Giant Texas plan defers performance pay for execs

Chief investment officer of the US$81 billion Teacher Retirement System of Texas, Britt Harris, has offered to forego an estimated $167,935 in performance incentive pay for 2008. At the most recent board meeting, the TRS board accepted Harris’ offer and also voted to defer all remaining investment division performance pay until the fund experiences a year of positive returns. In 2008 the fund experienced a 27 per cent drop in market value.

“We are all suffering during this virtually unprecedented period,” Harris said. “The value of people’s investments has decreased and many are out of work or concerned about their jobs. As CIO it seems to me that I should also feel the effects of this difficult time – just like many of our members.”

Harris, whose 25 years of experience in the investment industry has included a tenure as CEO of Bridgewater Associates, joined the plan in November 2006.

Since then, he has transformed its investment strategy and altered the composition of the fund’s internal team. The investment team now staffs a deputy CIO overseeing strategic research, risk management, external managers, hedge funds and trading, in addition to other professionals working in strategic research and private markets.

Responding to the decision to defer any performance pay, Linus Wright, who became the plan’s chairman of trustees this January, acknowledged the professionalism of the investment team.

Sponsored Content

“We place great value on the skills, expertise and performance of our staff, and we appreciate how they have helped us avoid bigger losses during the current economic downturn. However, the board agreed with Harris that deferring performance payments at this time was the responsible thing to do,” Wright said.

“My fellow trustees and I admire and respect the selflessness shown by Britt and the entire investment staff.”

“It only reinforces what we have known all along – the professional strength and character of the TRS team.”

Previously, all of the fund’s traditional assets were managed in-house, but now the plan has four strategic partners with money spread across their best equity and bond offerings.

The fund has also dramatically increased its allocation to alternatives from 5 per cent to nearly 30 per cent, with 15 per cent in real estate, 10 per cent in private equity, and 4 per cent in hedge funds.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Warren Buffett’s excellent adventure

'Youngster’ Warren Buffett (85) rebuffed risks from sugar and climate change as he toured the American economy with his ‘older’ offsider, Charlie Munger (92), presenting at the Berkshire Hathaway AGM .

Pay for performance

Pension fund executive pay varies widely around the globe, with differences based on internal management and alternatives exposures. Amanda White examines pension fund executive pay.

A long way to go

It’s all very well to have diversity, but most people lack the tools for how to get the best out of a diverse team. Instead the reverse is true and diversity can lead to an unlevel playing field.

Too much of a good thing

Experts at the Thinking Ahead Institute outline the pitfalls of implementing team diversity, , when too much diversity fails us, and how organisations can be champions for change.

Income the key dimension

Risk should be defined as the inability to meet retirement income goals, so investors and their managers should forget alpha and other “distractions”, according to David Booth.

Worlds colliding

The debate about the effect of pay inequality on both the financial and real-world markets is about to get a whole lot hotter this year.

Previous