CalPERS Lowers Risk in Bond Portfolio; Revises Placement Agent Disclosure

The nation's largest pension is seeking to cut risk in its $46 billion bond portfolio by 50%.

(September 8, 2010) — The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) is working on lowering its targeted alpha and risk in its $46.6 billion fixed-income portfolio by 50%.

At its September 13 meeting, changes to the scheme’s domestic investment range, including US Treasury and government-sponsored securities, consist of changing the range of the domestic fixed-income portfolio to 10- 80% from zero to 80%, mortgages to 15-45% from 10-60%, corporate bonds to 10-40% from 10-50%, opportunistic to zero to 12% from zero to 20% and sovereign debt to zero to 10% from zero to 15%.

In addition, the committee will consider revising the $206.7 billion portfolio’s placement agent disclosure policy to conform to a state bill being weighed in the Legislature. The bill would require certain placement agents register as lobbyists.

“The bill is consistent with efforts by the CalPERS board to be in synch with the filing of campaign reports as required for candidates of other state offices,” the fund’s information officer Clark McKinley told ai5000 last month. “We believe it’s appropriate under our own good governance and transparency guidelines that existing campaign contribution limits be extended to board members as well.”

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

The move by California lawmakers comes as pension officials across the country have been under intense scrutiny for their use of so-called placement agents, who offer access to pension officials in return for monetary gain. In May of last year, CalPERS revealed that a former board member, Alfred Villalobos, had allegedly used his access to the pension giant to make more than $60 million by helping money managers get CalPERS’ business. The fund, whose total fund performance was -4.6% for the quarter ended June 30, subsequently launched an investigation into the placement agent issue, which is still ongoing.



To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Paula Vasan at <a href='mailto:pvasan@assetinternational.com'>pvasan@assetinternational.com</a>; 646-308-2742

UN Principles for Responsible Investment Boasts 800 Signatories

More than 200 asset owners have signed up.

(September 7, 2010) — The United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment now has more than 800 signatories.

“Reaching 800 signatories with more than $20 trilion in assets after four years is a great achievement for the PRI,” the UN PRI’s Executive Director James Gifford told the Responsible Investor. “The PRI is now seen as an emerging norm in many parts of the investment industry. Client pressure from the PRI’s asset owner signatories is certainly a key factor driving the PRI’s growth in signatories. But it is also driven by the natural growth of responsible investment, and other initiatives such as Ceres and Carbon Disclosure Project are also growing strongly.”

Gifford added that the PRI is “under no illusions” about how much is needed before current best practice is implemented “across asset classes and in all major capital markets around the world.”

The principles were launched by then U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan at the New York Stock Exchange in April 2006. Of the UNPRI’s total of 803 signatories, 208 are asset owners, 440 are investment managers and 155 are service providers, according to the latest figures on its website.

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.



To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Paula Vasan at <a href='mailto:pvasan@assetinternational.com'>pvasan@assetinternational.com</a>; 646-308-2742

«