CalPERS seeks ideal pay formula

3D rendering. Symbol made of digits.

CalPERS is looking to get creative about how it attracts and pays talent, as two key investment positions remain vacant.

Some suggestions include tying pay to funded status or to the fund’s contribution to the state of California.

The problem of attracting and retaining investment talent at CalPERS, where compensation lags industry peers, has come to the fore once again, as the largest pension fund in the US begins its search for a new chief investment officer and continues to seek a new head of private equity.

“We are a multibillion-dollar organisation with 2800 employees, we have a multimillion-dollar impact on the State of California and a global presence, and our compensation is just too low. We are not attracting quality candidates,” CalPERS board member Richard Costigan said, speaking during a recent meeting of the pension fund’s performance, compensation and talent management committee.

CalPERS will not pay top-quartile rates like some Canadian funds but, Costigan argued, pay needs to go up to reflect the transition the organisation is going through, its diverse portfolio and membership, and pressure from the state legislature.

“We are paying millions of fees to outside managers and we ought to be addressing that internally, too, because it does lead to cost control,” he said. “We need to empower our CEO to bring in the best kind of folks to meet our members objectives. Where we are now is not acceptable to me.”

Sponsored Content

[For an analysis of how leading Canadian fund, OTPP, pays its people click here)

Clock is ticking

The latest meeting offers aglimpse of the challenges of navigating remuneration policy at the giant pension fund. CalPERS’ compensation needs to be high enough to retain staff but not so high people join only for the compensation. Salaries must not give the wrong impression to beneficiaries or stakeholders; they can’t incentivise risk or take too much from precious investment capital, yet they need to be high enough to woo talent in one of the most highly paid industries in the world. Finding the goldilocks zone for CalPERS’ remuneration is proving difficult.

And time is of the essence. One year on, and the pension fund is still looking to replace its head of private equity since Réal Desrochers left, picked off by an overseas bank.

Sarah Corr stepped up to become the interim head of the vast program, which dates from the early 1990s, accounts for 8 per cent of assets under management, and is also the fund’s highest returning asset class, with a 10.6 per cent annual return over the last 20 years.

Despite the urgency, the board continues tothrash out its pay parameters– what it should pay relative to peers, who those peers are and, most crucially, whether setting pay at mid-market levels will allow the pension fund to find the people it needs.

Grappling with the essentials leaves little room to weave in other ideas, such as tying compensation to the funded status of the plan in an approach board member Dana Hollinger suggested in the committee meeting.

CalPERS is particularly vulnerable to losing investment staff to local university endowments, where pay is higher than at public-sector pension funds, despite lower assets under management and less job complexity.

“The chancellor of the University of California, Los Angeles made $420,480 last year and the chancellor of UCSF (University of California, San Francisco) made $819,545, not including other incentives,” Costigan noted.

In comparison, departing CIO Ted Eliopoulos was paid a base salary of $552,842 in 2017 and awarded a $314,335 bonus, public pay database Transparent California shows. CalPERS has a base range salary for its CIOs of $408,000 and $612,000.

During the board’s discussion, it called in expertise from Andrew Junkin, president of Wilshire Associates. Drawing on compensation data from 107 CIOs, taken four years ago, Junkin told the panel that the top third of the sample were, indeed, paid “a million bucks year”.

“You are going to have to pay for talent,” he said. “The top third is a reasonable group to compare against.”

One way to engender more support for salary increases from CalPERS stakeholders could be making much more of CalPERS’ economic contribution to California, Costigan suggested. About $21 billion in annual benefit payments helps fuel economic activity across the Golden State.

“CalPERS generated $9.6 billion in Californian activity last year, including $2.2 billion in Los Angeles and $2 billion in Sacramento,” Costigan said.

It led to another bone of contention on the panel: quality candidates who want to come to CalPERS are affected negatively not only by the salary level, but also by harsh federal tax policies.

Eliopoulos, who has been at CalPERS since 2007, will remain in the job until a new CIO is named and assist in the transition. He is moving to New York City to be closer to his family.

Key changes introduced during his tenure include reducing the complexity of the portfolio, halving the number of managers to 150 and ending the hedge fund program.

Eliopoulos has also overseen moving more assets in-house, with 70 per cent of the $350 billion fund’s assets now internally managed by a team of nearly 400.

The fact that pressure on investment returns has ratcheted up, with CalPERS now paying out more in contributions than it takes in, adds a new urgency to attracting and retaining talent.

Leave a Comment

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

In an environment where multiple risks are emerging and their effects are compounding on the portfolio, CPP Investments' chief risk officer Priti Singh says the $572 billion fund is rethinking risk management from the ground up, shifting from reaction to preparation and embedding risk thinking earlier in investment decisions. She speaks to Amanda White about the fund's risk approach.

Sort content by

GPIF positions its alternatives database as first gate in manager selection

Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund will soon look to expand its alternatives database project, which evaluates the performance of private markets GPs, to cover more funds. Director of research and analytics speaks with Top1000funds.com on how the $2 trillion pension giant will position the system as its first point of reference for private market manager due diligence.

‘We are way ahead’: How Fairfax County bagged staggering crypto returns

Fairfax County Employees’ Retirement System says its allocation to digital assets has become the best-performing investment in the fund’s history. The $6.3 billion pension plan first invested in blockchain infrastructure and digital assets through venture funds in 2019, and early distributions are now beginning to arrive.

Germany’s largest pension fund VBL ups diversification; invests more abroad

Germany’s €70 billion pension provider VBL is increasing its diversification, notably investing in overseas real estate outside Germany for the first time. It's also increasing its tilt to international equities over European stocks, enabled by an organisational and investment process overhaul.

UTIMCO flags AI overweight; tweaks equity as US exceptionalism wanes

UTIMCO measures its AI exposure via analysis of how investee companies have integrated the technology. It reveals a 5 per cent overweight to AI thanks mostly to hedge fund strategies and infrastructure. Meanwhile, the investor pointed to history to flag a likely reversal to the mean in global equity markets.

Why Lothian is ready to lead on LGPS pooling – if it comes to Scotland

Scotland's Lothian Pension Fund's celebrated inhouse management affords active management at the price of passive and the ability to shape specific mandates with managers. It also positions the fund to lead on pooling - if pooling comes to Scotland's LGPS funds.

Sweden’s FTN focuses on fees and returns in latest procurement

Lower management fees and higher returns defined the latest selection process at the Swedish Fund Selection Agency in its latest awarding of active global equity mandates to 12 managers, its largest and most ambitious €20 billion ($23 billion) procurement so far.

Previous