CalPERS to slash fees in wake of $1bn external spend

CalPERS will set an external fee reduction target for the financial year, in light of the fact it spent more than $1 billion on external asset management fees in 2009-2010 and only a relatively modest $29.5 million on investment office personnel services including salaries.

About 62 per cent of CalPERS’ assets are managed inhouse, compared to about 33 per cent for its global peers according to a database put together by CEM. It also manages more assets passively than its global peers (31 versus 22 per cent), which when combined with the internal management, brings the costs down for the fund.

External asset management fees at CalPERS accounted for 90 per cent of the $1.2 billion in total investment office costs in 2009-2010. The other costs were personnel (3 per cent), portfolio management tools (2 per cent), consultants (2 per cent), legal and audit fees (1 per cent), appraisal fees (1 per cent), enterprise overhead (1 per cent)

Of the external management fees CalPERS dished out in 2009-10, the alternative investment management program accounted for 49 per cent of those costs, followed by global equity (31 per cent), real estate (17 per cent), inflation linked (2 per cent) and fixed income (1 per cent).

The Carlyle Group was the biggest beneficiary of the external fees paid to managers, receiving $52.45 million in fees in 2009-10.

In addition to developing an external fee reduction target, the fund will also enhance its financial reporting automation and data integrity, and determine an appropriate benchmark to set expense ratio targets for the fund.

Sponsored Content

Cost effectiveness initiatives for 2011-12 include continuing the external fee reduction initiatives and identifying a relevant peer group and process to benchmark the total expenditures, and work with CEM to refine the benchmark data collection and make it actionable.

CalPERS claims to be about 8 basis points more cost-effective than a CEM Custom Peer Group of 10 sponsors, with a median size of $64.5 billion, with that benchmark cost calculated as an estimate of peers costs if they had the same asset mix.

The fund claims that its cost-advantage is driven by its “public markets implementation style”, or in other words the combination of more inhouse and passively managed assets.

Cost-effectiveness is one of six strategic priorities for CalPERS’ 2011-12 investment office roadmap, the others are investment performance, capital allocation, risk management, organisation systems and controls, and talent management.

The fund’s ‘cost effectiveness vision’ includes more sophisticated financial management and governance structure that ensures pervasive cost awareness at asset class and organisation level; better tracking and reporting systems and improved data management; co-ordinated budget and resource allocation across INVO; greater flexibility to manage resources in the best interest of the fund and improved decision-making regarding use of internal versus external resources; and outperformance of relevant peers per unit of value.

CalPERS’ external asset management expenses: top 5 by asset class (2009-10)

AIM Carlyle Group $52,450,000
TPG $35,499,000
Apollo $30,315,000
PCG $19,132,000
Avenue Capital $18,586,000
Global equity Taiyo (corp gov) $18,023,000
Relational Investors (corp gov) $10,873,000
Arrowstreet Capital (external equity) $7,169,000
Genesis Asset Managers (ext equity) $5,891,000
JP Morgan (external equity) $5,741,000
Global fixed income Pacific Investment Mgt $1,861,000
Mondrian $1,644,000
Nomura Corp Research $1,609,000
AllianceBernstein $680,000
Rogge Global Partners $643,000
RMARS UBS $28,746,000
Chatham Asset High Yield Offshore $23,488,000
OZ Domestic Partners II $19,363,000
Black River FI Relative Value $19,204,000
PFM Diversified Fund $19,168,000
ILAC Timberland Timber Co $9,152,000
Alinda Capital Partners $8,274,000
CIM Infrastructure $3,000,000
UBS $2,500,000
Carlyle Infrastructure Partner $1,500,000
Real estate LaSalle Investment Management $16,976,000
CIM Group, LLC $15,273,000
IHP Capital Partners $12,166,000
Hines Interest $10,687,000
Stockbridge Capital Group $9,577,000
Remaining external management expenses total $646,612,000
Grand total $1,055,802,000

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Accenture puts diversity into action

Anna Darnley, 24, recently joined the board of Accenture's UK pension scheme. She and chair Peter George discuss achieving age and gender balance, and what her perspective brings.

Canadian pensions form research hub

Canada’s biggest funds are among the founders of the National Pension Hub, which aims to sponsor research that can help the industry, and has a plan for getting the right academics onto the job.

NBIM takes aim at forex practices

The manager of the $1 trillion Government Pension Fund Global has adopted the FX Global Code of Conduct and expects its counterparties to do the same. But the pension giant hasn’t stopped there.

Call for higher pension ages

The ratio of working years to retirement years should be at least 2 to 1 and raising the pension age is a universal fix for strained systems, the author of Mercer’s Global Pension Index says.

Active strategies still valued

Prominent CIOs say active management’s place is secure, even as passive strategies surge in popularity. But the two types of strategies aren’t as distinct as in years past.

Largest pension funds get bigger

Willis Towers Watson’s report on the top 300 pension funds for 2016 shows the world’s largest 20 funds have increased their share of global pension assets under management by 7.1 per cent.

Previous