Californian funds look through 3D to diversify boards

The two large Californian public funds, CalPERS and CalSTRS, recently collaborated to help develop a new digital resource dedicated to finding untapped diverse talent to serve on corporate boards. Director of corporate governance at CalSTRS, Anne Sheehan (pictured), discusses the need for such a resource, and why collaboration is such a key component of corporate governance.

For the past couple of years, the California State Teachers’ Retirement System (CalSTRS) and the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) have been working with an advisory panel of leading corporate governance experts to develop a new digital resource devoted to finding untapped diverse talent to serve on corporate boards.

The Diverse Director DataSource, known as “3D”, will offer its subscribers – which will most likely be shareowners and companies – a facility from which to recruit individuals whose experience, skills and knowledge qualify them to be a candidate for a director’s seat.

“3D has been in the works for a couple of years. We have been collaborating with CalPERS, and an alliance of interested firms, diversity groups, headhunters, and investors, to get a pool of talent to act as a source for appointing board members,” the director of corporate governance at CalSTRS, Anne Sheehan, says.

The focus is not just on “traditional” diversity, such as gender and ethnicity, but also diversity of skill sets, backgrounds, and perspectives.

“There is a lack of diversity of thought on boards. We want to see different perspectives on the issue, and a general encouragement of diversity of thought,” Sheehan says.

Sponsored Content

The 3D resource will be a data source, acting as a kind of “bench” of people from non-traditional board backgrounds which will be made available to subscribers, who will then be responsible for screening them for the particular position.

While with this particular resource, neither pension fund will be involved with choosing or recommending board members, CalSTRS has indulged in recommending board members before, through the engagement process.

The most vocal of those was the recommendation, with Relational Investors, of a board member at Occidental Petroleum, the culmination of engagement over the oil company’s compensation practices and the board’s failure to abide by its retirement policy, or announce a succession plan for its long-serving chief executive and chairman.

“Through our engagement process we sometimes recommend people for boards,” Sheehan says. “When we do engagement or litigation, 3D is a potential source for us.”

In the past year or so, the issue of majority vote has remained the most debated topic at CalSTRS, with 28 of the 39 shareholder resolutions this year on majority vote.

“Majority vote is an emphasis this year, it’s basic. Why should a board member sit in a meeting when they’re not a majority vote representation,” she says.

To this end CalSTRS is one of a group of investors in the US that have collaborated, and divided the market, in order to ensure full coverage.

“CalSTRS takes on the mid-cap market, CalPERS the S&P500 and Florida sent a letter to the Russell 2000,” she says.

CalSTRS’ corporate governance program includes about $3 billion with activist managers as part of its global equities. It is a relatively new program, with Sheehan only in the job since October 2008. Much of its engagement is based on improving performance and reducing the risk of underperforming companies, but it is yet to develop any meaningful measurement – that is the next step.

The corporate governance program is based on four strategic objectives: proxy voting, executive compensation, board diversity and sustainability risk management.

Sheehan, who is also a member of the Council for Institutional Investors, and the NASDAQ listing council, says the fund will continue to look at poor performers and engage with them on issues such as the separation of chair and chief executive positions.

“You need to de-personalise it when talking to those individuals and discuss the structure, not the individuals, going forward,” she says.

CalSTRS is keen to lead by example when it comes to corporate governance, and Sheehan says there is often a discussion at the board level about keeping its own house in order.

“Every pension fund board has its own balance. We constantly discuss at the board if we throw stones then we have to have our own house in order,” she says noting CalSTRS was an early mover on pay to play and implementing a placement agent policy, by way of example.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Australian contributions increase shifts retirement burden

The increase in the Australian superannuation guarantee (SG) from 9 to 12 per cent of salary is an example of how the retirement savings burden, a global phenomenon, can be shifted from the public to private sectors, according to senior partner at Mercer, David Knox. The increase in the SG, which has been approved in

Why you should take notice of what we write

New research released this month gives impetus to the evidence that newspaper articles can predict aggregate future stock returns. Conducted by Professor of Finance at the University of St Gallen in Switzerland, Manuel Ammann, it examines articles in the German finance paper, Handeslblatt, from July 1989 until March 2011, and overall found that “newspaper content

CalPERS to move $1bn fixed income in-house

CalPERS plans to move $1 billion of its externally-managed international fixed income portfolio in-house in the next 12 months, but it will require board approval to do so.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Texas Teachers extends manager partnerships

Texas Teachers Retirement System has extended a unique public markets strategic partnership structure to two of its private market managers in a move it claims will give the fund a long-term strategic advantage over other investors.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Keynes and the character required for a long-term view

In the interests of educating myself I recently read Chapter 12 “The State of Long-Term Expectations” in John Maynard Keynes’ seminal economics tome General Theory. I particularly like his statement: “it needs more intelligence to defeat the forces of time and our ignorance of the future than to beat the gun”, but then I’ve always

Recipe for avoiding half-baked dynamic asset allocation

In what is lauded as somewhat of a Laurel and Hardy performance, APG’s Stefan Lundbergh and academic provocateur Jack Gray, demonstrate the disparity between ideology and action in a hypothetical dynamic asset allocation case study. But jokes aside, it highlights the misnomer in the words “best practice”, and the lack of courage in this industry.

Previous