Calpers announces double-digit growth
16 July 2010 Sacramento
Image: Shutterstock
The California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) has reported an 11.4 per cent return in preliminary estimates for the one-year period that ended June 30, 2010.
The upturn for the 2009-10 fiscal year exceeded the long-term annualised earnings target of 7.75 per cent, which CalPERS has attained over the past 20 years.
"The positive returns over the last year are due to many factors, including the stabilisation in the financial industry and the increase in market liquidity," said Joe Dear, CalPERS chief investment officer. "Many asset classes have exhibited strength amid signs of stabilisation and recovery in the economy."
As of June 30, 2010, the market value of assets stood at $200 billion.
"With the exception of real estate, all of the asset classes had positive returns for the year," Dear said. "We're definitely in the recovery mode with the opportunity to capture future returns because of our long-term investment horizon. We're making good progress as we apply the hard lessons of the financial crisis to improving our investment policies, processes and strategies."
The CalPERS Board, investment staff and outside consultants are developing a new plan beginning in 2011 for how to allocate capital in public stocks, private companies, bonds and other fixed income, real estate and inflation-linked assets like commodities, infrastructure and forestland.
CalPERS has saved $100 million in fee reductions with external managers, has eliminated low-performing funds from its portfolios and is developing new risk management tools. It also successfully advocated several federal financial market regulatory reforms aimed at protecting investors, consumers and the economy from future financial crises.
Today's announcement includes market value of asset changes as follows: global fixed income, up 19.5 per cent; private equity, up 30.9 per cent; public stocks, up 14.4 per cent; commodities, infrastructure, forestland and inflation-linked bonds up a combined 2.7 per cent; and real estate, down by 37.1 per cent. The real estate dollar loss was equivalent to 1.3 per cent of the total CalPERS market value.
"Real estate declines reflect write-offs and deleveraging a portfolio that relied too heavily on borrowing at the peak of the bubble in 2005 and 2006," Dear said. "Our new real estate team has been completely restructuring 24 separate accounts. We're moving back into core properties and accepting managers in whom we have confidence. We're letting go underperforming managers and looking for the best possible deals as they become available in a still sluggish market."
The upturn for the 2009-10 fiscal year exceeded the long-term annualised earnings target of 7.75 per cent, which CalPERS has attained over the past 20 years.
"The positive returns over the last year are due to many factors, including the stabilisation in the financial industry and the increase in market liquidity," said Joe Dear, CalPERS chief investment officer. "Many asset classes have exhibited strength amid signs of stabilisation and recovery in the economy."
As of June 30, 2010, the market value of assets stood at $200 billion.
"With the exception of real estate, all of the asset classes had positive returns for the year," Dear said. "We're definitely in the recovery mode with the opportunity to capture future returns because of our long-term investment horizon. We're making good progress as we apply the hard lessons of the financial crisis to improving our investment policies, processes and strategies."
The CalPERS Board, investment staff and outside consultants are developing a new plan beginning in 2011 for how to allocate capital in public stocks, private companies, bonds and other fixed income, real estate and inflation-linked assets like commodities, infrastructure and forestland.
CalPERS has saved $100 million in fee reductions with external managers, has eliminated low-performing funds from its portfolios and is developing new risk management tools. It also successfully advocated several federal financial market regulatory reforms aimed at protecting investors, consumers and the economy from future financial crises.
Today's announcement includes market value of asset changes as follows: global fixed income, up 19.5 per cent; private equity, up 30.9 per cent; public stocks, up 14.4 per cent; commodities, infrastructure, forestland and inflation-linked bonds up a combined 2.7 per cent; and real estate, down by 37.1 per cent. The real estate dollar loss was equivalent to 1.3 per cent of the total CalPERS market value.
"Real estate declines reflect write-offs and deleveraging a portfolio that relied too heavily on borrowing at the peak of the bubble in 2005 and 2006," Dear said. "Our new real estate team has been completely restructuring 24 separate accounts. We're moving back into core properties and accepting managers in whom we have confidence. We're letting go underperforming managers and looking for the best possible deals as they become available in a still sluggish market."
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