U.S. News

Calpers CEO Latest Top Fund Officer to Exit

Reuters
WATCH LIVE

The chief executive officer of the California Public Employees' Retirement System (Calpers), the biggest U.S. pension fund, said on Monday he would retire, days after its chief investment officer said he would step down.

CEO Fred Buenrostro, said in a statement that he would leave the fund, best known as Calpers, which manages roughly $240 billion, to pursue private sector opportunities.

News of Buenrostro's pending retirement after six years as the fund's chief executive comes less than a week after Calpers said Chief Investment Officer Russell Read was resigning to pursue environmental investments.

Recent news reports have claimed Calpers board members have been in conflict with Buenrostro and Read.

Anne Stausboll, the chief investment operating officer at Calpers, has been designated as Read's interim replacement.

In January, hedge fund group Capital Z Asset Management said it had hired as chief executive Calpers senior investment advisor Christianna Wood, who had been responsible for overseeing $150 billion in assets dedicated to global equities plus many of the pension fund's hedge fund allocations.

Calpers president Rob Feckner said in a statement the pension fund is in discussions with Buenrostro about when he would retire.

"While the timing is a bit unfortunate, the board remains positive and confident in moving forward," he said, adding that reports of controversy between Buenrostro and the board were exaggerated.

Buenrostro said in a statement: "I want to publicly state what I have told the board: I have reached a decision to retire from public service. Media speculation about reasons for my departure are unwarranted and incorrect."

Read had been steering Calpers into more aggressive investments since joining the fund in June 2006. Infrastructure was one area he was especially keen on investing in, raising concerns among some unionized state employees concerned about private competition to public works.

"He had clearly had a somewhat different investment strategy than what Calpers had had for a very long time," said James Hawley, director of the Elfenworks Center for the Study of Fiduciary Capitalism at St. Mary's College of California.

"I don't think he was out of step with where a lot of institutional investors both public and private have been going over the last three to four years but for Calpers it was somewhat different," Hawley said.