Sam Sicilia, chief investment officer of Australian superannuation fund Hostplus, reiterated a singular strategic thesis in a Bloomberg interview on Mar 26, 2026: diversification remains the most effective tool to manage volatility and uncertainty across asset classes. Sicilia framed the argument not as a slogan but as a structural response to a market environment where policy tightening, rate re-pricing and geopolitics have increased cross-asset dispersion. The comments were delivered on the sidelines of the Asia Pacific Financial and Innovation Symposium during Bloomberg: The Asia Trade, and reflect an operational posture that Hostplus has emphasized in recent member communications and portfolio adjustments. For institutional investors, Sicilia's remarks warrant scrutiny because they come from one of Australia's largest active managers with significant influence over domestic capital flows.
Context
Hostplus's public positioning on diversification must be read against the backdrop of an Australian superannuation industry whose scale materially shapes domestic markets. The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority reported total superannuation assets of A$3.6 trillion as of June 30, 2025 (APRA, Jun 30, 2025), up roughly 4% year-over-year — a pace that has implications for liquidity across Australian equities, fixed income and private markets. Hostplus itself is a major participant in that ecosystem; its strategic allocations influence secondary markets for infrastructure, private equity and listed equities, particularly in sectors where domestic capital is scarce.
Globally, pension funds and sovereign wealth vehicles have been reallocating between public and private markets since 2021. OECD pension asset statistics show global pension assets grew roughly 6% YoY in the most recent reporting period (OECD, 2025), outpacing the Australian system marginally and pressuring domestic funds to seek differentiated returns. The combination of a large domestic asset base and pressure to deliver above-inflation returns for beneficiaries helps explain Sicily's emphasis on diversification as both a risk-management and a return-generation construct.
Sicilia's timing also coincides with a macro environment where central banks have been recalibrating policy. The Reserve Bank of Australia's official cash rate settled near 3.85% in early 2026 after an extended tightening cycle (RBA, Feb 2026), altering the opportunity set for fixed income and influencing duration bets in multi-asset portfolios. For an institutional allocator like Hostplus, that rate profile increases the complexity of hedging long-duration liabilities using traditional sovereign debt.
Data Deep Dive
Sicilia did not disclose detailed allocation shifts in the Bloomberg interview, but public filings and market activity provide insight into the mechanics of Hostplus's diversification approach. Across FY2024–FY2025, Australian super funds increased exposure to private assets — private equity, real assets, and direct infrastructure — by an estimated 120 basis points on average, according to industry-level disclosures (APRA sector reporting, 2025). That shift has two immediate implications: (1) valuation sensitivity in private markets is lower to short-term public market swings, but (2) liquidity risk and mark-to-model uncertainty rise.
Comparative performance metrics illustrate why such rebalancing matters. Over the trailing three-year window to Dec 31, 2025, global equities (MSCI World Index) returned approximately 11% annualized while Australian large-cap equities (ASX 200 Total Return) lagged at about 6% annualized (MSCI/ASX data, Dec 31, 2025). For a fund benchmarked to a diversified liability profile, differential returns versus domestic equities press the case for offshore diversification and augmenting private exposure where absolute returns have been higher.
Risk budgeting at Hostplus-like scale typically adjusts volatility targets rather than static allocations. For example, a hypothetical 60/40 public portfolio experiencing a volatility rise from 10% to 14% would need either active hedging or reweighting to remain within risk tolerances. In practice, leading Australian funds have increased overlay hedging and employed dynamic scaling of derivatives; public filings show a rise in derivatives notional as a percentage of AUM in 2024–2025 (Hostplus and peer filings, 2024–25 reporting cycle).
Sector Implications
Sicilia's diversification thesis has differentiated implications across sectors. Infrastructure and real assets become liquidity sinks and sources of return stability when public markets underperform, but they also concentrate exposure to construction, regulatory and demand cycles. Hostplus and peers have expanded greenfield and brownfield infrastructure investments — a trend supported by government co-investment vehicles — which can yield long-duration, inflation-linked cash flows but raise execution and political risk.
In listed equities, diversification implies both geographic and factor tilts. Hostplus's tilt toward overseas equities is consistent with an ASX-heavy starting point for many domestic funds; cross-border allocation reduces concentration risk versus the top 20 ASX companies, which represent a disproportionate share of market cap. For credit and fixed income, diversification has meant expanding into global investment grade and selective high-yield markets, where spread pickup compensates for domestic rate shifts. Such moves, however, expose funds to FX and sovereign spread volatility.
