In the face of escalating fiscal problems around the country, governors are upping their rhetoric on pension reform in an effort to tackle heightened costs.
In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, the President said he is announcing the launch of review of US regulations, removing outdated practices that hinder job creation.
The largest US phone company has announced via an SEC filing that it has changed its method of recognizing actuarial gains and losses for pension and other post retirement benefits.
State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli, trustee of the
$132.8 billion state and local employee retirement fund, asserted that
the New York State Common Retirement Fund was misled about the extent of
Merrill Lynch’s participation in the subprime mortgage mess.
A majority of claims, dating from early 2009, against the Royal Bank of Scotland have been dismissed by a US judge on the precedent that investors cannot use federal courts to raise fraud claims over the purchase of foreign securities.
As part of the Stichting Investor Claims against Fortis Foundation, institutional investors have launched a claim accusing Fortis of making misrepresentations to the market and to its shareholders.
A group of seven major public pension schemes are being led by New York City Comptroller John Liu to press the largest US banks to better examine their mortgage and foreclosure practices.
While denying any wrongdoing, Steve Rattner has agreed to
pay $10 million to settle charges that he and the firm he founded bought access
to New York’s Common Retirement Fund.
With three days to go before a state takeover, another proposal (30 years of dedicated parking revenue) and rejection (by Mayor Luke Ravenstahl) in the search for a Pittsburgh pension solution.
Two Motor City pension funds
have seen large write-downs on bad investments, many of which are tied to
recommendations from placement agents and an investment consultant.
Following the release of diplomatic cables quoting the current
RBS Chairman claiming that former directors may have breached their fiduciary
duty, a potential lawsuit, and embarrassment.
Odyssey Investment Partners LLC and HFV Management LP have reached agreements with New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo that resolve probes of their involvement with pay-to-play at the state pension fund.