…as consultant assessment initiates changes to internal equity team and technology

CalPERS has reached its capacity to internally manage equities portfolios and would need to make changes to technology and staff resources if the internally-managed equities program is expanded, according to the outcome of the annual consultant review of CalPERS’ internal equity team by Wilshire Associates.

While Wilshire said the internal team should be able to handle any risk or complexity in the portfolio at least as well as any external manager CalPERS might consider instead of internal management, there were considerable technology issues that needed to be addressed, and more staff would most likely have to be added.

CalPERS has 16 internally managed index funds, with a wide variety of target indexes, and Wilshire said as the equity trading desk has expanded in personnel, assets and sophistication it has begun to stretch the limits of CalPERS existing technology and databases. When Eric Baggesen and Dan Bienvenue were first hired to build the internal management capacity, there were only four internal index funds.

It is CalPERS’ intention to grow the internal equity programs, and it intends to facilitate a more scaleable structure by making changes to data, technology and its team, as a result of the review.

With more than $50 billion in internally-managed index funds, CalPERS is one of the largest index managers in the world. In the past year the team has been restructured across three functional lines: strategy, construction and trading. Previously, a single portfolio manager and backup manager handled all aspects of the portfolio, from research to trading.

The new structure allows team members to specialise and provides some increase in capacity as future strategies are added.

Sponsored Content

Recently one senior person on the portfolio construction side was hired, and there is a search for an additional resource on the trading side.

In a letter to CalPERS’ chief investment officer, Joe Dear, managing director and principal of Wilshire, Michael Schlachter, recommended a number of technology enhancements to solve the problems with the current order management system interfacing with CalPERS’ central database.

The consultant review found that the investment staff had discovered a number of errors in daily pricing of unitised portfolios and in portfolio holdings.

“Part of this is a result of the fact that orders and transactions can be generated through several different systems and partly results from the fact the trading desk is employing State Street for activities which generally exceed the scope of a traditional monthly-valued custodian.”

Wilshire recommended that should the fund continue to use State Street it should extend the arrangement to include the type of services that a traditional funds manager might employ, rather than typical custodian services.

In addition Wilshire pointed out that the internal fixed income team at CalPERS had outsourced the portfolio management system to BlackRock and a wide-open appraisal of the equity team’s needs would also be appropriate.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Complexity: thinking ahead

Complexity is, well complex. And as trite as that sounds, it’s something investors, even professional investors, don’t understand well enough, according to Tim Hodgson, head of the Thinking Ahead Group at Towers Watson. The Thinking Ahead Group (TAG), as has been reported here before, gets paid to think – a gig conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com is envious of.

Study finds greenness equals performance

There is a positive correlation between the investment performance of REITs and the “greenness” of their portfolio holdings, according to a new paper by Maastricht University’s Piet Eichholtz, Nils Kok and Erkan Yonder. The paper – Portfolio greenness and the financial performance of REITs – finds that investment performance of REITs is positively related to

Benchmarking ESG changes behaviour

The power of benchmarking funds on sustainability is demonstrated by the fact 171 property companies and funds surveyed in the 2012 GRESB benchmarking report reduced GHG emissions by 6 per cent – this is a reduction of 432,000 metric tons of CO2, the equivalent of removing 85,000 cars from the road. The Global Real Estate

Taking RI from in-house to front of mind

The industry needs to be better at thinking how responsible investing can be accessed by smaller funds or those lacking sufficient internal resources, David Russell, co-head of responsible investment at the UK’s Universities Superannuation Scheme, says. Russell, who will join a panel at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Santa Monica produced by Conexus Financial, publisher

In-house not for
every house: WSIB

While the trend for most large institutional investors is to insource asset management, the $85-billion Washington State Investment Board (WSIB) has decided to take a different path. Much-cited CEM Benchmarking research shows that funds with internal-management platforms are better performers after cost, and this is largely driven by the lower costs of internal management. Many

Three-way shift in investor behaviour

There are three major behavioural shifts occurring among investors that will have significant impact on asset allocation in the next 10 years, according to a year-long study by global head of research at State Street’s Center for Applied Research, Suzanne Duncan. An increase in investor sophistication, re-evaluation of the risk/return trade-off and more discernment over

Previous