based on recommendations from consultant Aksia.
Major Allocations:
Lexington NJ Strategic Opportunities Fund: A $600 million commitment to a separately managed account by Lexington Partners, focusing on private equity secondaries. This includes up to $150 million in two Lexington strategies and $300 million in opportunistic co-investments.
Barings: A $500 million allocation divided equally between Barings New Jersey Emerging Manager Program II and a Transition Manager sleeve, designed to foster relationships with promising investment managers.
Stellex Capital Partners III: A $125 million investment in the fund, targeting control stakes in underperforming businesses across North America and Europe, including manufacturing, logistics, aerospace, and defense.
Khosla Ventures: A $100 million commitment distributed across three of the firm’s vehicles, targeting AI, fintech, advanced manufacturing, and healthcare innovation.
Real Estate Investment Expansion:
NJDI also addressed its underweight real estate portfolio by committing $400 million to a Townsend Separately Managed Account, aiming for a net return of 13%. This investment will provide exposure to middle-market funds and tactical real estate plays.
Although the pension fund’s real estate investments returned 2% for the year ending March 31—lagging benchmarks—NJDI remains committed to broadening its exposure through joint ventures and seed investments.
The latest allocations were approved despite the pension fund slightly underperforming its benchmark, which rose 6.3% compared to the fund’s 6.0% gain. This assessment came ahead of April’s market volatility fueled by tariff concerns.