NY State Pension Returns 11.55% in Fiscal 2024, Dumps Another Stock Fund

The $267.7 billion pension giant cashed out of $3.8 billion worth of equity investments in March and April alone.

A strong equities performance helped propel the New York State Common Retirement Fund to an 11.55% investment return for the fiscal year ended March 31, easily beating its long-term expected rate of return of 5.9% and raising its asset value to $267.7 billion.

The NYCRF’s top-performing asset class was domestic equities, which returned 28.98%, followed by global equities, which earned 24.29%. Multi-asset strategic partnerships returned 14.80%, non-U.S. equities rose 14.21%, and opportunistic/absolute return strategies increased 11.17%.

Credit investments returned 10.65%, while real assets and private equity were up 8.16% and 6.85% respectively. Cash returned 5.5% and fixed-income investments increased 2.65%. The only asset class that didn’t see a gain was real estate, which was down 9.72%.

“Strong performances across asset classes helped drive the state pension fund’s investment returns higher over the past year, with many companies reporting better-than-expected earnings and consumer spending remaining strong,” New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli said in a statement. “While inflation persists and global tensions pose risks to investors, the fund, thanks to its prudent management and long-term approach, is well positioned to weather any storms.”

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As of March 31, the NYCRF’s asset allocation was 26.80% domestic equities, 20.51% fixed income, 14.60% private equity, 11.83% non-U.S. equities, 9.33% real estate, 4.50% credit, 3.44% global equities, 3.44% real assets, 3.02% opportunistic/absolute return strategies, 1.33% cash and 1.20% multi-asset strategic partnerships.

Despite the robust equity performance, the pension fund continued to cash out of public equity funds and terminated Baillie Gifford Investment Management, an international equity fund valued at $1.9 billion in April, according to its most recent monthly transaction report. In March and April alone, the NYCRF divested $3.8 billion worth of public equities, compared with approximately $4.6 billion for all of last year.

In addition to terminating the equity fund, the pension plan committed $108 million worth of investments in April, including $58 million within its emerging manager program and $50 million within its real assets portfolio.

Under its emerging manager program, which invests in newer, smaller and diverse investment management firms, the pension fund earmarked $50.5 million for the ZM Capital Fund IV, advised by HarbourVest Partners. The fund seeks to acquire lower-middle-market North American tech-enabled companies in the media, entertainment and communication sectors.

Also under the emerging manager program, the pension fund committed $7.5 million to the GP5 Sidecar JV fund through the Empire GCM RE Anchor Fund. The fund will invest along with the Griffith Fund V in life science and industrial/flex investment opportunities.

And within its real assets portfolio, the pension fund committed $50 million to the DigitalBridge Partners III fund. The closed-end fund aims to acquire digital infrastructure assets, including macro cell towers, data centers, fiber, small cell networks, edge infrastructure and other related businesses.

Related Stories:

New York State Pension Cashes Out of $1.9 Billion Public Equity Fund

NY State Pension Returns 6.2% in Fiscal Q3, Cashes Out Another Public Equity Fund

NY Pension Shifts Global Equity Assets to Alts

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Bob McCormick to be Council of Institutional Investors’ New Leader

McCormick will be replacing outgoing director, Amy Borrus.



The Council of Institutional Investors selected Bob McCormick to serve as its new executive director. Amy Borrus, the current executive director, is retiring effective June 30.

“With Bob at the helm, CII will be well-positioned to build on Amy’s success in advancing good corporate governance, strong shareholder rights and fair financial markets, while expanding CII’s membership and programming,” said Aeisha Mastagni, CII’s board chair and a senior portfolio manager at the California State Teachers’ Retirement System in a statement about the leadership change. McCormick currently serves as a senior adviser to Third Economy and as a part-time adviser at strategic advisory firm PJT Camberview. He is also on the advisory boards of Columbia Law School’s Millstein Center for Global Markets and Corporate Ownership and the University of Delaware’s Weinberg Center on Corporate Governance.

In previous roles, he led the proxy voting team at Fidelity Investments and was chief policy officer at Glass Lewis.

Borrus, who announced her plans to retire in October 2023, has served as executive director since July 2020. She first joined CII in 2006 as deputy director after 25 years of business reporting for Businessweek magazine.

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During Borrus’ tenure, CII has been active on issues important to institutional investors, including public policy, shareholder advocacy and stewardship, and corporate governance. In the last year, CII has published reports on management succession planning disclosure in proxy statements, cost-benefit analysis requirements in federal policy decisions and dual-class stock structures.

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