LACERA Terminates Mandates With Blackrock and Goldman

At its January 13 board meeting, the LA retirement association dropped Blackrock and Goldman mandates because of lagging performance.

(February 1, 2010) — The Los Angeles County Employees Retirement Association has terminated Blackrock’s $450 million Alpha Tilts mandate and Goldman Sachs Asset Management’s $240 million enhanced-index mandate, due to sub par performance and organizational changes.

Senior investment officer-equities June Kim told emii.com that Blackrock’s acquisition of Barclays Global Investors in 2009 could expose the fund to unnecessary risk and that the departures of Goldman Sachs’ Quantitative Investment Strategies Chairman Robert Litterman and co-CIO Robert Jones could deter the firm’s focus.

For the year ending November 30,  BlackRock’s Alpha Tilts strategy returned 23.7% while Goldman Sachs’ Equity Enhanced Index strategy returned 23.6%. Their benchmark, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index, returned 25.4% for the same period, reported emii.com. According to the online publication, the cash from these mandates would go toward funding LACERA’s international equity portfolio.

The fund will additionally consider a $200 million investment in Analytic Investors’ 130/30 commingled fund.

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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

Canada Pension Fund's Takeover Report Shows Infrastructure Appeal

The potential takeover of Northumbrian by its largest shareholder illustrates the lure of infrastructure to investors seeking long-term stable cashflows.

(February 1, 2010) — Shares of Northumbrian Water jumped 11% on Monday after a report that the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan could bid 1.7 billion pounds ($2.7 billion) for the British utility company, taking it private.

“The promise of infrastructure is that investors can get long-duration, low volatility, inflation-protected, low-correlated and attractive returns,” said Kevin Greene, the ex-CEO and chairman of pensions consultant Rogerscasey, to ai5000 in June.

The Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan is already Northumbrian’s biggest shareholder with a 27% stake in the company, after having purchased most of it from France’s Suez in April 2005. The Canadian pension plan, which has more than C$87 billion in assets, has reportedly been in communication with banks and other funds about purchasing the rest of the water company and being partners in the deal.

Northumbrian, which supplies water to 4.4 million customers in the north-east and south-east of England, has said it expects to maintain its current policy of increasing dividends by 3% annually before inflation, according to Reuters. Its increased share price aided the rest of the sector — United Utilities rose 4%, Severn Trust increased 3.9%, and Pennon gained 5%.

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The takeover report follows a positive review of water bills by British regulator Ofwat in November, when it relieved water companies by recommending an overall slash in bills of just less than 1% over the period to 2015. Water companies had expected bigger cuts. Since November, shares in Northumbrian have risen by more than a fifth.

This is a very attractive sector if you can get affordable debt, and clearly there will be people that are doing the math and discovering they can make better returns by taking them private,” said Stephen Tupper, a regulatory lawyer at Greenberg Traurig Maher, to Reuters. During the 1980s, British water companies were the last of many state assets to be privatized and today, Northumbrian is one of only three companies that remain listed, Reuters reported.



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

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