Showing posts with label loss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label loss. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

A Message to the New NYCERS Chairperson

You have a huge problem. Your designated investment manager, the NYC Comptroller, is doing a terrible job with investing NYCERS assets, this Comptroller and the last three. NYCERS has an average annual rate of return over the last 15 years of 2.89%.

The Comptroller, however, has the backing of DC-37 which is the largest city union and also a NYCERS trustee. Between the three city unions on the NYCERS Board and the Comptroller these trustees control four votes, a majority of the total seven votes on the Board.

These votes control investment decisions, disability decisions, the NYCERS administrative budget and the budget subsidies from NYCERS to the Comptroller. The three unions are bound together because of disability votes at the Board. They need to back each other up to be able to get closely contested disability cases resolved in their favor.

Without the annual investment delegation from NYCERS Board of Trustees, the Comptroller has very little political influence. With the change in the City Charter in 1990 the mayor essentially controls the Comptroller’s administrative budget. This totally compromises his operating capabilities and his political influence.

If the Chair wishes to provide some relief to the mayor from the city’s huge pension burden, he will have to take away the Comptroller’s power over investment decisions.

This is a complicated task. Since 2005, DC-37 has run NYCERS as patronage mill for its flunkies. That starts with the executive director and spreads throughout the agency. This also includes regular employees who have criminal liabilities and are more than happy to do as they are told.

As the mayor’s appointee to the Board of Trustees, the Chair will need to take on both of these political entities. This will clearly be a hard fight. The investment issue cannot be resolved without addressing the investment delegation and the internal rot at NYCERS. The Chair will have to convince DC-37 that it is in its long term interest to reduce investment costs and raise returns. He will also have to commit to totally honest and sympathetic votes on disabilities that come before the Board of Trustees.

In return DC-37 and the other unions will have to not vote for the annual investment delegation to the Comptroller in June. It will also mean, however, that DC-37 will have to accept reform within NYCERS because the Comptroller will no longer have any incentive to allow NYCERS executive staff to run wild with the agency.

In eliminating the Comptroller from investment management operations the Board will have to hire a truly independent investment consultant and hire internal NYCERS staff to track investment activity. You can see why NYCERS also needs to be reformed. Current investment consultants under contract to NYCERS have structural conflict of interest issues involving the investment community. A large part of their revenue comes from the investment community.

While the Comptroller is the statutory custodian, he has contracted out almost all of its functions. The Comptroller has even turned over the the pension payroll operations to FISA, another city agency. There really isn't much left of the old Comptroller's Office. Ed Koch really did out maneuver Jay Golden.

The Trustees should set the target for total fee expenses at 10 basis points. That would have saved $130M in FY-2014 ($184M-$54M). The Trustees could then focus on a basic Russell-3000 US stock index fund & core investment grade bond Portfolio. Maybe the bonds could be indexed also. This will make running the portfolio and hiring staff much simpler.

Note: As of June 30, 2014 NYCERS had $11.8B in US equity index funds with annual fees of $500,000 for FY-2014 with an annual rate of return of approximately 24.5% gross of fees. But at 0.4 basis points the fees don't really effect returns. Yes, that is correct. NYCERS only paid a 0.4 basis point, not even half a basis point for that return. You can see why investment managers get nervous when you talk indexing.

The Trustees can then drop all the garbage asset classes listed below. This won’t be easy because of the crazy contracts the Comptroller’s office has signed in the past. I consider these contracts illegal because of the secrecy clauses.

Asset Classes to be Dropped:

NYCERS: Unproducive Investment Classes: Values and Fees for FY-2014

Asset ClassFees PaidValue as of June 30, 2014Basis Points
Convertible bonds $2.1M $.5B 42
Bank loans $3.1M $1.0B 31
Emerging manager- US stocks $4.4M$1.0B 44
Emerging managers – Foreign stocks $.3M$.05B 60
Emerging managers – US bonds not reported $.1B***
Private equity $58.0M $4.0B (guess)145
Real estate $20.87M $2.3B (guess)90
Infrastructure not reported$.02B***
Hedge funds $15.5M $1.9B (guess)82
Emerging market/active $9.1M $2.3B 39
Developed Market equity $11.8M $5.4B 22
Junk bonds $6.9M$2.1B33
Opportunistic Fixed $16.3M $1.1B148
Foreign bonds $.4M$.3B13
Active US equity $14.2M $5.3B26
TIP bonds $1M $1.5B7
Subsidy to the Comptroller $2.3M
Foreign taxes $8.8M

Sunday, March 29, 2015

By the Numbers – Private Equity at NYCERS – 2011 to 2015

Since 2011 NYCERS has dropped the following number of private equity contracts:

  • 2010 – 3
  • 2011 – 4
  • 2012 – 7
  • 2013 – 0
  • 2014 – 8
It is not clear how many of these contracts were standard exits and how many were sold at a loss. NYCERS has provided no cash flow history for these dropped contracts except one. That was Allegra in 2012. That is because I requested the information. You can read about the Allegra disaster in one of my previous postings.

