Equities Fuel Kentucky Teachers’ Pension’s 12.3% Fiscal 2024 Gains

The TRS’ annuity trust’s asset value grew to nearly $26 billion despite missing its benchmark by more than 150 basis points.



Kentucky’s Teachers’ Retirement System’s annuity trust investments returned 12.27% for the fiscal year ending June 30, raising its asset value to approximately $25.8 billion but missing its benchmark’s return of 13.80%.

The retirement system also reported three-, five- and 10-year annualized returns of 3.52%, 8.81% and 7.94%, respectively, below its benchmark’s returns of 4.94%, 9.15% and 8.09%, respectively, during the same periods.

According to the TRS and based on Aon Investments’ analysis of U.S. pension plans with more than $1 billion in assets, the annuity trust’s one-year return ranks among the top 10% of the plans; its three-year returns place it in the top 41%, while its five- and 10-year returns rank among the top 12% and 7% respectively.

“Another strong year in the markets resulted in great returns for retired teachers,” said TRS Executive Secretary Gary Harbin in a statement. “TRS’ disciplined investing, using the diversified approach established by the board of trustees and implemented by TRS’s investment team, continues to be beneficial in all markets.”

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As of the end of June, the TRS’ asset allocation was 40.3% domestic equities, 19.9% international equities, 13.3% fixed income, 10.7% “additional categories,” 8.1% alternative investments, 6.6% real estate and 1.1% cash.

Domestic equities were the top-performing asset class for the TRS, returning 22.47%, compared with its benchmark’s 23.52% return. Within the equities portfolio, large-cap stocks provided the highest returns, increasing 24.65%, just ahead of the 24.56% return for its benchmark.

International equities earned 8.62% for the TRS, well below the benchmark’s return of 12.17%, while fixed-income investments returned 3.53%, outperforming its benchmark’s 2.74% return by nearly 80 basis points. The fund’s private equity investments gained 7.76%. No benchmark for private equity investments was available. Real estate was the worst-performing asset class for the TRS, losing 5.11% for the fiscal year, as it was weighed down by its core real estate investments, which lost 9.41%.


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