Peers provide a useful comparator. Over the last 24 months, the top five Australian funds collectively increased private markets exposure by an average of 1.1 percentage points of AUM while lowering Australian equity weights by 0.8 points (industry filings, 2024–25). That relative repositioning signals a sector-level consensus forming around Sicily's public message: diversify across geographies and instruments to protect long-term member outcomes.
Risk Assessment
Diversification is not a free lunch. Moving into private markets increases illiquidity and reliance on manager selection; both heighten implementation risk. During market stress, private asset valuations can lag (or overshoot) public repricing, creating valuation mismatches for reporting and for liquidity management. Hostplus's ability to handle this depends on its liquidity governance: committed liquidity buffers, subscription/redemption terms in fund structures, and term-matching to liability profiles.
Currency risk is another second-order effect. Offshore allocations diversify market exposures but add FX volatility unless hedged. Hedging at scale incurs costs that vary with yield differentials and central bank volatility. For example, hedging a US$10bn exposure with a one-year forward contract when basis widens by 50 basis points can materially affect net returns. Risk overlays and governance choices — discretionary hedging versus systematic rules — become crucial determinants of net outcomes.
Operational risk and concentration risk must also be monitored. As funds chase similar private opportunities, competition for deals can compress yields and increase leverage usage, meaning that the marginal dollar deployed may earn lower excess returns. This underscores the need for differentiated sourcing and active management rather than passive diversification alone.
Fazen Capital Perspective
At Fazen Capital, we read Sicilia’s comments as an operational recognition that beta alone cannot satisfy member expectations in the current macro regime. Our assessment is contrarian on one point: while broad diversification remains necessary, we believe the marginal value of adding more private-market exposure declines for funds that lack bespoke sourcing capabilities. For large allocators, the optimal move is not merely to increase private allocations but to retool implementation — prioritizing co-investments, minority stakes in specialist managers, and bespoke liability-driven investments that align cash-flow profiles with member liabilities.
Historically, the funds that succeeded in such shifts (notably some European pension plans in the 2010s) combined scaled internal teams with selective external partnerships. Hostplus's public posture suggests movement in that direction; however, the critical metric will be net-of-fee returns and liquidity-adjusted performance over market cycles. Investors should watch implementation metrics — manager retention, co-investment share, and realized IRRs — not just headline allocation changes.
For institutional allocators seeking further reading on execution and governance, our platform hosts several technical briefings on overlay management and private markets diligence protocols [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and on sector-level allocation frameworks [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Outlook
If central bank volatility and geopolitical uncertainty persist through 2026, the premium for diversified, multi-asset solutions is likely to remain elevated. For Hostplus, continued emphasis on diversification will probably translate into incremental private-market commitments, increased use of derivatives for hedging, and selective offshore expansion. The key performance differential will stem from execution: can Hostplus source high-quality private deals at scale while preserving liquidity and managing fees?
Institutional investors should prepare for a two-speed market. Public markets may offer episodic opportunities for tactical reweighting, whereas private markets will offer structural return enhancement at the cost of liquidity. For fiduciaries, the governance challenge is to set policy that balances these trade-offs with transparent stress testing and contingency liquidity plans. Failing to do so risks either overpaying for illiquidity or being underexposed when private markets re-rate.
Bottom Line
Sicilia's public endorsement of diversification reinforces an industry-wide pivot but highlights that implementation — not rhetoric — will determine outcomes. Funds must align allocation policy with liquidity governance and execution capability.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: How should liquidity needs shape a fund's move into private assets?
A: Liquidity needs should be the primary constraint: funds should model multi-year cash flows under stressed scenarios and size private commitments so that near-term redemptions do not force fire sales. Historical episodes (e.g., 2008–2009) show that funds with prudent liquidity buffers preserved the ability to meet liabilities without distressed asset sales.
Q: Is diversification a substitute for active management?
A: No. Diversification reduces idiosyncratic risk but does not replace the need for active selection, especially in private markets where manager skill and deal access drive returns. Empirical studies of pension plan performance indicate that successful outperformance typically combines strategic diversification with selective active allocation and low-cost implementation.
Q: What metrics should investors watch to evaluate execution of a diversification strategy?
A: Key metrics include net-of-fee IRR for private allocations, percentage of AUM in co-investments, notional of derivatives as a percentage of AUM (for overlays), liquidity buffer ratios (cash and near-cash as % of liabilities), and manager turnover. These operational indicators often presage whether headline allocation shifts will generate durable member value.
