Former SEC Chairman Levitt Calls for Probe of Public Pensions

Following scandal at New York’s Common Fund and CalPERS, former Chairman Arthur Levitt is calling on President Obama to launch a countrywide investigation into middlemen and public pension funds.

(October 22, 2009) – The former head of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), following recent troubles involving placement agents and other middlemen at multiple public pensions, is calling on President Barack Obama to create a panel to investigate the nation’s public funds.


According to Bloomberg, Arthur Levitt—who headed the SEC from 1993 until 2001—is calling for a full-scale investigation into payments made to placement agents. “It’s a national disgrace,” Levitt stated on Bloomberg Television. “It’s in pension funds all around America, and people are being badly hurt by this.”

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Levitt’s call comes after multiple scandals involving state pension plans. The New York State Common Fund—considered the epicenter of the placement agent scandal, and the subject of a recent article  in ai5000—already has  banned the use of placement agents, and the SEC is looking to follow suit. New Mexico pensions also have been caught up in the issue.


The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) also has had recent troubles, with a former board member—Al Villalobos of Arvco Financial Ventures, who served from 1993 to 1995—reportedly accepting payments from money managers in return for arranging investments with America’s largest public pension fund.



To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Kristopher McDaniel at <a href='mailto:kmcdaniel@assetinternational.com'>kmcdaniel@assetinternational.com</a>

Harvard Confirms Swap, Real Estate Losses

 

Although the fund was known to be down 27% on the year, the recently released annual report shows that the University lost big on interest-rate swaps and real estate in fiscal 2009—and that the University also was, unusually, investing much of its General Operating Account alongside the rest of the endowment.

 

(October 22, 2009) – Harvard University has confirmed massive losses stemming from bad interest-rate swaps and poor real estate deals, and also has revealed that it was investing, alongside its more illiquid endowment, much of the cash needed for day-to-day operations.

 


Although the University’s losses of 27% have been known since early September, Harvard, with the release of its annual report, has confirmed many suspicions regarding its unprecedented fall from grace, chronicled in ai5000’s inaugural edition in June. According to the report, the endowment was caught off guard by the “unprecedented” fall in interest rates last year, causing them to terminate—for a cash payment of $500 million—$1.38 billion in interest-rate swaps bought into years earlier, reportedly at the behest of then-University President Larry Summers. As a hedge against further drawdowns, Harvard also entered into new swap agreements in fiscal 2009 in order to offset other such agreements, locking in further unrealized losses of $425 million.

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The report also reveals that Harvard was investing much of its General Operating Account—essentially the cash on hand used to cover the school’s bills—alongside its endowment. Invested in a separate account but still managed by the Harvard Management Company—the entity that looks after the school’s $26 billion endowment—the university was looking for growth above and beyond traditional money market returns for this cash pool.

 


“We were invested fairly heavily with them and that’s what led to the losses,” Harvard’s Chief Financial Officer, Daniel Shore, said in an interview with The Boston Globe. “The problem, as much as anything, was we weren’t as diversified as we could have been.”

 


Harvard’s real-estate portfolio also suffered substantial losses, upward of 50%, according to the report.

 

The report can be found here .


 



To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Kristopher McDaniel at <a href='mailto:kmcdaniel@assetinternational.com'>kmcdaniel@assetinternational.com</a>

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