Riley: Time to End Politics in the Rhode Island Treasury

Michael G. Riley, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Riley: Time to End Politics in the Rhode Island Treasury

Seth Magaziner
The stock market and the fortunes of Rhode Island Pension Fund have a spooky feel as October ended yesterday. As creepy as it seems Mr. Magaziner still has never made any money in any calendar or fiscal year as a money manager. We are all hoping the roughly 6% Calendar 2016 gain as of September 30, 2016 holds steady or even increases but instead the opposite is happening and the fund may be hit with losses of 2% or more in October. 

In addition to the poor performance, the so called “back to basics” portfolio strategy roll out is looking at least as complex as the current portfolio, with dozens of managers, multiple asset classes and new “overlay” and “tilt” strategies.

Every one of these managers interacts with the consultants and in turn with the Rhode Island Treasurer creating a series of political touch points. Mr. Magaziner has learned well from the Clinton Machine to make as many political touches as possible and keep score. Eventually these touches will come back to Mr. Magaziner in the form of political support or donations. There is simply no other reason to have 50 different managers, 4 consultants, and even the investment commission. It’s all politics and tempting political favors created by the defined benefit “money pot."

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What I Know

How do I know this is true? I know because I am a successful money manager. I know that actively managed portfolios that litter the RI Pension Fund Holdings are being outperformed by cheaper index funds and this is likely to persist for decades as pointed out by Jack Bogle and Warren Buffett among others.

When Mr. Magaziner ran for office he claimed his money managing skills would be the difference between covering the 7.5% return assumption or not. The problem was that Mr. Magaziner lied about his job and his experience. He had never managed money. Mr. Magaziner briefly held a position as an industry analyst at Trillium Asset Management. His claimed 30% returns were pure fantasy. Now the jig is up. He hasn’t ever made a dime and he’s praying for the market to hang on until year end.

Contrary to other critics of Treasurer Magaziner, the return problem is much greater than just the hedge fund decisions made in late 2011 by Treasurer Raimondo. The portfolio is and has been overly complex with multiple layers of consultants, managers and fees. High fees can be found not only in the hedge funds but Venture Capital, real estate and Private Equity investments as well. In addition, there has been a persistent over-reliance on small and midcap stock managers. None of this had to happen.

A capable portfolio manager with strong hedging skills could prudently manage the portfolio with less than 10 instruments and reduced risk. The result would be 50 fired managers, 5 fired consultants. The Investment Commission could stay in place and approve only the risk level and the Discount rate but there is no other need for the Commission. The Pension Fund then would have better performance, lower risk, lower fees, lower structural costs and best of all NO MORE POLITICS.

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.

Timeline - Rhode Island Pension Reform

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