CalSTRS shortlists general consultant under new approach to advisers

CalSTRS has named three consultants in its shortlist to act as general consultant, including for the first time Meketa Investment Group, long-time consultant to Harvard Management Corporation and more commonly known as a specialist in infrastructure, under a new tiered approach to the use of consultants introduced by chief investment officer, Chris Ailman.

In addition to Meketa, Mercer and incumbent provider Pension Consulting Alliance have been shortlisted for the fund’s general consultant, a review held every five years.

Ailman said the fund was looking to introduce a new structure in its use of consultants and would hire a consultant to the board, then a panel of special project consultants to work with the investment staff, and finally a new group of specialist, focused consultants.

“We will issue another RFP for a group of consultants to work for the staff, on special projects and white papers, and last year we had four in that pool,” Ailman said. “We will also issue a third RFP for specialists which will include Nobel Laureates such as Bill Sharpe and Harry Markowitz and firms that specialise in areas like Latina, or infrastructure, we are looking for those that do one thing really well.”

Ailman said Meketa scored well in its bid for general consultant because the fund was “looking for thought leaders”.

Sponsored Content

The $130 billion fund  has been a net seller of equities in the past six weeks, selling more than $3 billion, in order to return to its allocated weight.

Ailman said the fund’s outlook was “quite positive” on equities but the fund wanted to return to its neutral weights. With $72 billion in global equities at the end of September, the fund was 2 per cent overweight.

CalSTRS is also in to the second phase of its active versus passive study, and is putting together a panel of experts to debate the issues, including Diane Garnick, an investment strategist at Invesco, and Sunder Ramkumar from BGI.

This study, including a delineation of the pros and cons including fees and the fund’s experience in active versus passive, will conclude in February with a decision to either increase or decrease active allocations, if at all.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

…as Gulf funds buoyant on BP

Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs) from the Gulf swooped in to buy stakes in troubled financial institutions during the financial crisis – now there is speculation they are sizing up stakes in BP as the oil giant seeks to raise capital following the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Investors from the Middle East were running a ruler over

Chinese whisper over CIC turf wars

The $300 billion China Investment Corporation (CIC) aims to sidestep official barriers to investing in the US by offloading its stakes in home-country banks. The proposal would see the sovereign wealth fund (SWF) relinquish responsibility for the Chinese government’s majority stakes in the country’s largest banks, such as Bank of China, the Financial Times reported.

Companies face up to investors on say-on-pay

Proxy advisory firms have substantial influence on executive pay decision-making processes in US companies, however they have had little impact on the design of executive compensation programs, according to about half the respondents in a Towers Watson survey. The Towers Watson”Executive Say-on-Pay Flash Survey”, conducted in June surveyed 251 US public and private corporations representing

MSCI index launches ESG into mainstream

Following its merger with RiskMetrics, global index provider MSCI will launch a series of indexes and risk products incorporating ESG for the first time, and in doing so will propel ESG factors into the mainstream. Amanda White spoke to managing director, global head of index and applied research at MSCI, Remy Briand. With more than

CalSTRS to get nimble for risk…

CalSTRS will explore the potential of risk-oriented strategic allocation management and wider asset class ranges, as it sets out its investment business plan for 2010-11, which also includes collaborating with UC Regents and CIC about improvements to Barra One – its risk management system – and potentially further insourcing. Each fiscal year CalSTRS sets out

CalSTRS team rejig makes way for new deputy CIO

The $130 billion Californian fund, CalSTRS, will hire a deputy chief investment officer who will oversee the new absolute-return asset class, investment operations and a majority of the day-to-day investment branch management. This brand new position will allow the chief investment officer, Chris Ailman, to focus more on portfolio management and asset allocation. All existing

Previous