Culture Club: CalPERS puts people first in talent reboot under new CIO

Only two months into the job and presenting to the board for only the second time, CalPERS new chief investment officer Stephen Gilmore has outlined his plans to overhaul talent and culture in the investment office, putting people and their development at the heart of his leadership.

Gilmore, who has taken the reins of the $502 billion portfolio following Nicole Musicco’s abrupt decision to leave this time last year after less than 18 months, said his focus on talent development is rooted in his belief that getting “the people, processes and portfolio right,” will ultimately support a strong performance.

Signs of change are manifest in an internal initiative called the Culture Club, set up seven months ago but enthusiastically embraced by Gilmore. It is focused on nurturing fresh values in the investment team around engagement, developing talent and sharing ideas across the office to create an atmosphere that allows innovation to flourish and breaks down silos to share skills and knowledge.

New talent has already arrived into the investment team witnessed in the presence of Stanford fellows linked to a partnership created by Ashby Monk, senior research engineer in the School of Engineering at Stanford University and executive and research director of the Stanford Research Initiative on Long-Term Investing set up three months ago. Elsewhere, the investment office now hosts a rebooted internship program and formalised mentoring program.

New arrivals joining the investment office can look forward to a more formal and improved onboarding process; their suggestions being welcomed, and everyone being given the education, development and opportunity to further their careers. Above all, Gilmore seeks to oversee an investment team where everyone knows what each other is working on – and  an office that is known and celebrated throughout the wider organisation.

Gilmore said that talent didn’t only manifest in formal qualifications among the investment staff. He aims to build a team that has a breadth of skills and perspectives, better equipped to solve today’s complex problems. Yes, gaps in the team would be filled by external training, but on-the-job learning and recognising the aspirations of team members to fill those gaps will also come to the fore.

Sponsored Content

And talent development will go beyond a focus in finance and economics to value other skills too.

As well as cutting the number of weekly investment team meetings, Gilmore has slashed the number of strategic initiatives from nine to four. The smaller number of initiatives – still based on innovation and resiliency themes – are now run by a tag team of individuals who will be able to work together to get results.

The four initiatives that have dropped away, including private market innovation and private debt strategies, have been integrated into the standard operating processes of the investment office.

Drawing on his vast experience at the Future Fund and New Zealand Super. Gilmore said the investment office will be run in accordance with four key themes: people, process, portfolio and performance. Overhauling talent and culture (people) will be followed by new processes around how CalPERS integrates data and technology to support efficiency and reduce risk; portfolio resilience and sustainability, and how to better measure performance of the dollar value add of the portfolio and any improvement in the funded status.

Over the next 18 months, Gilmore will spend much of his time coming to understand the liabilities and assets in a deep dive ALM study.

“We have to have to design portfolio that [can] reduce the unfunded gap as we go forward,” he said.

He added that CalPERS has invested less in data and technology compared to peers, and new IT systems will enable the team to conduct more analysis, increase efficiency, reduce risk and innovate. His priority will be taking user-focused technology off the shelf rather than introducing bespoke processes.

Gilmore wants to enable CalPERS’ investment team to draw more on their vast internal knowledge.

“We touch so many parts of the economy and market, we should be able to collect that information to help us invest,” he said.

He also wants to improve stakeholder engagement. A unit within the investment office is now charged with engaging with stakeholders in a new formalised process. When a member of the public comes before the board with a big issue, the investment team have a process to engage and track stakeholder reactions.

This article was edited on October 4 to correct the date of CalPERS’ partnership with the Stanford Research Initiative on Long-Term Investing, the establishment of the Culture Club internal initiative and the fact Stephen Gilmore’s comments were made in a presentation to the board.

Leave a Comment

CPP, NBIM CEOs swap notes on leading through teams, not bureaucracy

CPP, NBIM CEOs swap notes on leading through teams, not bureaucracy

In a high-level exchange between two of the world's largest and most sophisticated asset owners, CPP Investments’ chief executive John Graham shared a leadership lesson with Norges Bank Investment Management chief executive Nicolai Tangen: having an aligned senior team is one of the most critical things a leader can build. The two funds, which are consistently leaders in transparency, also exchanged playbooks on managing bureaucracy at large organisations.

Sort content by

Risk management in an age of geopolitical uncertainty: Davos 2024 insights

Geopolitical risk was a key theme at Davos 2024 says FCLTGlobal’s Sarah Keohane Williamson who hosted an institutional investor CEO roundtable at the World Economic Forum. She says investors need to address geopolitical uncertainty in their strategies with the ability to distinguish signal from noise more critical than ever before.

The RFP bonanza emanating from Sweden’s Fund Agency

In an unprecedented bonanza for fund managers, the $100 billion Sweden’s Fund Selection Agency is preparing multiple RFPs as it re-tenders its whole portfolio. With a focus on quality and cost, executive director Erik Fransson explains his ambition for the overhauled system.

ART looks to digital infrastructure, energy transition for opportunities

The $171 billion (A$260 billion) Australian Retirement Trust, which sets itself apart from its Australian peers with the identifying investment features of lower infrastructure allocations and less internal management, is looking to opportunities in digital infrastructure and the energy transition.

Asset managers inconsistent on labour rights: 2023 proxy voting results

Asset owners collaborating to influence labour rights in investee companies have another string to their bow with the release of the Committee on Workers' Capital report examining large fund manager voting performance.

UTIMCO gets ready for 2024

The endowment for two major Texan universities is hoping for a soft economic landing but planning for a recession. It is honing a playbook that ensures ongoing liquidity to make distributions, is not over its skis in terms of capital calls and commitments and has the firepower to invest in.

Navigating 2024: Expect the unexpected, and shape it

Through 2024 the power of inter-connection will increasingly shape our investment world. To thrive in this intricate web, embracing systems thinking, recognizing tipping points, and confronting post-truth realities are essential says Roger Urwin.

Previous