For the trustees of state and local public pension funds, who invest and manage more than $5 trillion in assets nationwide, transparent investment reporting serves as the cornerstone for making informed, accountable, and effective decisions.
In most states, trustees are fiduciaries, legally mandated to act in the best interest of plan participants. As such, they should provide pension plan members, beneficiaries, sponsors, and other supervisory authorities with clear evidence of sound processes and effective oversight of plan operations. That includes their adherence to each plan's investment policy statement (IPS), the document that lays out a fund’s objectives, guidelines, and strategies. According to the Chartered Financial Analyst Institute, board members can achieve this goal “not only by making effective strategic decisions but also by having a defensible, repeatable, and documented process as evidence of due diligence.”
The Pew Charitable Trusts has developed a model governance framework that highlights how transparent reporting supports robust oversight to meet trustees’ fiduciary duty. Components of the framework include the establishment of clear plan objectives, assessment of risk profiles, formulation of investment policies, provision of comprehensive disclosures on performance and costs, and engagement in ongoing monitoring and review processes.
The information gathered then helps to shape the future direction and content of the IPS. This foundational document includes a comprehensive framework for management of the plan's assets, detailed guidelines on the strategic allocation of plan funds, target rates of return for each asset class, and cost breakdowns by asset class and external managers.
Transparent reporting then allows administrators and trustees to ensure that the plan's investments align with its objectives and long-term goals, taking into account risk and cost considerations. It also provides pension plan stakeholders with clear evidence of a board’s sound decision-making and effective oversight. When disclosures accurately and completely capture a robust “virtuous circle” of monitoring and review of investment policies and procedures, built on comprehensive reporting on performance and costs from fund managers, stakeholders have the evidence they need to affirm that the board is meeting its fiduciary duties.
Pew’s governance framework describes a structured and accountable environment for managing pension funds. It aligns decisions with the fund's objectives, manages risks, ensures transparency, engages stakeholders, and facilitates adaptability to changes, contributing to positive outcomes for beneficiaries.
Effective oversight using this governance framework enables trustees to evaluate the fund's performance, assess the effectiveness of strategies, and make necessary adjustments in response to changing circumstances. Specifically, public employee pension trustees should:
A number of state boards have been making decisions that reflect these kinds of deliberations, monitoring, and information gathering. In 2014, for example, the California Public Employees' Retirement System board of trustees voted to eliminate allocations to hedge funds after concluding that the investments were too complex and expensive and could not provide an effective hedge against market volatility at a sufficient scale.
Similarly, in December 2021, the board of Pennsylvania’s Public School Employees’ Retirement System approved an update to the plan’s investment policies that would gradually divest its $6 billion in hedge fund holdings and reallocate the proceeds to lower-cost investments. Pension funds in Kentucky, New Jersey, New York City, and Rhode Island also have slashed or eliminated their allocations to hedge funds in the years following California’s decision.
In 2016, Pennsylvania lawmakers established the Public Pension Management and Asset Investment Review Commission to enhance transparency and reduce fees paid to investment managers. The commission found that the state’s two largest pension funds could save $10 billion by “pursuing more cost-efficient investment strategies, renegotiating existing fee terms, developing greater internal capacity, and eliminating operating redundancies” between the two retirement systems.
Ultimately, transparency in investment reporting equips governing boards with the information necessary to make informed and accountable decisions. And that information is vital for shaping the strategic direction of public employee pension plans and to provide evidence of trustees’ due diligence in meeting their fiduciary duties.
Susan Banta is a project director and Claire Lee is an associate with Pew’s state fiscal policy project.