CalPERS formally adopts placement agency policy…

CalPERS has officially adopted a placement agent policy, in light of recent pay-to-play allegations at other public funds, and introduced an investment policy for leverage, as its total fund value increased to $177.5 billion as at April 23, up from $169.4 billion at the end of March.

The fund’s new placement agent policy requires external managers to disclose fees and other information about the placement agents they hire to seek CalPERS’ business.

One of the specifics of the policy is that placement agents must register as broker-dealers with the US Securities and Exchange Commission or the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, or CalPERS would decline the opportunity to retain or invest with the external manager or investment vehicle.

Other requirements set out by the policy are: CalPERS investment partners and external managers must disclose their retention or placement agents, the fees they pay them, the services performed, and other information about their engagement; disclosed information must include agents’ identities, resumes of key people, description of compensation and services, copies of agreements, and if the agent is registered.

CalPERS board president, Rob Feckner, said the policy would help ensure that decisions were made solely on the merits of proposed investments with full transparency and disclosure.

“We want to know who’s being hired, how much they’re being paid, what they’re paid for, and who pays them,” he said.

Sponsored Content

Interestingly, Aldus Equity, one of the firms caught in the New York State Fund’s placement agent brouhaha, was shortlisted alongside Brock Capital, Ennis Knupp & Associates, and Pension Consulting Alliance as a private equity consultant for CalPERS. The latter two were subsequently shortlisted and asked to present to the investment committee on May 11.

Meanwhile the purpose of the fund’s leverage policy is to set a framework for identifying, measuring, managing and reporting various forms of leverage, including limits on some forms of leverage.

As part of the policy, use of leverage is prohibited unless expressly permitted in the relevant asset class or program policy; and except for unsettled loss positions on non-exchange traded contracts, direct debt, is prohibited unless authorised by the investment committee for a defined purpose.

Private real estate, infrastructure and forestland include limits on the use of non-recourse debt, and recourse debt is prohibited for investments in risk managed absolute return strategies or other programs that do not have complete transparency on all investment positions.

The asset allocation/risk management unit will be required to report to the investment committee on leverage.

The fund saw its total assets increase to $177.5 billion at the end of April 23, partly due to the expanded asset allocation ranges approved in the December 2008 investment committee meeting.

As at April 23, the global equity allocation was 13 per cent under the 56 per cent target but within the range; and there was a cash allocation of 5.3 per cent, compared to a 0 per cent policy target.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Academics and industry unite

The gargantuan impact of systemic risk in global financial markets has been corroborated by a consortium of industry and academics collaborating to provide independent quantitative research, insight and leadership on systemic risk. Driven by director of MIT’s Laboratory for Financial Engineering,  Andrew Lo, senior managing director at State Street Global Markets, Jessica Donohue, and managing

Rethink remuneration

Institutional investors around the world have been lobbying for the right to have a say on pay, a right to have an input into the remuneration of the executives in the companies they invest in. In June the UK’s business secretary, Vince Cable, laid out new plans that will give shareholders three-yearly votes on executive

Endowments fall
from grace

US college and university endowments have gone from pioneers in the adoption of socially responsible investing (SRI) to markedly trailing the rest of the investment industry in integrating environmental social and corporate governance (ESG), new research reveals. The Boston-based Tellus Institute, an independent not-for-profit think-tank, looked at 464 endowments and was damning in its findings,

Kay Review recommendations tackle short-termism

Co-head of responsible investment at the £32 billion Universities Superannuation Scheme, David Russell, says asset manager engagement with companies should move away from its “almost myopic focus on remuneration” to other issues that impact value and strategy. His comments come on the back of the final report of the Kay Review of the UK equity

POLL: Which strategy within emerging markets debt do you find the most compelling?

mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalPERS: “opaquely transparent”

A Columbia Business School case study on CalPERS has criticised the fund for being “opaquely transparent”, with a computation of investment expenses revealing the fund pays three-to-four times its peers in fees. Written by Columbia professor of business Andrew Ang and Columbia CaseWorks fellow, Jeremy Abrams, Californian dreamin’: The mess at CalPERS examines the political,

Previous