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

Quality factor explained by profitability: Robert Novy-Marx

Among academic classifications, and the subsequent implementation of factor investing, “quality” is one of the newer areas of investigation. Robert Novy-Marx, the Lori and Alan S. Zekelman Professor of Finance at the University of Rochester, is leading the charge on the academic justification of quality as a factor, although he has a “jaded scepticism” about

How to allocate assets to combat climate risk

  Mercer’s extensive climate change report, launched today, gives investors a practical framework for monitoring and managing climate risk, shifting the discussion from philosophical agreement to practical investment implementation.   In Investing in a time of climate change Mercer outlines extensive dynamic investment modelling that analyses changes in the return expectations of assets between 2015

Behind Norway’s coal divestment

The Norwegian Parliament’s finance committee recommendations to direct the Government Pension Fund Global to divest from companies that generate more than 30 per cent of their output or revenue from coal-related activities, is the evolution of a climate-related investment strategy that dates back to 2010. Amanda White explores the raft of tools the fund uses

CalPERS gives its managers ESG ultimatum

In what promises to be a transformational moment for ESG integration and investment manager accountability, CalPERS will require all of its managers to identify and articulate ESG in their investment processes. CalPERS staff led by Anne Simpson, senior portfolio manager and director of global governance, presented the ESG manager expectations, and draft sustainable investment guidelines,

Sourcing liquidity in fragmented markets

As equity trading becomes more fragmented, and more trading is done outside exchanges, it is prudent to assess whether alternative liquidity pools contribute to well-functioning markets. Norges Bank Investment Management has done the work for you, analysing the contributions, structures and functions of trading venues with limited pre-trade transparency. One of the benefits of liquidity

Factors the same in credit and equities

Robeco will launch the world’s first multi-factor credit fund, after academic research by its quantitative research team reveals that size, low-risk, value and momentum factors have economically meaningful and statistically significant risk-adjusted returns in the corporate bond market. David Blitz, co-head of quantitative strategies at Robeco in Rotterdam, tells Amanda White why an active approach makes

Previous