It is reasonable to assume that most of these dropped contracts were equally bad.

Everyone knows that the private equity industry is feeding off of the US public pension fund structure. It is a malignant cancer but no one wants to publicly admit it because that admission would make the public pension funds look like fools and would put most private equity firms out of business.

Now, for the bad news. NYCERS has continued to enter into new private equity contracts since 2010 as you can see from the numbers below:

  • 2010 – 8
  • 2011 – 5
  • 2012 – 7
  • 2013 – 7
  • 2014 – 14
  • 2015 – 3 (as of Sept. 30, 2014)
You would have thought that NYCERS would be quietly trying to get out from under these flawed investment deals but no. There is no end to this stupidity.

NYCERS’s private equity fees for FY-2014 were $44.1M for 142 contracts allegedly worth $4.0B. Don’t bet the ranch on that figure. There is an added charge for private equity organizational costs of $13.9M (page 120). No one knows who this money was paid to except that it has a private equity label.

The sum of the two costs is $58.0M. That is 145 basis points or a 1.45% annual charge. Another serious problem is that NYCERS is not reporting 33 of the 142 contracts in its fee schedule on page 135. Enough said.

Monday, December 16, 2013

What the Comptroller Won't Tell You

The chart below is a report card for the investment performance of the NYCERS trustees over the last 14 years. The Comptroller has never presented this type of report. The trustees have never demanded this type of analysis. It is "crystal" clear why neither party does.

The avgerage actual annual rate of return over the last 14 years is 2.11%. No one wants to have to explain this long term sub par performance. It has been a rough 14 years for pension fund investing.

Over the years NYCERS has had a general asset allocation of 70% in stocks and 30% in bonds. With that allocation and using a US stock index fund and a core bond strategy the market would have given NYCERS an average annual rate of return of 3.59% over the last 14 years. This is not anything to write home about but it would have produced an extra $11B over the $47B closing balance that NYCERS had at the end of 2013.

On a side issue, you can see how dangerous the actuary's 8%/7% interest rate assumption is.

The 2000 closing balance, $42.9B, was 99.9% based on market values. In contrast, the 2013 closing balance, $47.2B, is only 85% market based due to the illiquid non-market based components of the current portfolio. The $47.2B includes a $7.2B estimate for private equity, real estate, and hedge fund assets. This estimate is always open to question and raises the very real possibility that the $11B shortfall is even larger.

In conjunction with this rise in illiquid assets NYCERS has shifted out of the the index/core strategy that it previously followed. In 2000, the NYCERS portfolio was 71% invested in an index/core strategy. By 2013 NYCERS had only a 39% position in the index/core strategy.

To be accurate the trustess outperformed the market four times (marked in column 4) over the last 14 years but it was not enough to make up for the damage incurred in the other 10 years.

The last column of the chart lists the investment fees incurred each year. You can see that from 2000 to 2004 these fees were in the range of 10 basis points. Since 2005, the trustees have lost control of these fees. I suspect that the trustees are most likely not aware of the actual fees being paid or the content of the investment contracts they have agreed to.

NYCERS - Actual Returns Versus Index/Core Returns 2000 to 2013

Fiscal Year Close Balance Net Cash Flow Actual Rate of Return Index/Core Return (70%/30%) S&P/Bond Returns Index/Core Close Balance Fees
1999 $41.9B $ % % % $ $
2000 $42.8B -$412M 3.14% 5.52% 6%/4.47% $43.8B $32.5M
2001 $38.1B -$558M -11.86% -7.58% -15.8%/11.65%% $40.0B $41.3M
2002 $32.8B -$1,028M -11.44% -10.82% -19.2%/8.65% $34.8B $37.6M
2003 $31.5B -$1,511M 0.62% 2.36% -1.5%/11.47% $34.0B $29.3M
2004 $34.2B -$1,202M 12.71% 12.08% 17.1%/0.43% $36.8B $35.1M
2005 $35.5B -$756M 6.30% 5.56% 4.4%/8.2% $38.1B $53.9M
2006 $37.3B -$711M 7.10% 4.23% 6.6%/-1.36% $39.0B $69.4M
2007 $42.5B $368M 13.03% 14.75% 18.46%/6.33% $45.2B $98.1M
2008 $39.7 $314M -7.32% -8.10% -14.9%/7.67% $41.9B $115.3M
2009 $31.9B $313M -20.46% -17.50% -28.2%/7.40% $35.0B $138.2M
2010 $35.4B $72M 10.68% 11.63% 12.1%10.49% $39.3B $175.3M
2011 $42.4B $164M 19.39% 20.94% 28.1%/4.15% $47.8B $145.1M
2012 $42.7B $728M -1.14% 5.01% 3.1%9.35% $51.0B $129.5M
2013 $47.2B $783M 8.81% 12.26% 17.9%/-0.95% $58.2B $183.3M

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

All the King's Horses...

