CalPERS draws roadmap for manager selection

CalPERS will standardise the process by which it selects investment partners as part of the investment office’s roadmap for 2011-2012 which includes six strategic priorities including the new categories of talent management and investment performance.

As part of the investment performance priority, the processes for external manager and investment partner selection, negotiation and monitoring will be standardised, according to a presentation given by chief investment officer, Joe Dear, to the investment committee.

In addition more attention will be paid to enhancing investment performance attribution and reporting, with the overall aim of outperforming the fund’s relevant peers on a return per unit of cost.

There are also priorities within each asset class. The affiliated programs, global equity and inflation-linked assets will all see organisational structure changes, while within the fixe- income asset class, the priority is to insource short-duration fund and review currency overlay strategy.

The global-equity asset class will prioritise the implementation of the capital allocation model and finalise the ESG strategy; while the AIM will continue to streamline and optimise the portfolio and implement the dedicated co-investment strategy.

Real estate and infrastructure will implement phase one of their 2011 strategic plan, as reported last week (click here).

Sponsored Content

Overall the strategic priorities for 2011-2012 are:

  • achieve investment performance targets
  • establish a new capital allocation framework
  • strengthen risk management
  • strengthen organisational systems and controls
  • improve cost-effectiveness
  • enhance talent management

Within risk management the aim is to implement a total fund investment risk management system, fund and asset class risk budgeting and monitoring, and deliver enhanced capabilities for performance and risk attribution. It also outlines a priority to implement operating risk evaluation process for new investment ideas.

CalPERS’ investment team aims to enhance its cost-effectiveness and will continue on its fee-reduction initiatives. It will also evaluate and select a tool for financial reporting to track and manage expenses.

The roadmap was initiated in 2010 and the idea is it lays the foundation for a more thoughtful, longer-term planning effort to clarify the strategic direction and identify the objectives and initiatives for strengthening the investment office capacity and performance.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Internal contracts could solve accountability issues

Internal investment committees and teams should be given an investment management agreement by their boards, in order to define accountability, according to Russell Investments expert, Sorca Kelly-Scholte.   mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

China’s growth not so lopsided but markets are

You get immune to rapid change in China, with the pace of development clearly visible all around. One wonders how long it will still be considered a developing nation.  mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

DiNapoli’s first snag at NY State fund as markets sour again

After three tumultuous years of reforms including a raft of new policies and procedures at the third-largest pension fund in the US, culminating in a 25.9 per cent return last year, Thomas DiNapoli, the New York State Comptroller, has hit a snag in the last quarter.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Water a new focus area for Canadian fund

Water is the latest focus area for the Canadian Pension Plan’s responsible investing initiative, with the fund planning to target big Canadian and global companies this year to gather information on their water usage. Click here to read more.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

ADIA looks to GM for economist

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority has hired General Motors’ chief economist and director of global economic and industry analysis, Ted Chu, as its chief economist.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous