Elizabeth Burton to Step Down as CIO of Hawaii ERS

After more than three years leading the $22.5 billion investment portfolio, Burton is leaving due to personal and family considerations.

Art by Nigel Buchanan

Elizabeth Burton, CIO of the $22.5 billion Employees’ Retirement System of the State of Hawaii, is stepping down effective June 30 due to personal and family considerations.  

“We on the board of trustees are very grateful for Elizabeth’s significant contributions to the ERS,” Hawaii ERS Chair Vince Barfield said in a statement. “She joined us at a critical juncture in our investment strategy development and her expertise has strengthened our portfolio’s risk posture and performance and positioned the ERS for continued success. We will miss Elizabeth and wish her well.”

In her three and half years at ERS, Burton has helped the state’s largest public pension fund’s investment portfolio grow to a record $22.5 billion in assets as of December 31, 2021, from $16.6 billion in 2018. During her tenure, the pension fund also increased its funded ratio to 58.3% as of the end of 2021 from 55.2% in 2018.

In the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2021, the ERS portfolio returned 26.2%, the highest one-year investment return in the fund’s 96-year history. The ERS also lowered its unfunded liability to $14.61 billion in fiscal year 2021 from $14.23 billion a year earlier, and decreased the funding period to 24 years from 26 years. The funding period is the estimated time it will take to fully pay off the current unfunded liability assuming current contributions remain unchanged and all investment return assumptions are met. [Source]

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Burton joined Hawaii ERS as CIO in October 2018 from the Maryland State Retirement and Pension System, replacing Vijoy Chattergy, and in 2019 was named to Chief Investment Officer’s Power 100 for asset owners. Burton is also on the board of directors of the Chartered Alternative Investment Association, and was named as one of CIO’s 40 Under 40 in 2017.

Prior to joining the Maryland State Retirement and Pension System in 2016 as a senior investment analyst, Burton owned William Street Advisory, a strategic advisory practice she founded in 2013. Prior to William Street, she was a senior economist with Criterion Economics, and a consultant at First Annapolis, where she worked on mergers and acquisitions transactions and consulting. She was also a co-portfolio manager and quantitative risk analyst with a South Africa-based fund of hedge funds; a trader of fixed-income securities for a risk management firm; and a portfolio management associate with a quant-focused fund of hedge funds.

“Elizabeth’s investment expertise and leadership skills have proved enormously valuable in strengthening the performance of our investment team,” Hawaii ERS Executive Director Thomas Williams said in a statement. “We have a solid investment foundation on which we can continue to build. There is no question she will be dearly and deeply missed.”

Williams said the pension fund will consider all options in search of its next CIO.

“While no immediate decision has been made as to longer term direction, we have a deputy CIO, Howard Hodel, on staff who is more than capable of handling affairs during any interim period, or even perhaps permanently. Howard has served in this capacity in the past and handles matters today during the CIO’s absence from the office. Moreover, we have a very solid team of experienced investment professionals who have participated in the development and implementation of our existing strategies. We will approach this process diligently. We are under no pressure to hurry things,” he added.

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Is the Market Slide’s End Near? Maybe So, Says BofA

Large departures of money from retail funds could mark capitulation, per the bank’s chief strategist.

Another day, another debacle. That’s been the experience for weeks now, as stocks have plumbed new depths. The lone hope along this forbidding slope is that the sell-off’s end will be soon.

The end is usually called “capitulation,” when most investors are sick of the market and get out. That juncture—colloquially known on Wall Street as “the puke point”—may be near, according to Bank of America.

Equities in retail funds for stocks saw $1.1 billion in outflows this past week, EPFR data shows. Meanwhile, inflows into funds of essentially risk-free Treasury bonds are up.

“The definition of true capitulation is investors selling what they love,” then exiting the market, writes Michael Hartnett, the institution’s chief strategist, in a report. He points to drawdowns in once-venerated tech stocks such as Apple and in iffier tech prospects, as well as other risk assets such as cryptocurrencies.

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Retail behavior has propelled much of the market’s meltdown, as it is much more driven by emotion. Few reports have surfaced of major selling from institutional investors, whose orientation is longer-term. But retail-dominated selling affects the value of large asset allocators’ portfolios.

The S&P 500, up a tiny bit on Thursday after a dizzying 4% descent yesterday, is down 17.8% in 2022, almost at the dreaded 20% level that signals a bear market. Apple, once one of the top U.S. stocks, has already breached that line, off almost 24% this year.

Investing in such a market is a bear unto itself, says Barry Ritholtz, CIO of Ritholtz Wealth Management. It pays to be careful trading, whether the capitulation point occurs yesterday or six months from now.” 

 

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