As of December 31, 2012 NYCERS had 263 open contracts with investment managers. For details see pages 103 and 119-124 of NYCERS FY-2012 CAFR .

In the table below I have listed 12 of these managers along with the assets they have under management and the fees NYCERS paid them in FY-2012. I picked these managers because not only are they sufficient to manage the total NYCERS portfolio, they are significantly more effective and efficient than the mob of plus 230 current managers. These twelve managers represent the index/core strategy I referred to in a previous posting.

It is always enlightening to see specific details about big picture issues. You can get clear sense of what is going on. Of course, limiting the investment activity to these twelve managers would have a profound effect on the broad investment community. What is good for NYCERS, is not necessarily what is good for "Wall Street".

These 12 managers handle approximately 28.5% of NYCERS assets but their fees represent only 3% ($3.88M) of the total $130.81M paid in investment fees in FY-2012. It is reasonable to estimate that if they handled all of NYCERS assets, the annual fees would run about $10M. Total returns would be higher and the internal management at the Comptroller's Office and NYCERS would be far simpler and transparent.

The Comptroller wouldn't have to worry about replacing his departing private equity specialist. It is highly unlikely any competent investment specialist would sign up for the last 7 months of Liu's term.

NYCERS - The Index/Core Strategy Managers

Manager Category Asssets: December 31, 2012 Fees: FY-2012
Blackrock R3000 Russell 3000 Index $3,710.66M $184,173
State Street R3000 Russell 3000 Index $1,803.35M $304,439
Sate Street Global Advisors EAFE (developed international) Index $1,119.15M not reported
Blackrock EM Emerging Markets Index $1,078.31M $99,331
Blackrock Government & Agency Bonds $425.68M $186,104
PIMCO Government & Agency Bonds $460.52M $186,881
Blackrock Mortgage Bonds $675.25M $305,410
Neuberger Bermann Mortgage Bonds $733.52M $511,144
PIMCO Mortgage Bonds $760.26M $350,840
Barrow Hanley Corporate Bonds $562.92M $642,933
Taplin, Canida Corporate Bonds $580.87M $349,386
T. Rowe Price Corporate Bonds $678.66M $648,665

Note: A "not reported" item is an accounting error on a financial report (accrual method).

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Listed below is a sample of some of the investment managers under contract with NYCERS who are unnecessary for the effective performance of the NYCERS portfolio. I'll bet the trustees have no idea that there are some many mangers and how much they are being paid.

