Amid Internal Clashes, San Diego Hunts for CIO

The public pension’s OCIO experiment with Salient Partners is reaching a tumultuous end.

Recruitment is set to begin in earnest early next month for an internal CIO for the San Diego County Employees Retirement Association (SDCERA).

After voting eight-to-one in June to wholly outsource the $10 billion portfolio to Salient Partners, the board changed course only months later. In September, a motion to terminate the $10 million contract was narrowly defeated, but SDCERA will soon begin actively searching for an internal replacement.  

Mary Hobson of recruitment firm EFL Associates told the board on Thursday that job postings would go up early in the new year. She said she aims to present a pool of candidates to the board for consideration by February 6.

“As a woman and woman of color, I find Mr. Meyer’s attack on me racist and sexist.” —Trustee Samantha Begovich 

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Already, according to Hobson, between eight and ten people have contacted her expressing interest in the position. 

However, board members themselves indicated that recruitment efforts could be hamstrung by their highly public and ongoing infighting. 

Vice Chairman David Meyers, who has consistently supported the deal with Salient Partners, asked that transcripts of yesterday’s meeting and one in September be combined and given to serious candidates for the job.

“The hypocrisy of this board should be shared with any new CIO that comes forward,” Meyers said. “Talk about running scared.”

The salary for the new position remains capped by lawmakers at $209,000 per year, although Hobson intends to recruit candidates that could fall outside that range.

“I want to leave us wiggle room to talk to people who may need more than that, to see if you can try and push that through,” she said. The job posting will stipulate “a competitive salary,” and said, intentionally leaving compensation details “pretty vague.” 

“The hypocrisy of this board should be shared with any new CIO that comes forward. Talk about running scared.” —Trustee David Meyers

Following individual discussions with the board members, Hobson strengthened the posting to say SDCERA “encouraged diversity” from interested parties, and she would work to present them with minority and women candidates. 

Still, a few hours prior, one trustee requested the secretary include in the meeting minutes that another member had made racist and sexist remarks against her.

“As a woman and woman of color, I find Mr. Meyer’s attack on me racist and sexist,” said Samantha Begovich, the board’s newest member and a lawyer with the district attorney.

Trustee Meyers had requested “that she put the pitchfork down, stop storming the castle, and stick to the facts” during an argument about additional audits.  

Those interested in the CIO position can contact Mary Hobson at EFL Associates

Related Content:San Diego Vote on Firing OCIO Too Close to Call, Insiders Say; Asset Owners Under Attack

Norway Adopts Fresh Responsible Investment Framework

The Ministry of Finance has passed oversight for the SWF’s responsible investing to Norges Bank and a five-strong ethics council.

Norway’s $856 billion sovereign wealth fund (SWF) is to get a new responsible investment mandate from January 1.

The country’s Ministry of Finance has appointed a new Council on Ethics to provide feedback to the Government Pension Fund Global’s advisory committee. It has also given the fund new guidelines about excluding companies from its portfolio.

Responsibility for “observation and exclusion of companies” has passed from the Ministry of Finance to Norges Bank, which runs the fund’s investment portfolio.

“The changes in the governing documents are a result of a long-term effort to strengthen the work on responsible investment management in the fund,” said Siv Jensen, Norway’s minister of finance. “Emphasis is put on facilitating better interaction between active ownership and the exclusion mechanism.”

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The changes follow research by Norges Bank Investment Management, at the ministry’s request, which showed that active engagement with companies was a preferable approach to divestment.

The ministry did not make any changes to the criteria currently in place that dictate the companies that must be excluded from the SWF’s portfolio.

The five new members of the Council on Ethics include chairman Johan Andresen, owner of financial and industrial conglomerate Ferd, Guro Slettemark, general secretary of Transparency International Norway, and humanitarian lawyer Cecilie Hellestveit. Hans Christian Bugge, professor of environmental law at the University of Oslo, and Arthur Sletteberg, CEO at Norwegian Microfinance Initiative, have also been appointed to the council.

Related Content: Norway SWF: Divesting ‘Ineffective’ Against Climate Change & How the World’s Largest SWF Gets the Best from Active Managers

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