CalPERS adds specialist consultants

CalPERS has made three additions to its General Pension Consultant Services Spring-Fed Pool, including a consultant that specialises in sustainable consulting, infrastructure and property with its sector-specific research including climate change.

ARUP North America, now one of six consultants in the pool, will dedicate 24 employees to the CalPERS account. It specialises in sustainable consulting, detail design and evaluation of high performance buildings.

The Spring Fed Pool is a group of consultants that specialise in particular areas, and with the new additions the pension fund now has four consultants specialising in organisational and structural analysis.

In addition to ARUP, the new consultants are Beacon Consulting Group, and Robert H Schaffer & Associates, which join the existing three of Aon Investment Consulting, McKinsey & Company, and Duff & Phelps.

Robert Schaffer specialises in risk strategy, asset allocation, corporate governance and systems and controls. It has previously worked with CalPERS’ investment office.

Sponsored Content

And Beacon Consulting Group is a management consultant to the investment management industry with clients including investment managers, custodians, hedge funds and pension funds.

The CalPERS’ pool includes a service structure consisting of six specialty areas of expertise:

1. General investment analysis and research (Aon Investment Consulting)

2. Organisational and structural performance (Beacon Consulting Group, Robert Schaffer & Associates, Aon Investment Consulting, McKinsey & Company)

3. Performance analysis and benchmarks

4. Asset allocation (Aon Investment Consulting)

5. Risk management and risk budgeting (Aon Investment Consulting)

6. Specialty consulting (Duff & Phelps, ARUP North America, McKinsey & Company)

CalPERS has an annual fees’ budget for the Spring Fed Pool of $1.2 million.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Taking the future into account

At the International Centre for Pension Management’s biannual meeting in London, Jack Gray and Generation’s David Blood had a tête à tête on sustainability. An academic at the Paul Woolley Centre for Capital Market Dysfunctionality at the University of Technology Sydney, Gray has written a paper, Misadventures of an Irresponsible Investor, that at its core

Kay calls for philosophical shift

In an interview with conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com, John Kay, economist and author of the UK government-commissioned enquiry into long termism and the UK equity markets, has said it is “fanciful to imagine large number of trustees will have the skills and knowledge to have long-term relationships with corporates”. Kay says the key players in the UK equity

UK equity allocation falls

Equity allocation by UK pension schemes continues to fall, but the assets are being re-allocated into “everything else except gilts”, according to Mercer chief investment officer, Andrew Kirton. Last year equities allocations by UK pension funds fell by 5 per cent, according to Mercer, as they attempt to deal with the enormous amount of pension

CalSTRS considers
asset risk factors

The $152.5-billion Californian State Teachers Retirement System (CalSTRS) is undertaking an asset-allocation review that will consider the underlying risk factors of assets for the first time. Chris Ailman, chief investment officer of CalSTRS, says the fund is in the middle of an asset-allocation study, which would likely take six months, and would take a different

Natixis champions
Asian alternatives

In a bid to achieve long-term returns without incurring the risk of today’s choppy markets, Asia’s biggest institutional investors are increasingly opting for alternatives in their asset allocation. The majority of respondents in a survey of 120 Asian institutional investors no longer deem long-held industry norms – such as lengthy holding periods or conventional 60/40

PIP in to infrastructure

A swathe of UK pension funds is poised to increase its exposure to infrastructure. In a small start, which enthusiasts believe will quickly grow, the Pension Infrastructure Platform (PIP) will launch as a fund in January 2013, targeting £2 billion ($3.24 billion) worth of projects with the backing of around 10 UK pension funds. The

Previous