NYCERS - Some of the Unnecessary Investment Managers

Manager Category Asssets: December 31, 2012 Fees: FY-2012
Research Affiliates Domestic Equity Index $912.84 $1,293,845
Attucks Domestic Equity (Minority/Women) $216.49M $1,179,486
Capital Prospects Domestic Equity (Minority/Women) $51.44M $268,539
Progress Management Domestic Equity (Minority/Women) $281.14M $1,468,541
F.I.S. Managers Domestic Equity (Minority/Women) $166.85M $828,940
Walden Asset Mgnt Domestic Equity (Environmental) $253.86M $308,333
Breeden Capital Mgmt Domestic Equity (Environmental) not reported $1,118,833
Progress Management International Equity (Minority/Women) $42.79M $310,251
Ballie Gifford International Equity $432.79M $1.037,943
GE Asset Management International Equity $109.52M $1,162,633
Mondrain International Equity $239.08M $1,214,513
Sprucegrove International Equity $529.97M $1,047,245
Philadelphia International Equity $315.79M $1,373,394
Thornburg International Equity $570.97M $2,248,851
F&C SGE International Equity (Environmental) $55.60M $337,259
Generation GE International Equity (Environmental) $133.85M $1,772,148
Governance for Owners International Equity (Activist) $254.74M $841,776
Acadian Emerging International Equity $318.37M not reported
Ballie Gifford Emerging International Equity $334.09M $2,501,886
DFA Emerging International Equity $558.15M $1,519,145
Eaton Vance Emerging International Equity $569.31M $554,824
Permal Asset Management Hedge Fund $254.98M $1,452,171
Blue Trend Hedge Fund $115.19M not reported
Brevan Howard Hedge Fund $199.42M not reported
Brigade Lev Cap Str Hedge Fund $116.16M not reported
Caspian Select Cf Hedge Fund $88.31M not reported
D.E. Shaw Hedge Fund $227.95M not reported
Aisling Capital II Private Equity $4.28M $71,973
Aisling Capital III private Equity $6.27M $274,905
Allergra private Equity $0.06M not reported
American Sec Partners VI private Equity $24.83M $685,718
Ampersand 2006 private Equity $24.42M not reported
Ampersand 2009 private Equity $16.37M not reported
Apollo Investment Fund V private Equity $11.16M not reported
Apollo Investment Fund VI private Equity $92.17M not reported
Apollo Investment Fund VII private Equity $82.90M $1,205,026
Ares Corp Opp private Equity $18.29M $121,554
Ares Corp Opp II private Equity $26.48M $209,001
Ares Corp Opp III private Equity $70.96M $1,111,806
Ares Corp Opp IV private Equity $3.86M not reported
Axa Secondary Fund V private Equity $56.56M $1,368,478
BC European Capital Private Equity $47.70M $2,092,480
BDCM Opportunity Fund private Equity $7.95M $395,168
BDCM Opportunity Fund II private Equity $29.87M $399,327
BDCM Opportunity Fund III private Equity $14.66M $675,930
Blackstone Capital Ptnrs IV Private Equity $15.88M not reported
Blackstone Capital Ptnrs V Private Equity $9.38M $553,449
Blackstone Capital Ptnrs VI Private Equity $26.76M $1,136,958
Blackstone Mezzanine Ptnrs II Private Equity $11.62M $245,257
Blue Wolf Capital Fund II Private Equity $17.18M not reported
EQT VI Private Equity $25.24M $1,674,292
Fourth Cinven Fund Private Equity $68.06M $901,122
Green Eq Inv VI Private Equity $14.6M not reported
Landmark Equity XI Private Equity $10.78M not reported
Landmark Equity XIV Private Equity $59..39M not reported
Landmark Fund XIII Private Equity $25.40M not reported
New Mountain Ptnrs private Equity $1.86M -$231,107
New Mountain Ptnrs II private Equity $27.50M -$450,855
New Mountain Ptnrs III private Equity $54.50M $1,424,805
Onex Ptnrs III private Equity $7.95M $1,089,789
Quadrangle Cap Partners II Private Equity $42.57M $503,573
Ripplewood Partners II Private Equity $8.89M $21,583
Tailwind Capital Private Equity $1.88M $606,463
Vista Equity III Private Equity $31.82M $336,956
Vista Equity IV Private Equity $33.68M $1,483,426
Wellspring Cap Ptnrs V Private Equity $9.09M $908,561
Welsh Carson Anderson & Stone XI Private Equity $31.42M not reported
Yucaipa American Alliance FD Private Equity $65.58M $637,938
Yucaipa American Alliance FD II Private Equity $150.53M $423,574
Yucaipa Corp Initiative II Private Equity $22.40M $624,375
Amer Value Ptnrs I Real Estate $24.57M -$326,904
Apollo Europe III Real Estate $25.97M $523,333
Apollo RE Fund V Real Estate $10.76M $278,780
Blackrock Carbon III Real Estate $31.18M not reported
Blackstone RE Ptnrs EU III Real Estate $37.09M $750,000
Blackstone IV Real Estate $17.13M $317,794
Blackstone VI Real Estate $131.89M $1,466,194
Blackstone VII Real Estate $77.399M $1,784,556
Brookfield Strategic RE Ptnrs Real Estate $12.26M not reported
Canyon Johnson Urban Fund Real Estate $0.01M -$19,101
Canyon Johnson Urban Fund II Real Estate $19.99M -$133,311
Canyon Johnson Urban Fund III Real Estate $22.50M $300,000
Capri Urban Investors Real Estate $39.36M $744,550
Carlyle R.P. Fund V Real Estate $14.49M $636,344
Carlyle Realty VI Real Estate $22.12M $118,142
Colony Realty Ptnrs II Real Estate $8.75M not reported
H/2 Special Opportunity Fund II Real Estate $12.56M not reported
Heitman America Real Estate $138.63M $616,535
JPM Strategic Property Fund Real Estate $165.35M $1,464,228
JPM Special Situation Fund Real Estate $72.94M $1,117,013
Silverpeak RE Ptnrs III Real Estate $9.16M $300,510
The City Investment Fund Real Estate $92.15M not reported
Thor Urban Property Fund II Real Estate $26.59M $1,030,292
Tishman Speyer/Citigroup Real Estate $38.60M not reported
UBS Trumbull Property Fund Real Estate $186.05M $1,263,748
Urban America II Real Estate $13.49M not reported
Walton St RE Fund VI Real Estate $47.12M -$62,722
Westbrook RE Fund VII Real Estate $30.85M $498,359
Westbrook RE Fund VIII Real Estate $47.77M $751,032
Loomis Sayles Enhanced Yield Bonds (Junk) $547.40M $1,933,194
Shenkman Enhanced Yield Bonds (Junk) $249.91M $1,015,023
T. Rowe Price Enhanced Yield Bonds (Junk) $485.14M $1,400,339
Advent Convertible Bonds $275.87M $1,330,140
Lord Abbett Convertible Bonds $144.78M $326,330
Victory Convertible Bonds $146.32M $448,484
Comptroller's Payroll subsidy $0.00M $1,983,615
Unknown Private Equity Organizational Costs $0.00M $7,893,741
Unknown Real Estate Organizational Costs $0.00M $4,770,660
Aksia consultant $0.00M $540,867
PCG consultant (private equity) $0.00M $463,888
Stepstone consultant (private equity) $0.00M $916,667
Torreycove consultant $0.00M $456,654
Townsend Group consultant (real estate) $0.00M $384,790

