CalPERS hires Mercer for compensation review

The $200 billion California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) has hired Mercer Consulting review the investment office incentive compensation program, a design set up in 1997 under the guidance of the board’s compensation consultant Watson Wyatt.

The appointment of Mercer, designed to give a new perspective, follows a directive to staff in May to review the existing incentive compensation program and propose modifications to simplify it.

The redesign project will include reviewing CalPER’s current compensation plan as well as analyzing incentive compensation practices in relevant sectors such as other pension funds, endowments, and asset management firms. Mercer will then design a new incentive program and discuss it with the key stakeholders at CalPERS, including the head of the human resources chief Chris O’Brien.

Mercer has begun the process of individual interviews and has interviewed the CIO, senior investment officers, human resources and policy business support divisions. It recommends it has access to select board members and relevant senior management, with the estimated completion date the end of March 2010.

In assessing compensation programs against the market Mercer will review the size and complexity of the operations, assets under management, internally versus externally managed funds; the individual scope and responsibility of each position, and the relative market competition.

Sponsored Content

Mercer highlighted some of the challenges that CalPERS, and other organizations face, including:

Attracting high visibility and scrutiny as a large, public entity;

Fielding questions about the relative performance design component common to investment office incentive plans, such as how can the plan pay out incentives when the fund value is down;

Attracting and retaining high calibre investment professionals to the non-Wall Street investment community;

Providing creative alternatives for compensation investment professionals that are fair, competitive and reasonable; and Simplifying investment compensation strategies to promote transparency.

Nanci Hibschman, principal in the human capital business of Mercer’s San Fransisco office, is the lead compensation consultant, and Louis Finney, principal in Mercer Investment Consulting’s Chicago office is the lead investment consultant.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Russell takes up fundamental index for alternative beta series

Alternative beta is catching on, with Russell Investments the latest market index builder to embrace the non-cap-weighted index trend by inking a deal with Rob Arnott’s Research Affiliates company. Russell will launch a series of “fundamental” indices, in association with Research Affiliates, during the third quarter of this year. Fundamental indices rank stocks according to

Fund managers want to be fiduciaries too

With less institutional flows forecast in the next few years, asset managers will need to implement a convincing “fiduciary overlay” to win business from large investors. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Study accounts for TIPS, alternatives

The effects of adding TIPS and alternatives to the existing asset mix are being explored in an asset liability analysis conducted for the $53 billion Oregon Public Employees Retirement System by Strategic Investment Solutions. A presentation from SIS, which looked at five new asset allocation scenarios adding a 5 per cent alternatives allocation, and between

Time to come clean, says Ambachtsheer

The International Centre for Pension Management’s Keith Ambachtsheer believes if pension fund stakeholders “fessed up” about the real state of their funding situation, the business of pension fund management, and its subsequent investments, will have a brighter future. He spoke to Amanda White. There are not many pension funds around the world that can satisfy

Calls for global governance code go unheard

The global application of a code of best practice for institutional investors, developed by the UK Financial Reporting Council, was debated at the International Corporate Governance Network’s annual conference in Toronto. Amanda White reports. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

How emerging markets benchmarks misread economies

As pension funds around the world shift international equity allocations to emerging markets, they should be increasingly cautious about the benchmarks in use, according to Conrad Saldanha, the New York-based portfolio manager for emerging markets equities at Neuberger Berman. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous