APFC mulls self evaluation and more board members in governance revamp

Governance processes at $76 billion Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation (APFC), the Juneau-based sovereign wealth fund, have been under scrutiny ever since board members unexpectedly ousted former executive director Angela Rodell at the end of 2021. Now, as a probe of its policies continues, trustees have turned their focus to strengthening the processes around how they evaluate their new executive director. Deven Mitchell replaced Rodell as executive director in October 2022.

Although APFC trustees have an evaluation policy in place (for their executive director) it is complex and distinct from peer funds with a similar AUM, said governance experts from boutique advisory firm Funston Advisory Services. Funston has been mandated since February to oversee APFC’s governance practices and suggest recommendations in an iterative process that has included gathering governance documents and executive feedback from within APFC.

At funds with the most robust governance, executive director performance is measured relevant to set goals over a period of time. Trustees typically evaluate their executive director in terms of compliance with governing documents, gaging where the executive director is doing well and where there is a need for improvement.

Following meetings with the executive director for feedback and discussion, findings are published. In this example, oversight also includes a process whereby the executive director provides a self evaluation to the board.

Staff and trustee contact

APFC could also sharpen its governance around trustee contact with staff members outside board and committee meetings. Ideally, an executive director should always know the workload and requests for additional information generated by board members of staff. Every board member should be copied on requests for information from staff, working off a well-managed list.

Neglecting these types of processes risks undue influence and ethics violations via behind-the-scenes trustee contact with staff members about which other board members are unaware. Funston recommended a policy stipulating the logging of all information regarding contact and requests between staff and trustees.

Sponsored Content

Something that becomes increasingly important when it comes to referrals with service providers around investment opportunities, ensuring that regular standards of due diligence apply. This provides transparency to the board and ensures a level playing field, they said.

More trustees

APFC’s governance could also benefit from an increased board member bench. APFC only has six trustees compared to an average of nine board members at peer funds. Having more board members would create more support for trustees around burgeoning workloads and also support succession planning. Trustees heard that expanding the size of the board is a chance to add different perspectives and skills.

Funston executives also counselled on the importance of having a majority of board members with investment expertise and discussed the value of term limits. A large minority of peer funds have term limits of two to three consecutive terms for board members in a strategy that strengthens independence.

APFC’s trustees include the Commissioner of Revenue and the head of another state government department. The other four trustees are public members, appointed by the governor, who serve four-year staggered terms, so one is replaced each year.

Board self-evaluation

Board and committee member self-evaluation processes is another pillar of strong governance.

Typically, board evaluation involves a governance committee chair or external facilitator developing a questionnaire that elicits input and reactions from the board. Typical questions would include how well trustees think they set clear policy and direction, or how well they oversees due diligence and performance and use of board powers. An important element of the process involves the board ensuring that recommendations from the self-evaluation process are acted upon. Self-evaluation also helps highlight skills trustees need to develop and can be tied into educational programmes.

Funston also suggested APFC revisit its succession plan around executive director and CIO roles. Although the fund has an emergency succession plan, the advisory firm recommended it develop a long and short-term succession strategy. Moreover, although the CIO reports directly to the executive director, Funston suggested the executive director also confer with trustees in that CIO evaluation process, incorporating their input too.

Other high priority board recommendations included improving stakeholder communication and crisis management plans and developing clear and expanded compliance monitoring and reporting responsibilities.

 

 

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Time to change the curriculum

Finance education needs to move away from neo-classical economics towards a more holistic approach including sustainability, philosophy and ethics. Robeco is actively engaging with leading universities in The Netherlands to change the curriculum.

COVID-19 hits retirement system adequacy

COVID-19 has exacerbated retirement insecurity and governments need to use this as an opportunity to examine their system inadequacies and make improvements according to David Knox, partner at Mercer and author of the annual Mercer CFA Institute Global Pension index which measures adequacy, sustainability and integrity of 39 retirement systems.

Verification essential for more impact

A new impact investing verification, which uses the same level of rigor that institutional investors approach the due diligence of fund managers, promises to unlock capital flows into impact and build the necessary scale with integrity needed to address the urgent social, environmental, and economic challenges.

Economic future very precarious: IMF

The global macro-economic future remains precarious amongst huge uncertainties according to the head of the capital markets department at the IMF, Tobias Adrian, who warns of fragilities including the disconnection between the real economy and financial markets, and growing debt, as potential interruption to future growth.

Exploring big ideas with Marisa Hall

Pension funds need a generation of investment professionals that are willing to be brave and less conservative than their predecessors if they are to move to the systems level perspectives on investment that is required for better returns and societal outcomes.

New Zealand Super adds climate alpha

New Zealand Super’s low-carbon reference portfolio has outperformed the original reference portfolio, adding NZ$800 million to the fund and providing evidence of ESG alpha. The low-carbon reference portfolio, that until now has had targets of reducing emissions intensity by 20 per cent and its exposure to potential emissions from fossil fuel reserves by 40 per cent, has added about 60 basis points per annum to performance since it was brought

Previous