Note: The following is a great NY Times article on how trustees can lose their way.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Investment Failure for NYCERS in FY-2012

The books for FY-2012 are closed. NYCERS’s closing balance for FY-2012 was $42.655B. This represents a 1.02% profit from the $42.409B closing balance for FY-2011. The profit is due to dividends and interest payments of $1.165B.

Unfortunately, there was is only a .58% increase in the valve of the NYCERS portfolio and there was a loss of $481.7MM in the fair value of its investments.

The S&P 500 Index, a broad gauge of the US stock market, increased from 1320 to 1365 during FY-2012, a 3.4% increase. If NYCERS had matched the S&P 500 Index, that loss would have been an increase of $1.442B.

The Russell 3000 index, a broader gauge of US companies, went from 790.00 to 803.63, a 1.73% increase. This index would have produced an increase of at least $734MM.

This poor performance was in spite of a $633MM jump in employer contributions which increased from $2.387B to $3.017B (Cash Statement shows only $2.661B)in FY-2012. While Albany in 2012 was radically cutting the pension benefit structure for all new employees, the NYCERS trustees were digging the whole deeper.

There was no press release from NYCERS acknowledging this disappointing investment result for 2012.

Hidden away on page 74 of NYCERS 2012 Comprehensive Financial Statement is the following comment on NYCERS financial highlights for 2012:

Financial Highlights — NYCERS’ net assets held in trust for benefits have increased by $246 million (.6%) from $42.4 billion at June 30, 2011 to $42.7 billion at June 30, 2012. The main reason for the modest increase was that the increase in value of the Plan’s bonds and private equity segments, along with the increase in employer contributions, were enough to offset the losses in the domestic and international equities markets.

It is unclear why NYCERS had losses in its domestic and international equities assets, since the domestic and international indexes were up for the year ending June 30, 2012. A subsequent NYCERS comment below appears to contradict the above quote.

Investment Performance — Investment performance results for fiscal year 2012 were generally consistent with related benchmarks. Domestic equities returned 2.23%, which significantly trailed the Russell 3000 benchmark of 3.84%. International equity holdings returned 13.62%, slightly below the MSCI EAFE Index of 13.83%. Fixed income securities returned 7.05%, significantly below the NYC Core Plus Five Index of 9.35%.

What is clear, however, is that there are serious questions about the investment decisions being made by the NYCERS trustees.

For the record, this is the first year NYCERS is reporting hedge fund investments with a value of $833MM or $929MM depending on which report you look at. The Comptroller reported this asset class with a -2.14% loss for the year ending June 30, 2012.

As a word of caution, while the market value of fixed income assets increased $632MM ($13.222B - $12.590B) based on prices from open market trading, the private equity assets were “reported” to have increased by $669MM ($5.925B - $5.256B). The private equity increase, unlike fixed income assets and employer contributions, is unverifiable and most probably exaggerated.

The last 12 years have been a disaster for NYCERS investments. The closing balance on June 30, 2000 was $42.824B. On June 30, 2012 it was still only $42.655B. While this represents an average annual profit of 3.71% due dividends and interest payments, the assets have been totally stagnant.

Some of this problem is due to financial crises beyond the trustees control but the trustees, like desperate gamblers, have raised the risk level of the portfolio over the last 12 years in a manner that is inappropriate for a prudent pension fund with a mandated $3.758B in annual benefit payments.

No one ever holds the trustees accountable for their actions.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Investment Loss - Allegra Capital

I previously commented on the notice that Allegra Capital Partners IV, LP had exited its limited partnership with NYCERS as of the first quarter of 2011. Pacific Corporate Group had notified the NYCERS trustees of this on September 16, 2011.  NYCERS first invested in the Allegra private equity deal in FY-2000. It was the third private equity deal NYCERS entered into. NYCERS currently has approximately 150 open private equity investments.

