Commentary: Pending bill carried by Assemblymember Jim Cooper opens door to CalPERS corruption
Assembly Bill 386 sailed through the Assembly Judiciary Committee last week on a unanimous vote with virtually no discussion about its provisions.
The measure also received express treatment a few days earlier from the Assembly committee that deals with public employee matters.
Given its cavalier handling,
one might think that AB 386, carried by Assemblyman Jim Cooper (see video below), an Elk Grove
Democrat, is just another minor change in law. In fact, however, it would allow
the financially shaky California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS)
to semi-secretly lend out untold billions of dollars by exempting details from
the state’s Public Records Act.
Potentially it opens the door
to insider dealing and corruption in an agency that’s already experienced too
many scandals, including a huge one that sent CalPERS’ top administrator to
prison for accepting bribes.
CalPERS, which is sponsoring
the bill with support from some unions and local governments, claims that the
exemption is no big deal since the money it lends through “alternative
investment vehicles” such as venture capital funds and hedge funds is already
partially exempted from disclosure.
However, there is a big
difference. Using outside entities to invest means they have skin in the game.
Direct lending by CalPERS means that its board members, administrators and
other insiders would be making lending decisions on their own without outside
scrutiny.
CalPERS’ rationale is that
using alternative investment partners is costly because of their fees, and that
direct lending could potentially result in higher earnings. However, it says,
disclosing loan details would discourage many would-be borrowers from seeking
CalPERS loans, thus limiting potential gains.
Underlying that rationale is
that CalPERS’ $440 billion in assets are, by its own calculations, only about
71% of what’s needed to make pension payments that state and local governments
have promised their workers. It has ratcheted up mandatory “contributions” from
its client agencies to close the gap, but it’s also been chronically unable to
meet its self-proclaimed investment earnings goal of 7% a year.
During the fiscal year that
ended last June 30, CalPERS saw a net return of 4.7%, blaming the shortfall on the economic fallout from the
COVID-19 pandemic.
“What started out as a health
crisis turned into an economic crisis and severely affected investors
everywhere, including CalPERS,” Yu (Ben) Meng, CalPERS chief investment
officer, said at the time.
One sub-par year would not be
cause for alarm, but CalPERS officials have repeatedly said that meeting the 7%
goal over time would be impossible without getting more aggressive in its
investments.
Meng was brought aboard to
juice up investment strategy but shortly after reporting disappointing 2019-20
results was forced to resign because he failed to reveal his personal
investments in a New York financial firm, Blackstone Group, with whom he had
placed $1 billion in CalPERS funds.
The Meng situation
illustrates the perils should AB 386 become law and CalPERS officials be
allowed to loan money to corporations and individuals without having to
disclose all-important details.
The potential pitfalls were
pointed out in an extensive analysis of the bill by the Judiciary Committee
staff. It mentioned the Meng case as well as the scandal that sent chief
executive Fred Buenrostro to prison for taking bribes from Alfred Villalobos, a
former CalPERS board member who became a “placement agent” for hedge funds.
Villalobos committed suicide rather than face prosecution in the scandal.
One might think that members
of the two Assembly committees that rubber-stamped AB 386 would have at least
discussed those scandals and the potential downside. But they couldn’t be
bothered to do their jobs.
CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary Elk Grove News in a CalMatters media partner,
Copyright by Elk Grove News © 2021. All right reserved.
Post a Comment