Investment staff at Ohio STRS lose bonuses to board infighting

The investment committee at the $94 billion State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio (STRS Ohio) has narrowly voted to block bonuses to investment staff.

The decision to stop at least $8.5 million earmarked for performance-based bonuses marks the latest turmoil at the pension fund. The 11-member main board has a 6-5 majority in favour of reform-minded trustees who have publicly supported moving the fund to index strategies and downsizing the 108-member investment team.

They also have the backing of a noisy beneficiary group, Ohio Retirement Teachers Association, ORTA, which has used the board election process (7 members are elected) to push reform-minded candidates onto the board.

In-house investment and costly alternative allocations have become a lightning rod for anger amongst ORTA members who never received an adequate annual cost-of-living allowance (COLA) given to retired teachers.

The previous board cut the standard 3 per cent COLA and then eliminated it for five years to help stabilise the system’s finances. Retirees got a 3 per cent adjustment in 2023 and 1 per cent in 2024, not nearly what they wanted.

Meanwhile, other forces are trying to pull Ohio STRS in the opposite direction. The state’s Republican attorney general is suing to remove two board members, claiming they have breached their fiduciary duties following an anonymous memo – reportedly from the investment team – flagging board misconduct. The board, the memo said, was lobbying to mandate 70 per cent of the fund’s assets to an investment firm touting an untested AI-driven trading strategy.

Sponsored Content

This hotchpotch of grievances made for a fraught June investment committee meeting where discussion included the annual review of performance compensation for the investment team. The testy back and forth, peppered with applause from current and retired teachers assembled in the audience, shows what happens when the investment team are drawn into politics and face public participation.

One board member argued that recent returns showed the fund was doing well without needing to pay higher compensation. “If we can get top performance and not pay as much, what’s wrong with this?” the board member asked. STRS’s net total fund performance is in the top 10 per cent of  sponsor peer group analysis over the long term.

A reference to the disconnect between asset performance and the COLA was greeted with angry shouts. Elsewhere, concerns from one board member that not paying the investment team performance compensation risked staff leaving, met with calls from the gallery to “let them walk.”

It fell to Lynn Hoover, acting executive director, to lay out the risks of not rewarding investment performance. Sixty-nine members of Ohio STRS 108 investment staff are eligible for incentive pay and current levels sit below peer funds, she warned. Competitive pay is crucial to the fund’s ability to attract and retain staff  at a time an increasing number of staff members are approaching retirement.

Over the last five years, 200 staff have retired or left the organisation, and between 90 and 95 current employees who have been at Ohio STRS for the past 25 years will also retire soon.

“Ninety four billion dollars in assets – that does not manage itself,” Hoover said.

Hoover added that investment performance is a key source of funding for benefits. She said internal management is a strategic advantage at the pension fund and provides low-cost access to both active and passive strategies. Outsourcing internal management would increase costs by an estimated $130 million annually.

“It is important for eligible associates to understand performance goals and expectations before the fiscal year begins,” Hoover said. The bonuses would be applicable for July 1 to June 30, 2025. Although the board agreed to explore alternative plans for employee performance incentives at a meeting in July, they did not set an exact date.

The meeting also exposed the challenge for pension funds when members of the board lack investment expertise. Witness one board member’s rapprochement of the investment team during presentations on asset class performance for using investment terms like tranches, credit and pre-payment risk. Calling for better explanations and clarity, and more information presented in a simple way, he said:  “It’s not helpful making decisions if you don’t have a good grasp of the information.”

Others countered it was incumbent on board members to take an active role by asking questions, and suggested focusing board scrutiny on the competency of investment staff in managing the fund and making investment decisions. Members of the investment team responded that they seek to find a balance between clear explanations and not dumbing down or patronizing the intelligence of the board.

Such discussions will surely grow more heated as the year progresses. Decision-making will now focus on a new asset liability study requiring board decisions on implementation and the asset liability mix.

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

How CPP Investments uses leverage: Lessons for CalPERS

The CIO of Canada Pension Plan Investments, Edwin Cass, shares insights on the benefits of leverage, the impact on liquidity and the governance structures for success.

Impact: ‘Losing the plot’ or better long-term returns?

Giant Dutch pension provider, PGGM, has been a leader in embracing 3D portfolios shaped around risk, return and impact. Top1000funds.com talks to Piet Klop the new head of responsible investment about the journey so far and what is next in linking the portfolio to positive real-world outcomes.

Asset owners reflect on what to expect in 2022

Asset owners think in years rather than months, but investors expect a handful of key areas will define the year ahead. A clearer view on inflation; poor bond performance and a resurgence in labour rights to name a few.

UTIMCO harvests SPAC boom

UTIMCO's new CIO Rich Hall talks at the December board meeting about the profits the fund has found in SPACs, adding that UTIMCO is currently deploying strategies to arbitrage the market where Hall estimates there are still around 500 SPACs looking for acquisition targets.

Private equity’s shorter investment period causes headaches

Institutional investors are seeing their investment period with some private equity managers shorten. The time the GP invests in a company until the time they exit is reducing, meaning that investors are getting more cash coming back than forecast in their pacing models.

New Zealand Super reviews risk budget

New Zealand Super just returned its best-ever result of nearly 30 per cent. In addition to the gains from its overweight position to equities the fund also fully hedged the currency. Amanda White explores the fund’s strategy and the risk budgeting review currently under way.

Previous