Allegra is the second deal to exit. The first was Emerald Infrastructure Development Fund which was a total loss ($1M) of capital for NYCERS.

On December 9, 2011, I asked NYCERS, under the NYS freedom of information law, for the cash flow history between NYCERS and Allegra during the life of the partnership. On July 2, 2012, seven months later, NYCERS notified me that the Comptroller’s office had the cash flow history. I have to assume NYCERS did not have the information even though NYCERS did not specifically say that the agency did not have it.

On July 9, 2012, I requested the information from the Comptroller’s office. I was told it would be sent on August 20, 2012, a six week delay. That is not bad for a FOIL request and I actually received the information on August 20, 2012.

The response, however, was a bit strange. Let me quote the wording of the Comptroller’s email:

“The cash flows below have been provided by the Stepstone Group LLC, the Private Equity consultant to NYCERS.” 

This is troubling since this implies that the Comptroller’s office does not have this information in its own files. This would mean that neither NYCERS nor the Comptroller records what money is moving between NYCERS bank accounts and the private equity managers. 

I suspect that each private equity manager has a blanket approval to draw down against NYCERS bank accounts up to a fixed maximum limit set by contract. It would appear that the only way that the consultant would have this information is from the private equity manager since the Comptroller does not have it.

Bottom line, the private equity managers have direct access to NYCERS bank accounts without NYCERS disbursement authorization and without notification to NYCERS or the Comptroller.  

There is a very specific requirement in the NYCERS section of the NYC Administrative Code. It states as follows:

 “ §  13-137  Payments  from funds. All payments from such funds shall be made by such comptroller upon a voucher signed by the executive director  of the retirement system.”.
It is true that modern investing requires managers to move quickly before a voucher can be processed. All other investment actions, however,  are subsequently reported to NYCERS and the necessary vouchers are produced. This allows NYCERS to keep accounting control of its assets. Of course, private equity investing is not high frequency trading and a 24 hour approval cycle would be reasonable for disbursements to private equity managers.

Legally, NYCERS is responsible for the proper accounting of its assets, not the Comptroller and not a third party private firm.  In addition, as of June 30, 2011, Stepstone was not under contract to NYCERS. Assuming they  began working for NYCERS in FY-2012 any information they have is dependent on work that was done by another contractor, Pacific Corporate Group, over  the last twelve years. 

The cash flows reported may be totally accurate but it is not possible to confirm their accuracy. I don’t know any prudent person who would turn over his check book to a third party.

Now let’s look at the really bad news. With cash flow information provided, the Allegra investment had a rate of return equal to negative 8.24% per year over eleven years. This is equal to a steady loss of  8.24% for 11 years in a row, not just a bad quarter or a year.

NYCERS invested $24M and got back $11.66M. 

On top of the loss of accounting control this was a disastrous investment for NYCERS. As I said before NYCERS has about 150 private equity deals in play. The law of averages projects that NYCERS will break even on these deals, if it’s lucky. It definitely will pay huge annual fees.

This is clearly an imprudent investment strategy for a large pension fund. Heck, it’s a bad strategy for anyone.

For some strange reason the Comptroller is still carrying Allegra on his NYCERS quarterly reports as of March 31, 2012 at a value of $4.74M. This makes you question the accuracy of the quarterly reports.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Hard Reality of Private Equity

At the NYCERS investment board meeting on September 16, 2011, the NYCERS private equity (PE) consultant, Pacific Corporate Group (PCG), notified the trustees that one of its PE investments, Allegra Capital Partners IV, had exited during the first quarter of 2011. See the Wikipedia quote below:

A private equity fund's ultimate goal is to sell or exit its investments in portfolio companies for a return, known as internal rate of return (IRR) in excess of the price paid. These exit scenarios historically have been an IPO of the portfolio company or a sale of the company to a strategic acquirer through a merger or acquisition (M&A), also known as a trade sale. Increasingly, more common has been a sale of the portfolio company to another private equity firm, also known as a secondary sale. In prior years, another exit strategy has been a preferred dividend by the portfolio company to the private equity fund to repay the capital investment, sometimes financed with additional debt.

I have previously commented on the problems of PE investments for public pension funds.

PCG stated that this is the second NYCERS PE investment to exit since the PE program was started in 1999. I suspect that the first PE investment to exit was the Emerald Infr. Dev. Fund. It was a disaster with a total loss of capital equal to $1M and fees for two years (2009 & 2010) equal to $754,338.

