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

Abu Dhabi sovereign fund coughs up: first ever review published

With uncharacteristic fanfare, the big Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund has provided the first insight into its workings, illustrating an international outlook and an appetite for a sophisticated asset allocation strategy. The fund published its first ever “annual review” this week. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

The benefits of US regulatory reform

US regulatory reform, such as the SEC’s plan to restore the uptick rule and the Volcker rule to restrict proprietary trading, are a step in the right direction for those advocating transparency. Amanda White explores the story with the chief executive of Principal Global Investors, Jim McCaughan, and head of research, analysis and strategy at

CalPERS considers new asset class classification

CalPERS is considering doing away with traditional asset class classifications in favour of classifying assets according to fundamental characteristics in a bid to provide a better understanding of portfolio risks and performance drivers and so move to a more effective portfolio construction and risk management framework. Amanda White reports. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Risk parity becomes bittersweet flavour of the month (2)

  “Understanding a program’s results involves attributing relative performance to active management, identifying any tactical asset allocation decisions and assessing mechanical factors such as leverage costs. “For most investors implementation of a leveraged strategy would likely require the retention of a beta overlay manager to execute and maintain the desired leveraged systematic exposures or an

Selective opportunities in private markets: Wurts

Private market investors should focus on distressed debt and to a lesser extent secondaries, according to the annual private equity outlook by consultant Wurts Associates, which contrary to other industry observers believes value can be added through top down analysis of the sector. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Strategic implications drive climate change study

The 14 institutional investors participating in the climate change strategic asset allocation study, a collaborative between Mercer, Carbon Trust and the IFC, will all receive individual portfolio scenario analysis of how physical and policy climate change-related events could affect their portfolio at an asset allocation level. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous