Reliable $1 Web Hosting by 3iX

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

BT : CalPERS revises policy on real estate investment

Business Times - 21 Apr 2010

CalPERS revises policy on real estate investment

It will not invest in strategies that hit low-income homes

(SACRAMENTO, California) America's largest pension fund has changed its policy on investing in real estate to balance its socially responsible investment philosophy with its quest for profits.

The revised policy, adopted at a CalPERS board meeting on Monday, says the fund will not participate in investment strategies that rely on eliminating rent-regulated housing or raising rents above regulated levels.

CalPERS has had a practice of trying to invest in projects that will help low-income tenants. But critics say the funds cannot make money off such investments unless tenants enjoying regulated rental rates are pushed out of their homes to make room for people who will pay more.

The decision came after the California Public Employees Retirement System, which manages about US$210 billion in assets, saw its real estate portfolio lose nearly half of its value from September 2008 to September 2009.

As of Friday, CalPERS' total real estate portfolio was worth about US$14.8 billion.

Some of the biggest losses came from investments in real estate ventures whose financial success depended on pushing low-income residents out of rent-controlled housing.

CalPERS is known for its influence on socially responsible investing. Earlier this year, it voted to remove the limit on the number of shareholder proposals it can issue to companies in its portfolio, a change that could boost its influence among publicly traded companies.

Monday's action by America's largest pension fund could encourage other large investors to adopt similar policies.

CalPERS wants to balance a socially responsible investment philosophy with the need to ensure adequate long-term returns for its pensioners.

'The intent is to prevent us from investing in those strategies that are not well intended and had tenant impacts that were unacceptable to staff,' Laurie Weir, CalPERS' real estate portfolio manager, told the board.

'We really are trying to prevent those tenant impacts that we have seen over the past year.' A real estate investment that went bust in New York last year prompted CalPERS to re-evaluate its approach to that aspect of its portfolio.

CalPERS lost US$500 million in a failed investment in Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village in New York that displaced low-income residents. The California State Teachers' Retirement System lost US$100 million in the same deal.

The policy change was prompted by both those real estate losses and the risk to CalPERS' reputation, said spokesman Brad Pacheco.

CalSTRS (The California State Teachers' Retirement System) is also considering a policy that would ban investments in strategies that are intended to capitalise on displacement of low-income households, spokesman Ricardo Duran said in an interview.

'Public pension funds should not be used to evict working people from their housing,' said Dean Preston, an advocate for the group Tenants Together\. \-- AP

Copyright © 2010 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Pre-development Land Investing

In business for over 30 years, success in providing real estate investment opportunities to clients around the world is a simple, yet effective separation of roles and responsibilites. The four pillars of strength guide the land from the research and acquisition, through to the exit, including the distribution of proceeds to our clients ......


To know more how this is really work for you and your clients....

Please contact me Terence Tay @ (+65) 9387-5896 or email : terencetay.kh@gmail.com