CalSTRS faces prospect of lowering forecast
Nov. 2, 2010, Dale Kasler
CalSTRS once again faces the controversial task of cutting its investment return forecast, a move that could put more pressure on the Legislature to increase its annual contribution to the teachers pension fund.At its meeting Friday, the CalSTRS governing board is scheduled to vote on a staff recommendation to reduce the forecast of annual investment returns by half a percentage point, to 7.5 percent.
The move sounds subtle but would have major implications for taxpayers, teachers and the amount of money they pour into the California State Teachers' Retirement System.
CalSTRS is already preparing to ask the Legislature next year for more money to help the fund recover from heavy investment losses. Lowering the investment forecast would increase the amount of money CalSTRS needs from the Legislature by hundreds of millions of dollars – at a time when budgets are tight and public employee pensions are politically unpopular.
The issue is so sensitive, in fact, that the CalSTRS board blinked the last time it was scheduled to vote on the forecast. Faced with an identical recommendation from its staff in June, it put off voting. Now the staff and its consultants say it's time for the board to deal with the issue once and for all.
In a memo to the board released last week, the Milliman consulting firm said the current rate of 8 percent "is no longer reasonably expected to be achieved in either the short or long term."
The volatility in the stock market, plus record-low returns from bond holdings, are forcing public pension funds everywhere to rethink their investment forecasts. The California Public Employees' Retirement System is scheduled to vote in February on changes to its forecast, which has been pegged at 7.75 percent for the past seven years...
Full article at http://www.sacbee.com/2010/11/02/3151104/calstrs-faces-prospect-of-lowering.htmlSomeone apparently left the mike on at the CalSTRS board when this issue was considered:
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