SEC Subpoenas Kentucky Pension Officials

As part of an inquiry by the US Securities and Exchange Commission to investigate the role of middlemen among pensions, the regulator has subpoenaed officials of Kentucky Retirement Systems to be interviewed.

(October 12, 2011) — The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is investigating officials at the Kentucky Retirement Systems (KRS), which manages about $14 billion in assets for retirement programs for about 330,000 active and retired employees of state and local governments.

According to Kentucky’s Courier Journal, the federal agency sent subpoenas last week to one current and two former staff members to attend depositions. The US regulator told attorneys for the retirement systems that it wants to talk to all individuals who have served on the KRS board of trustees since 2007.

William Thielen, interim executive director of Kentucky Retirement Systems, told the newspaper that the subpoena for the current staff member — whom he declined to identify — ordered a deposition on October 25 in New York City, adding that in total, the SEC aims to speak with about 15 people, including board members.

To date, the SEC has revealed that they are solely interested in the use of placement agents.

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In June, while an audit of KRS found no evidence of pay-to-play activity, “troubling aspects” regarding the use of financial middlemen that connect money managers with pensions, known as placement agents, were revealed. According to an audit by Kentucky Auditor Crit Luallen, no evidence of “pay-to-play” activity at the scheme was found. Nevertheless, Luallen recommended 92 items for improving the system, urging greater oversight.

Luallen’s staff spent months probing into the role of placement agents, and found nearly $11.6 million in fees paid or committed to placement agents from 2007 to 2010. The report discovered that New York placement agent Glen Sergeon had “an unusually close working relationship” with Adam Tosh — the former chief investment officer at KRS and the current managing director at consulting firm Rogerscasey. Sergeon was involved in seven of 13 of the system’s investment agreements in which placement agents were used in 2008 and 2009. Additionally, the audit discovered that Sergeon “appears to have acted as a representative of KRS, setting up appointments and making travel arrangements” for Tosh.

“Based on the information they reviewed, auditors saw no evidence of a ‘pay to play’ scheme involving placement agents, or of conflicts of interest that benefited KRS officials; nor is there evidence that KRS incurred any additional cost through the use of placement agents,” Luallen said on June 28 in a press release accompanying the audit. “However, the audit points to several troubling aspects regarding the use of placement agents and will be referred to the SEC. The SEC has the authority to determine if further investigation is needed in Kentucky.”



To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Paula Vasan at <a href='mailto:pvasan@assetinternational.com'>pvasan@assetinternational.com</a>; 646-308-2742

Fed Survey: Hedge Funds Ward Off Risk

According to a survey by the Federal Reserve of 21 senior credit officers, hedge funds have an increasingly lower demand for risk.

(October 12, 2011) — Hedge funds are lowering their risk tolerance, a new survey by the Federal Reserve reveals.

The study released Tuesday showed that more than 50% of respondents reported that risk exposure with hedge funds has lowered over the previous quarter.

Furthermore, 20% of dealers, with regards to most-favored hedge fund clients, and one-third of dealers, with regard to other hedge fund clients, revealed a decrease in their exposure to risk since the beginning of 2011. Of the dealers surveyed, about 86% said pricing terms remained unchanged.

In addition, the Fed’s survey showed that the number of banks easing other terms to hedge funds, such as haircuts, still outnumbered those tightening. For such terms, 9.5% of dealers tightened while 33.3% eased and 57.1% were unchanged.

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“Responses to the September survey pointed to small changes in credit terms across major classes of counterparties with no clear overall bias toward either easing or tightening over the past three months, in contrast with the broad-based easing that had been since…June 2010,” said the Fed survey, which was conducted last month while asking about changes between June and August, when concern about Europe’s debt crisis was at its peak.

The survey by the Fed comes as the $46 billion Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Management (MassPRIM) made a decision to invest $280 million with 11 hedge fund managers as part of its move into direct investments.

According to a report from MassPRIM’s board meeting held yesterday, Massachusetts sent $25 million to each of the following fund firms (Viking Global Investors will receive $30 million):

1) Anchorage Capital Group

2) Arrowgrass Capital Partners

3) BlueCrest Capital Management

4) Brevan Howard Capital Management

5) Claren Road Asset Management

6) Elliott Management

7) Kingdon Capital Management

8) Och-Ziff Capital Management Group

9) Taconic Capital Advisors

10) York Capital Management

11) Viking Global Investors

In February, MassPRIM spokesman Barry Nolan told aiCIO that the fund decided to shift from a fully fund-of-funds investment strategy to incorporating more direct hedge funds. According to Nolan, MassPRIM’s decision signaled an effort by the fund to eliminate millions of dollars in fees as well as the threat of over-diversification that often comes from relying solely on a fund-of-funds approach. MassPRIM felt the decision to increase the percentage of direct investments into hedge funds translates to an attempt to make more intelligent decisions on asset allocation and rebalancing.



To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Paula Vasan at <a href='mailto:pvasan@assetinternational.com'>pvasan@assetinternational.com</a>; 646-308-2742

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