Both Taveras and Raimondo Claimed They Fixed Pension Underfunding - Not True

Michael G. Riley, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Both Taveras and Raimondo Claimed They Fixed Pension Underfunding - Not True

Providence owes at least $62 million to the pension fund in 30 days. If a technical default takes place on June 30, 2015. Taxpayer unfunded liability will increase by at least that amount. Then there is the interest cost and due to the pension plan for surreptitiously and bizarrely borrowing from the pension fund at 8.5% for at least 10 years. Whoever decided it was wise to hide cash flow issues in providence and borrow at 8.5% should be fired and or jailed.

The State of Rhode Island, on the other hand, has not stolen or borrowed money from the State pension plan. The State has not created any false assets or engaged in “Enron" accounting like Providence has done.

There are 30 days left in the Fiscal year 2015. Rhode Island fiscal year ends on June 30 as does the fiscal year for all but four States in America.  Providence Fiscal year also ends on June 30, 2015.  Both pension plans have recently reported their pension returns, but since they have a tendency to spin their performances by interchanging “calendar year performance” with “fiscal year performance," we will use Fiscal year returns because they are the most relevant.

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The State Investment Commission and their Chairman Seth Magaziner project that their portfolios return on investments will compound at  7.5% over  the next 30 years and the  Providence Investment Board and its Chair Jorge Elorza project their returns at 8.25% compounded over the next 30 years.  Clearly the State should fire their advisors and use the Providence guys, right? Welcome to the world of pension accounting and actuary shopping.

Few Rhode Islanders realize that much of the RIRSA reform plan, though not legislated, actually occurred on the money management side. Gina Raimondo directed the CIO to focus on reducing the risk of the portfolio. She proposed to do this by increasing investments in Hedge Funds and non-correlated assets. This nod toward Modern Portfolio Theory is somewhat standard in today’s world of asset management. However the results have been less than stellar and what exists today at the State level is a very complex portfolio with dozens of managers and some very high fees. The performance as you will see later is poor. The risk adjusted return is the holy grail of the investment world but the Raimondo/Rhode Island experiment is struggling and new Treasurer Seth Magaziner should consider slimming down the massive portfolio to less than 10 positions while keeping the same risk level. It can be done easily. 

The table below shows the Fiscal year returns for 2015 with 30 days left compared with the S&P 500 and also compared to the discount rate Chosen by Raimondo at the State Level and Jorge Elorza for Providence. Any performance below is a shortfall to the pension fund and any performance above the discount rate is a surplus.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The under-performance of both the State and Providence pension Funds is clear and significant. The States performance has been particularly poor over the last 12 to 18 months bringing into question the whole complex construction of the portfolio. A shortfall of over $300 million is alarming but nothing compared to the losses that occurred under Caprio in 2008-2009. This portfolio is designed not to have those type of losses. But if it can’t achieve the discount rate, then the Pension fund will be unsustainable and more reform and or higher taxes are on the horizon.

More urgently, the City of Providence cannot afford any losses or down years in the Pension plan especially given the disappearance of $63 million dollars in assets. The funding ratio of 26% is dangerous and by far the worst in the Country. Providence teeters on the edge of Bankruptcy.

Michael G. Riley is vice chair at Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity, and is managing member and founder of Coastal Management Group, LLC. Riley has 35 years of experience in the financial industry, having managed divisions of PaineWebber, LETCO, and TD Securities (TD Bank). He has been quoted in Barron’s, Wall Street Transcript, NY Post, and various other print media and also appeared on NBC News, Yahoo TV, and CNBC.

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