LACERS prioritises local companies

The Los Angeles City Employees’ Retirement System (LACERS) will give preference to Los Angeles-based companies in its alternative investment allocations, providing all else is considered equal in terms of performance, strategy, personnel, and philosophy.


Chair of the investment committee, Moctesuma Esparza, has requested that the traditional alternative investment policy include a provision relative to the geographic diversification of investments that would give preference to LA-based companies if all other considerations were equal.

Esparza also requested that the policy include a provision that would require diversity and workforce composition information from the general partners as part of the due diligence process.

The fund revised its alternative investment policy at the last investment committee meeting with a framework set for a more consistent and disciplined approach to the traditional core private equity portfolio, including additional due diligence and risk management oversight practices.

The fund is also considering expanding its asset allocation ranges by 25 per cent on the back of recent market fluctuations. At the end of April the US equity and non-US equity allocations were below their targets, and at 10 per cent the alternative allocations were above the 8 per cent target.

The board proposes the ranges be extended by 25 per cent at the upper and lower limits until a new asset allocation review can be completed.

Sponsored Content

At the end of April the target allocations were: 22 per cent to bonds, 1 per cent to cash, 42 per cent to US equities, 20 per cent to non-US equities, 7.4 per cent to real estate and 10 per cent to alternatives.

 

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Long-horizon premium: up to 1.5%

A study from the Thinking Ahead Institute finds the premium for long-horizon investing is up to 1.5 per cent a year and identifies eight strategies for reaching that target.

Bloomberg embraces diversity

Head of diversity and inclusion at Bloomberg stresses the benefits of a diverse workforce and says asset owners can highlight areas for improvement in this regard.

Real factors, and how to use them

Factor investing has become a topic du jour, but according to four experts, there are only a handful of factors that are persistent and robust. If used strategically, these can be useful.

No sustainable growth from Trump tweets

US President Trump’s Twitter outbursts can have a big temporary impact on markets, but longer-term results are driven by economic fundamentals, State Street Global Advisors’ Dan Farley says.

UK watchdog set to back pension mergers

The UK Financial Conduct Authority’s upcoming report is expected to call for consolidation in pension funds, tighter controls on active management fees and greater transparency.

Fed official: end reinvestment

The US Federal Reserve’s James Bullard is inclined to let bond buying run off in 2017. He also says higher interest rates are unlikely worldwide and calls the US a relatively closed market.

Previous