(September 27, 2013) – If Chicago’s
public teacher pension plan were a hedge fund, it would be in the vein of Third
Point or Perishing Square.
Where Dan Loeb and Bill Ackman
strong-arm corporations as activist investors, Chicago Teachers’ leans on
school systems as an activist creditor. For some public retirement funds,
employer contributions roll in as promised, in full, and on time. For other
pension plans, inflows require a bit of shaking loose.
Carmen Heredia-Lopez, CIO of
Chicago Teachers’, is happy to leave the pursuit of payments to her boss and
focus instead on the pursuit of returns. (Unfortunately, the fund isn’t
rewarded for credit risk on contributions—many of its debtors would be
distinctly high-yield.)
“My focus as
a fiduciary is to seek the highest returns on a risk adjusted basis—and I try
to not get involved with the political part,” she tells aiCIO. “I focus
on investments—that’s where my passion is.”
But in creating an investment
program and undertaking an asset liability study, the contributions factor is
impossible to ignore. How can a CIO set a risk budget without knowing their
actual budget?
When Heredia-Lopez
and the fund’s consultants look at the entire plan, she says, “the most
pressing question is, ‘Are we going to get the contributions?' We see that as
the biggest risk. It’s the biggest risk to the long-term stability of our plan.
If we don’t get the contributions as detailed, it limits our ability to invest
in illiquid assets."
Heredia-Lopez is closing in on a
year at the helm of Chicago Teachers’ $9.7 billion portfolio. Prior to taking
over the CIO office in January, she spent two-and-a-half years as the fund’s
director of investments. Her tenure as an asset owner began in 2006 at the
Illinois Retirement Fund, although she arrived with more than a decade of
private-sector finance experience and an MBA.
That background in asset
management serves her well as CIO; she credits years spent batting for the
other team with giving her insight into the service side playbook. “For
example, every consultant now will tell you they have an open door
policy, that they take every call and every manager meeting they’re offered,” Heredia-Lopez says. “I know for a fact that’s not
true—because I was a manager.”
Diversify.
The institutional asset owner
community has plenty of strengths. It is by and large a grounded set, one
generous with ideas and equipped with a sense of purpose and a long-term
perspective.
Yet for all these lovely
qualities, the group has its shortcomings. Specifically, it’s short on women.
And minorities. Imagine aiCIO’s 2012
Power 100 list of influential CIOs as a portfolio. It’s 89% allocated to male
assets, with only 11% exposure to women. If those weightings were asset classes
or risk factors, every CIO on the list would implore the same thing: Diversify!
For years, Heredia-Lopez has been
helping to make that easier for other CIOs. Through mentoring, speaking at
events, and involvement with the Robert Toigo Foundation, she’s spreading the
world about institutional investment to communities that aren’t currently
well represented in its ranks.
Not only does this provide solid
job opportunities to groups which may not have previously accessed them, it
also hugely expands asset owners’ talent pool.
Heredia-Lopez is an alumnus of the
Toigo Foundation, which supported her pursuit of an MBA in finance and
accounting at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business.
"As women, we always question our quantitative ability,” she
says. “'Should I be here? What am I doing here?' But I'm not afraid of
math: I can do it. And foundations like Toigo give you that
confidence."
And
Heredia-Lopez’s team might be another organization in the same mold.
The Chicago Teachers’ Pension Fund
may be the only public fund in the US with an all-female investment staff—or if
there’s another, it’s news to the CIO.