LACERS Bounces Large Cap Manager AJO

Performance has lagged for many years.  

The Los Angeles City Employees’ Retirement System has terminated a large cap US equities manager, according to board meeting materials.

The $17.3 billion fund ended its contract with AJO due to performance issues, according to June documents. The manager, which had worked for the organization since 2001, had been placed “on-watch” since June 30, 2016. The current contract was set to end in October, but the pension plan decided to cut its losses early.

“As detailed in the performance section of the report, AJO’s overall relative performance has not improved through the approximate three-year watch period and continues to breach policy criteria,” the materials said.

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Source: LACERS

AJO, which is benchmarked against the Russell 1000 Value Index, trailed nearly every year since the organization first hired it. It has outperformed the benchmark by only 20 basis points since inception.

AJO, which runs active quant strategies, managed $183 million of the plan’s assets as of April 30. It manages $21 billion in total client assets. Key personnel, strategies, philosophies, and process never changed during its contract with the Los Angeles fund.

The pension program’s AJO-managed assets will be transferred to a passive S&P 500 portfolio run by RhumbLine Advisers. That firm managed $3.2 billion as of March 31.

RhumbLine is also far cheaper than AJO as its annual passive fees for LACERS will be 0.5 basis points of the fund’s assets as of April 30, or $9,150. LACERS was paying AJO 30 basis points, or $549,000 per year.

AJO’s removal is in line with the fund’s “widely accepted view that US large-cap equity exposure should be implemented with passive management,” materials show.

Neither LACERS nor AJO could be reached for comment.

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Nominate This Year’s Key Asset Owners and Managers for the 2019 CIO Innovation Awards

Nominations for this year's 10th annual bash close August 3.

CIO’s 2018 Innovation Awards at NY Public Library     Photo by Margarita Corporan


For 10 years, CIO has honored the accomplishments of you, the chief investment officers, with our Industry Innovation Awards

On Thursday, December 12, at the New York Public Library, CIO will once again bring together institutional investors and those who provide for them.

It’s time to nominate deserving asset owners and asset managers/servicers for this year’s awards.

Since we started these awards in 2010, “innovation” has perhaps become an overused buzzword. While others may confuse innovation with change, we do not: Our goal is to highlight the truly innovative approaches to asset management and asset owning, separating the merely different from the meaningful. 

When nominating, ask yourselves, who has done something that is truly different, that may have changed the way we think about this business?

To nominate, please follow the survey directions here.

What You’ll Need:

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  • To make a nomination, you’ll be asked whether you’re nominating an asset owner or asset manager, the name and title of the person or entity you’re nominating, their location, email address and to choose which category they fall into.
  • The asset owner CIO categories fall into plan size and type, as well as special categories for ESG and Collaboration. Asset manager categories fall into a full array of topics of expertise. You can make more than one nomination, and you’ll do this by indicating if you’re done or ready to nominate another. Please feel free to make as many nominations as you’d like. 


THE DEADLINE TO SUBMIT YOUR NOMINATIONS IS AUGUST 3.

To verify nominees, CIO editorial team will consult an advisory board of former and current chief investment officers, consultants and allocators including Chris Ailman of CalSTRS; Raphael Arndt of Australia’s Future Fund; Paul Ballard of Texas Treasury Safekeeping Trust Co.; Harshal Chaudhari of IBM; Dan Chu of Sierra Club; Matt Clark of South Dakota Investment Council; Anne Dinneen of Hamilton College; Jonathan Grabel of LACERA; Rosalind Hewsenian of Helmsley Charitable Trust; David Holmgren of Hartford HealthCare; Robert Hunkeler of International Paper; Kim Lew of Carnegie Corp.; Allan Martin of NEPC; Sam Masoudi  of Wyoming Retirement System; Jacque Millard of Intermountain Healthcare; Chad Myhre, Portfolio Manager of Hedge Funds and Domestic Equities, Public School and Education Employee Retirement System of Missouri (NextGeneration winner of 2018); Mansco Perry of Minnesota State Board of Investment; Susan Ridlen of Eli Lilly; Anthony Waskiewicz of Mercy Health, St. Louis.

Hartford HealthCare CIO David Holmgren will chair the board. 

Click here to view CIO’s 2018 Industry Innovation Award winners.

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