CalPERS’ infrastructure consultant cuts fees

CalPERS has appointed a lead infrastructure consultant from its list of four shortlisted candidates that included Meketa Investment Group, Pension Consulting Alliance, RV Kuhns and Wilshire, with the appointed consultant offering a reduced fee structure as part of its contract.


Meketa Investment Group was appointed the lead infrastructure consultant starting from the beginning of January next year, cutting 15 per cent of its proposed annual fee.

It originally proposed an annual fee of $125,000 that was reduced by 15 per cent to meet the State of California’s directive to reduce state contract costs. The new proposed annual fee is $106,250.

In November a working group of investment committee members conducted interviews with the four finalists, with Meketa awarded the contract because of its proposal, presentation and responses to questions demonstrated their experience and skill in providing investment advice around infrastructure investing services.

Meketa originated by providing investment strategy and systems advice to the Harvard Management Company and was hired by its first pension fund client in 1978. It now consults for about $250 billion in institutional assets.

Meketa also has a collaborative relationship with Stanford University to focus on global infrastructure development, finance and policy.

Sponsored Content

This Global Infrastructure Forum brings together several experts with broad backgrounds in infrastructure, who will provide strategic information to Meketa on its infrastructure investment services. Meketa will also partner on specific research projects with the Collaboratory for Research on Global Projects, a leading multi-disciplinary infrastructure research centre at Stanford University.

While CalPERS had an initial target of 5 per cent in inflation linked it currently only has a market exposure of 2.3 per cent, or $4.6 billion.

CalPERS is also underweight real estate (6.9 per cent versus 10 per cent), alternatives (11.6 per cent versus 14 per cent) and cash (1.4 per cent versus 2 per cent). At the end of October its major overweight position was global fixed income (24.6 per cent versus 20 per cent).

CalPERS can invest up to 3 per cent of total assets in infrastrucuture, which forms part of the inflation-linked asset class, created in 2007 as the fund’s fifth asset class. The other four are global equity, flobal fixed income, alternative investment management and real estate.

The ILAC program has a target allocation of up to 5 per cent of the total CalPERS market value, and includes commodities, inflation-linked bonds, infrastructure and forestland. For inflation the fund has targeted an average annual investment return of 5 per cent over the rate of inflation, net of fees, over five years

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