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CalPERS Discloses Private Equity Profits and Management Fees/Costs;
Innovative Settlement Balances Transparency With Ability to Compete
(Business Wire 12/7/04) -- The California Public Employees' Retirement System
(CalPERS) today announced it has reached an innovative settlement in the litigation
brought by the California First Amendment Coalition (CFAC) over release of private
equity records.
Under terms of the settlement reached by CalPERS and CFAC, the pension fund
developed new "custom spreadsheets" that show the amounts of CalPERS
annual profits received from and expenses paid to its 300 private equity and
hedge fund partnerships.
As part of the settlement, CFAC agreed to withdraw its broad original requests.
"This innovative solution -- to develop new documents with the bottom line
information -- enables us to provide important information to the public and
still protect, as prescribed under the exemption to state disclosure laws, the
kind of information that absolutely must be shielded to meet the public interest
in obtaining high rates of return from a diversified public pension asset pool,"
said Peter Mixon, General Counsel for CalPERS.
The case was filed by CFAC on September 2, 2004 after CalPERS rejected initial
requests because disclosure of the documents requested would have created a
host of problems. As a "limited partner" investor in the private equity
and hedge fund market, CalPERS negotiates fees, carried interest, and profit
splits with partnerships. If all of the terms and conditions were disclosed,
CalPERS would likely be shut out of top-tier investment funds and would be put
in an unfavorable position when negotiating terms of a deal, said Mark Anson,
CalPERS Chief Investment Officer.
It would have also forced CalPERS to withdraw prematurely from other funds and
lose money, lose its advantage in negotiating favorable terms, and be refused
the kind of detailed information necessary to evaluate the funds' performance.
"The disclosure of this information strikes the appropriate balance between
the public's right to access information and the continuing ability of CalPERS
to invest in these asset classes, which generate long-term returns to pay benefits,"
Mixon added.
The settlement has provided the dollar amount of gain/profit that CalPERS received
from each fund for calendar years 1999-2003. Data for 2004-05 will be released
in the future. Additionally, CalPERS disclosed management fees and other costs,
expressed in dollars, paid by CalPERS to the funds for each
calendar year between 2001-2003. Data for 2004-05 will be released in the future.
Copies of disclosed material are available on the CalPERS Web site at www.calpers.ca.gov.
Click on Press Room and go to the News Center.
Prior to this settlement, CalPERS already had the greatest transparency of any
public pension fund in the world regarding private equity performance, going
further than any other state pension fund. The System posts internal rates of
return, cash invested and returned, quarterly performance reports and general
information on each of its general partners on the investment section on its
Web site at www.calpers.ca.gov
CalPERS has committed $21.1 billion in private equity and committed $2 billion
in hedge funds. It has generated profits in excess of $6 billion since 1990
in its private equity program, and in 2003 paid management fees and costs of
$202 million to private equity fund managers. The average private equity fund
in which CalPERS invests is 3.9 years old, and in most cases it remains too
early to tell how well the investments will do, because most have a 10-year
lifespan.
CalPERS is the nation's largest public pension fund with assets of more than
$177 billion. The System provides retirement and health benefits to more than
1.4 million State and local public agency members and their families.
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