New Mexico Teachers’ Fund Scores Small Gain for Fiscal Year

In a tough time for investments, the fund logs a 1% portfolio increase.



In a difficult market, the New Mexico Educational Retirement Board eked out a small advance for the fiscal year ending June 30, up 1%, following the prior year’s spectacular showing of 28.7%, the fund’s strongest advance in 36 years.

For the most recent fiscal year, the $15.5 billion pension program beat its benchmark, which lost 2.8%. This gauge is an amalgam of several indexes, including the S&P 500, MSCI Emerging Markets and the Bloomberg Agg. For the troubled April-June quarter, the New Mexico plan bested its benchmark, with both negative: minus 4.6% and 6.0%.

The plan’s asset allocation hasn’t changed in three years, according to CIO Bob Jacksha. For example, the program is underweight in public equities and core bonds compared with its targets. On the other hand, it is overweight in private equity, opportunistic credit and real estate. Over the past 10 years, the fund has beaten its benchmark—8.5% annually against the benchmark’s 7.7%.

Jacksha says he and his staff will review the asset allocation later this year with the organization’s board of trustees. “If there are any changes, I would expect them to be minor,” he says. The largest group in the portfolio is public equity at 24%, followed closely by private equity at 23%.

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The biggest gainers and losers—which Jacksha calls “studs and duds”—were private real estate, ahead 35.1%, and PE, up 21.9%, while EM equity lost 27.2% and non-U.S. developed market equity was down 18.2%. 

The latest funded ratio was 62.8% as of mid-year 2021, an improvement from 60.4% in 2020. Later in the calendar year, the fund’s actuarial report will determine where it sits for fiscal year 2022. The state legislature modestly increased contributions to the fund, which may be a factor this time.

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San Diego Pension Fund Names Carina Coleman CIO

She succeeds Liza Crisafi, who retired after 15 years at San Diego City Employees’ Retirement System.

 



The San Diego City Employees’ Retirement System has named Carina Coleman as its new CIO. She will oversee the pension fund’s $10.9 billion investment portfolio, and succeeds Liza Crisafi, who retired at the end of July after 15 years at SDCERS.

 

According to the SDCERS release announcing the appointment, Coleman has managed multi-billion-dollar retirement plan investments of varying risk profiles among multiple asset classes, and has experience creating investment policy, constructing portfolios to meet return and risk objectives, conducting investment manager due diligence and analyzing risk and performance. She is also a former SDCERS board president.

 

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Coleman joins SDCERS from Sempra Energy, an energy infrastructure company, where she worked for more than 12 years, nearly nine of which she spent as director of pension and trust investments. At Sempra, she was responsible for managing the company’s qualified and non-qualified retirement plans as well as other trust assets worth more than $8 billion. She was also responsible for developing and implementing investment policies and strategies and overseeing investment staff.

 

Prior to Sempra, she was a manager at Disney for five years, and before that she started her career as a research associate at financial planner Bradford & Marzec, according to her LinkedIn profile.

 

“Carina brings technical expertise, strong business acumen, practical CIO experience, detailed knowledge of SDCERS’ investment program policies, good relationships with key SDCERS business partners, and, importantly, a leadership and soft skill set which is in close alignment with SDCERS’ core values,” SDCERS CEO Gregg Rademacher said in a statement.

 

Coleman earned her MBA in finance from the Wharton School of Business and is a CFA and Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst Charterholder. She also holds an M.A. in international studies from the University of Pennsylvania and a B.A. in economics/international area studies and German studies from the University of California, Los Angeles.

Coleman will start August 18; until then, Senior Investment Officer Jamie Hamrick will serve as interim CIO. SDCERS hired professional recruiting firm EFL & Associates to assist in the search to fill the CIO position.

 

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Hawaii ERS Names Howard Hodel Acting CIO

 

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