Investment Chiefs Leave Kentucky Retirement Systems for Consulting Firm

The struggling pension system will search for replacements after Rich Robben, Andy Kiehl depart at the end of September.


The CIO and deputy CIO of the Kentucky Retirement Systems (KRS) will leave the struggling $18.7 billion pension fund this month to go into consulting. 

The pension fund is launching a search to replace Rich Robben, executive director of its office of investments, and Deputy Executive Director Andy Kiehl. Their last day at KRS is Sept. 30. They start at Florida-based investment consulting firm AndCo Consulting on Oct. 5.

“Rich and Andy are strong additions to our team of professionals and believe in our customized client solution service approach,” read an AndCo statement.

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“Adding  two  practitioners  who have managed and allocated assets from a client’s perspective in the large public plan space will bring a wealth of practical experience and further enhance our ability to add tangible value for our clients,” it continued.  

Rich Robben (top) and Andy Kiehl, CIO and deputy CIO of the Kentucky Retirement Systems

Robben has been permanent executive director at KRS for a little more than a year, having taken the post in April 2019 after serving as interim executive director since 2017. KRS said that until a replacement is found, Robben’s responsibilities of overseeing the fixed income, equity, and alternative asset divisions, and serving as the primary adviser to the investment committee, will be taken over by staff in the office of investments. Investment office staff will also take over Kiehl’s duties of directing the real estate and real return asset classes.

“I can assure all of our constituents that our funds will continue to have experienced staff and investment committee leadership actively overseeing them while we begin a search for Mr. Robben’s and Mr. Kiehl’s replacements,” David Harris, chairman of the KRS Board of Trustees, said in a statement.

A recent report from nonprofit group Wirepoints ranked the Kentucky Employees Retirement System (KERS) lowest among 148 state and local pensions with $2 billion or more in assets based on asset-to-payout ratios. According to the report, which used data collected by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, KERS has a funded ratio of only 16%, with $2.66 billion in assets and $1.03 billion in annual benefit payouts for an asset-to-payout ratio of 2.6. That means that without any contributions or investment income, the fund only has 2.6 years until it runs out of funds—if it isn’t bailed out first.

For the fiscal year that ended June 30, KRS investments returned 1.15%, which was less than one-third of the median 3.59% return for peer pension plans as reported by Wilshire Associates. KRS attributed the underperformance compared with its peers to its low funded status, which requires it to invest more conservatively than better funded plans.

The various pension funds under KRS reported returns ranging from 0.2% for the KERS-Hazardous insurance plan to 2.36% for the KERS Non-Hazardous pension plan.  

Robben first joined KRS in January 2015 from Stock Yards Bank & Trust in Louisville, where he was an investment officer. Before that, he was a fixed income portfolio manager at Deutsche Bank, and he started his career out at Invesco Ltd. where he was director of information technology (IT).

Kiehl has been with KRS since 2015 after working at Deutsche Asset Management as a director, global fixed income. Prior to that, he worked at Invesco US and National City Investments.

The KRS office of investments team includes Joe Gilbert, who oversees and evaluates domestic and international equity investments; Anthony Chiu, who manages private equity and alternative investments; and Steve Willer, who manages fixed-income investments.

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Don’t Worry about an Election Outcome Delay, Goldman Says

The mechanisms are in place for the nation and the market to know pretty soon who wins, the firm’s economists argue.


Fears of a chaotic vote count in the upcoming presidential election are rife, but Goldman Sachs says not to worry: The ballot tallying mechanisms should be able to render a quick decision.

So traders shouldn’t get anxious about a system breakdown, which would translate into a stock market slide, Goldman economists Michael Cahill and Alec Phillips wrote in a research note. By their assessment, the nation and the market should know fairly soon who won the election, GOP President Donald Trump or Democratic former Vice President Joe Biden.

Right now, the traders sure are fretting. Readings of the so-called “fear gauge,” which measures volatility via futures contracts, indicate how deeply traders are concerned about election turmoil. For the S&P 500, the Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, expiring in late October closed on Friday at 31.2, compared with a spot VIX that closed at 26. That’s quite a wide gap historically. What’s more, the November closing was higher still, at 32.9.

To Goldman, the trepidation now rocking the options market, which could well spill over into regular stock trading, may be explained as “muscle memory” that resulted from delayed counts in the past.

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In 2000, the outcome of the election hinged on 600 ballots cast in Florida, entailing a dispute that had to be settled by the US Supreme Court. This year, there will be record numbers of mail-in votes due to the coronavirus. Among traders’ biggest anxieties is that the mail-in ballots may not be counted for days.

But the Goldman economists wrote that “there should be enough information on Election Night from states that will report quickly” to know who the likely winner will be, even before the Associated Press or others pronounce the victor. “In other words, the S&P can trade the likely outcome even if the AP does not call the race,” they declared.

Although a delayed result is a “tail risk,” they reasoned, a lot of states, including key battleground ones, will have begun tallying votes well before Nov. 3, Election Day. Indeed, the outcome in the key state of Florida, which was the crux of the 2000 problem, should be known early, they stated.

That’s because the Sunshine State will begin counting early votes 22 days before Nov. 3 and won’t accept any more ballots after Election Day. The Goldman economists wrote that “nearly all scenarios in which President Trump reaches an electoral college majority includes Florida’s 27 electoral votes.” A Florida win should come early and tell the tale for the rest of the contest, they said.

Phillips and Cahill conceded that legal challenges could draw the situation out. But they argued that this would only be the case if the count was very close in a state. The winner in any certain state, they said, “is usually more decisive.”

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