PCG did not give the trustees any specifics on the close out of the 12 year old Allegra partnership. But from the PE investment recap you can extract some of the bad news. NYCERS invested $24M in this partnership and received back $11.7M. That is a 51% loss of capital and obviously, a negative IRR.

To rub salt in the wound, NYCERS paid Allegra $2.2M in fees from 2000 to 2010. The fees may be even higher. Since 2005, there are four years with missing fee data. I left NYCERS in 2005.

PCG is reporting a -9.2% IRR for these two exited PE investments. PCG, however, provides no documentation supporting this number.

The only way to calculate an accurate value of a PE investment’s IRR is with the full cash flow history for the partnership. NYCERS members and retirees are entitled to this history. They have the right to a public reckoning of all investments.

When it comes to accurate data, there is a high flight risk with any PE investment. In addition, I have a strong suspicion that NYCERS has been derelict in its responsibility to seek and maintain the necessary information to protect the funds it placed with PE managers.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Comptroller's Pension Report 2000-2010

On April 6, 2011, Comptroller Liu released a report analyzing NYC pension cost over the last decade. This is generally a good report. It is a more complete look at the NYC pension problem than what most commentators produce. Liu has his agenda like everyone else but he is way out in front on content and balance.

The starting year used in the report is 1986. That was the year Harrison Goldin started submitting city financial reports to the GFOA. At the time, I thought it was a PR exercise but it was a major step towards transparency for city and pension financial records.

The heart of the report, on page 2, focuses on what Liu considers the most relevant causes of the NYC pension underfunding problem. I have listed them below along their FY-2010 increased cost:

  1. lower investment returns - $3.1B
  2. benefit enhancements put in place in 2000 - $2.1B
  3. actuarial losses and revisions - $790M
  4. benefit enhancements put in place after 2000 - $264M
  5. higher than expected investment and administrative fees - $313M.

Lower Investment Returns

The report correctly identifies the prime cause of underfunding as the market collapse since March, 2000. But on this key point, the report fails to add the fact that the pension fund trustees exacerbated the market collapse by poor investment decisions.

The actual closing balance as June 30, 2010 of the five city pension funds was $89.9B. In comparison, the closing balance as of June 30, 2000 was $105.6B, a decrease of $15.7B over ten years. It is also distrubing that approximately 10% of the 89.9B is in illiquid limited partnerships whose values are only an estimates.

The employer pension contributions for the 11 years from 2000 to 2010 were $42.9B. The employee contributions for these same 11 years were $7.4B.

The pension contributions (city only) for FY-2010 were 11.2% of the total city budget ($6.651B vs. $59.479B). The total for all employers for all five pension funds was $7.765B for FY-2010.

With the $42.9B contributions, if the funds had earned 8% each year during this period, the closing balance would be $168.8B. No one would be discussing any pension crisis.

In his simulation for the five pension funds, the Comptroller estimated the June 30, 2010 closing balance at $139.2B. Rather than the actual $42.9B, Liu used a much lower level of employer contributions, $11.8B, for the 11 year period from 2000 to 2010.

As of June 30, 2010, the NYCERS actuary, Bob North, estimated (using the EAN method) the pension liabilities for the five pension funds at $145.8B. This generates a short fall of $56B ($145.8B - $89.9B).

Using a more traditional 4.5% of the total city budget for employer contributions ($28.1B), I estimated that the 8% June 30, 2010 closing balance for the five pension funds would have been $151.6B.

The $151.6B figure would easily cover North’s estimate of pension liabilities even with the increased benefit structures outlined in the report. You, therefore, can make a plausible argument that the investment collapse caused the entire problem.

Bad Investment Decisions

But the killer point is that as of the summer of 2002 all parties knew that 8% was an irrational investment target.

But because of the trustees’ adherence to the 8% target, (see my March 15 posting), the pension funds continued to follow their 70%/30% investment strategy after the 2000-2003 market collapse and even increased the risk level with an new 11% commitment to private equity and real estate. This was motivated by the desire to avoid paying the higher employer contributions that would have been required with a lower more realistic target rate. In the end, they wound up paying more and getting less. They lost on both ends.

The impact of the collapsing markets was magnified by the 8% decision. In my March 15 posting, I stated that if NYCERS had adopted a conservative strategy from 2005 to 2010, it would have increased the its closing balance for 2010 from $35.4B to $42.8B. Projecting this number to all 5 systems, the closing balance could have been $108.7B instead of the $89.9B, an $18.8B increase.

It is unrealistic for us to expect the trustees to admit such a huge mistake. So they blame all the loss on the market collapse and accept no responsibility. They do, however, regularly claim credit for investment increases.

The actual flat rate of return for the 5 city pension funds for 2000-2010 was 3.85%. You can see the specific rates of returns for 2001 to 2010 on page 6. In contrast, NYCERS 10 year rate of return on its government bonds was 7.72% as of June 30, 2010. It is easy to see the impact of aggressive investment decisions. There are bad decisions in the investment world.

