Fed Ups Inflation Forecast; Signals End of Bond-Buying

The Federal Reserve has announced that it now expects headline inflation to reach 2.1-2.8% during 2011 before returning to the official target of under but close to 2% in the following year.

(May 2, 2011) — The Federal Reserve expects that US inflation — which has been a primary concern for institutional investors worldwide — will surpass the target rate set by policymakers.

Last week, the US central bank announced that it anticipates headline inflation will reach 2.1-2.8% during 2011 before returning to the official target of under but close to 2% in the following year. “The [Federal Open Market] Committee expects the effects on inflation of higher commodity prices to be transitory,” chairman Ben Bernanke said during a news conference, according to the news service. “As the increases in commodity prices moderate, inflation should decline toward its underlying level,” he said, contrasting with earlier statements made by Jeremy Grantham, the co-founder of the US investment firm GMO Capital Management, who has said that it’s ‘time to wake up’ as the days of plentiful resources and falling commodity prices are a thing of the past.

Meanwhile, while Chairman Ben Bernanke acknowledged that long-term inflation projections remained stable, short-term price hikes have convinced the Fed not to continue its latest $600 billion stimulus program of asset purchases — dubbed QE2 — beyond its scheduled end in June.

“The trade-offs are getting less attractive at this point,” he said. “Inflation has gotten higher…it’s not clear we can get substantial improvements in payrolls without some additional inflation risk.”

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

Despite the Fed’s efforts to quell fears, investors have continued to voice concerns over inflationary pressures. In the UK, an April survey of 64 European pension schemes with more than $426 billion (€300 billion) of assets showed that inflation is the most pressing concern for investors, with 92% of respondents citing it as a slight concern or a serious worry.

On the other side of the pond, in the US and Canada, a heightened focus on inflation is reflected by an annual investment consultant survey from Casey Quirk & Associates and eVestment Alliance revealed that alternatives, emerging markets, and strategies that provide a hedge against inflation are expected to dominate 2011 search activity. The study showed that half of those surveyed expect an increase in institutional interest in inflation hedging strategies this year. “One of the more interesting findings in this year’s consultant survey is the rising interest in private equity and real assets,” noted Casey Quirk Partner Yariv Itah in a statement. “Institutional investors increasingly manage toward outcomes rather than just excess return, and they want asset managers who can use illiquid investments to mitigate inflation risk and manage liabilities.”

In response to US fiscal concerns, investors have been adjusting their allocations. Pacific Investment Management Co. (PIMCO), for example, has been increasingly shorting US government-related debt and raising its cash holdings, largely due to inflation concerns. In June of last year, Bill Gross, chief investment officer of PIMCO, revealed that he would be making a transition into equities. “We are recognizing that the global marketplace is not just bond-oriented, and so equities have a place, always have had a place,” he told CNBC. Mohamed El-Erian, CEO of PIMCO, who popularized the phrase “new normal” to describe how growth will be depressed by consumer retrenchment and tighter financial regulation, has said the Fed’s purchase of Treasuries will lead to faster global inflation while failing to revive US economic growth. Thus, he has warned that investors should expect lower-than-average historical returns with greater regulation, lower consumption, slower growth, and a shrinking global role for the US economy.



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

In Latest Public Pension Exodus, Chief Investment Officer of CT Scheme Quits

Timothy Corbett, who has been the chief investment officer of Connecticut's $25 billion pension fund since July 2009, has resigned and will head into the private sector.

(May 1, 2011) — The political and financial strains on public pension plans in the United States have often pushed top-tier investment managers to seek opportunities elsewhere.

In the latest example of a chief investment officer at a public pension leaving for the private sector: The $25 billion Connecticut Retirement Plans and Trust Funds (CRPTF) CIO Timothy Corbett has resigned to become CIO and executive vice president of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, where he will be in charge of the firm’s overall investment strategy. The resignation of Corbett will take effect May 20.

“Connecticut has been well-served by Tim’s exceptional skills and affable professionalism,” said Denise Nappier, Connecticut’s treasurer, in a statement. “I am deeply grateful for his contributions.”

Corbett’s new supervisor — MassMutual’s Chairman, President, and CEO Roger Crandall — issued a separate statement on the CIO appointment, saying: “With our unwavering focus on delivering long-term value for our policyholders and given today’s new world of accelerated economic change and increased regulation, it is important to have a Chief Investment Officer focused exclusively on this role. Tim is a true industry veteran with a strong record of performance with more than 20 years in leadership roles as an investment professional. With Tim’s extensive investment expertise, risk management discipline and leadership capabilities, I have every confidence he will continue our track record of exceptional performance.”

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

CRPTF’s investment performance speaks to Corbett’s strong track record. Last year, the scheme produced a net return of 12.88% for the fiscal year ended June 30, increasing in value by $1.5 billion and finishing the fiscal year with assets of $21.9 billion. “What drove the increase in return was the fact that our plan was so well-positioned and diversified even going into the downturn in late 2008 and early ’09, with about 10% in our liquidity fund,” Corbett told aiCIO in August, noting that during fiscal 2010, the fund’s four best-performing sectors — emerging market equities, high yield bonds, emerging market debt, and private equity portfolio — each returned between roughly 17% and 25%.

From the departure of Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Management Board’s (MassPRIM) Michael Travaglini to the more recent departure of San Diego County Employees Retirement Association’s (SDCERA) Lisa Needle, examples of investment heads leaving the public pension arena — largely burdened with limited resources, severe underfunding, and volatile boards — for the private sector are numerous. Another such notable example is the departure of Timothy Barrett, who served as the chief investment officer at the San Bernardino County Employees’ Retirement Association (SBCERA) and now works as Eastman Kodak’s director of pension investments worldwide. “For me, Kodak offered an opportunity to manage pension funds globally with various defined benefit and defined contribution plans around the world,” Barrett told aiCIO, referring to his departure from SBCERA in October 2010. “It was simply an opportunity I could not turn down.”

In January, Tim Thonis, pension administrator of the Ventura County Employees’ Retirement Association (VCERA) in California, resigned unexpectedly, and while speculators blamed years of failed promises over pay raises, he cited governance as the reason for his departure. VCERA is still left without a CIO.

In a 6-3 vote, the Ventura County Retirement Board had declined to make changes that could have resulted in higher salaries for top officials at the fund. Over the past two years, the Retirement Board had recommended raising Thonis’ salary, but action had been delayed by County Executive Officer Marty Robinson and the Board of Supervisors. Thonis identified the attempt to raise his salary as one of fairness, as he was promised certain assurances about compensation when he was hired. The departure of Thonis, who ran the roughly $3 billion VCERA fund as both CIO and CEO, marks the tension at public pension funds over pay, as schemes struggle to retain their best talent.

“Tim Thonis was doing an outstanding job. Everyone said he was doing an outstanding job,” Ventura Chairman Tracy Towner, a senior district attorney investigator, told aiCIO, noting his belief that politics at public pensions are hindering the investment process. “Politics hindered our ability to retain someone like Thonis,” he said. “Now, Tim’s at the Orange County retirement board making a lot more money than he made here.”

As government-run pensions continue to run on government wages, chief investment officers and others in the industry note that schemes in the US may serve as a training ground for highly skilled people, such as Corbett, Barrett, and Thonis, who will eventually seek opportunities in the private sector with more money and less politics.



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

«