Note: The 2000 market value reset issue, see page 4, is important but rarely mentioned. In a classic case of bad timing, March, 2000 was the start of the dot.com market collapse. On page 5 you can see how the level of employer contributions (1983 to 1999) benefited from the long bull market and the pension benefit reforms under Tier 3 & 4. The sharp drop, however, in the 2000 employer contributions was due to the market restart.

Benefit Enhancements Put in Place in 2000

This is a very comprehensive breakdown of the pension benefit improvements from 2000 to 2008. See pages 18 & 19. This is the most intriguing part of the report. It attempts to quantify the effects of the benefit enhancements. It catalogues and presents purported annual costs for individual benefit enhancements. It puts the benefits in a cost framework. I am, however, skeptical of the accuracy of the cost figures. Assuming that they are accurate, it provides a guideline for corrective action with respect to the benefit structure.

I do, however, particularly question the estimated cost for the city of the state wide COLA benefit enacted in 2000. Liu claims that this benefit costs the city $1.373B in FY-2010. I doubt that the cost is that high.

For this benefit, the city has an exposure to about 180,000 pensioners.

  1. NYCERS: 72,000
  2. TRS: 79,000
  3. BERS: 10,000
  4. Police: 8,000
  5. Fire: 11,000

Generally at age 62, the annual COLA on average starts at $300 and grows by $300 per year per pensioner for his/her remaining lifetime. This benefit conservatively has a life cycle on average of 18 years.

This translates into an average annual cost of a $2,250 per pensioner or a $486M ($300 * 18 / 2 * 180,000) total annual cost on a pay as you go basis. This benefit does not grow after it reaches a steady state.

This means that the $1.373B cost for FY-2010 seems to be way off track, even considering an effort for future funding.

This type of discrepency means that the benefit costs have to be more carefully researched with extensive documentation supporting the estimated costs. .

Actuarial Losses and Revisions

Actuarial profits and losses occur when the actuary makes mistakes in his assumptions. If he/she is too conservative, then you have a profit. If he/she is too aggressive, then you have a loss. I don't think this is really a cause of increased pension costs but reflects a bias on the actuary's part to reduce pension costs.

Benefit Enhancements Put in Place After 2000

What is interesting about this point is why has the current mayor agreed to give any benefit improvements during this period. He has also given significant salary increases during his nine years in office in spite of the huge pension overhang that has existed since 2002. In particular, the two 4% increases given to DC-37 in the fall of 2008, concurrent with the fall of Lehman, are disturbing at best.

Higher Than Expected Investment and Administrative Fees

This is a valid area of concern which Liu is presenting using the two year lag.

On an accrual basis, the five systems incurred investment costs of $101.9M for FY-2002. The FY-2010 cost was $462.8M, a 454% increase. I did not start with FY-2000 because prior year’s investment costs were bundled along with securities lending costs and were not broken out in the CAFR reports.I have previously commented on the insanity gripping the trustees concerning investment fees.

Two of the systems, NYCERS and TRS, incurred administrative costs of $52.9M for FY-2000. The FY-2010 figure is $115.7M. NYPPF started incurring costs in FY-2002($8M) and BERS($4M) in FY-2003. Liu, quite correctly, allows for 3% per annum increase which would have produced a FY-2010 cost of $86M. The actual cost of $115.7M reflects a 6.3% average annual increase for the 10 years, way above the rate of inflation.

Both of these costs must repaid by the employers two years later with a 8% annual interest charge. For example the $115.7M admin charge for FY-2010 must be paid in FY-2012 with interest totaling $134.9M. The $462.8M charge must paid back in FY-2012 at $539.8M. These costs are directly under the control of the trustees. Why are trustees letting them costs run wild?

Liu attempts to compare these cost to other public pension funds. That is a waste of time. If everyone is jumping of the cliff, are you going to jump off the cliff too?

Closing

There is an excellent closing to the report on page 12. It calls for increasing investment income while reducing volatility. It, however, fails to own up to the failings of the trustees with respect to past investment decisions and to the exploding investment and administrative costs that the trustees have immediate control over.

There is a grudging consensus that the pension benefit structure needs to be cut back at the city, at least to the Tier 5 level at the state. Most of the benefit reform is already in place. Newly hired city police officers and firefighters are under Tier3 and newly hired teachers are under Tier 5. Newly hired general city workers will have to moved to Tier 5 in the same manner as general state workers.

But this benefit reform must be coupled with a strategey that adopts a more prudent, conservative and effective investment plan and outlaws all campaign contributions to any pension fund trustee from any contractor who is work for funds.