New Jersey Pays $600 Million a Year to Financial Firm Managing State Pension Fund Investments
Chris Christie's Administration Omitted Wall Street Fees From State Pension Analysis
International Business Times - Even as Chris Christie pushed to cut benefits to retired New Jersey firefighters, teachers and other state workers, saying there simply wasn’t sufficient money in the pension fund, his administration was concealing how millions of those pension fund dollars were spent.
Faced with intensifying criticism of skyrocketing fees the state pension was paying to financial firms, the Republican governor's officials have touted their own cost estimate. But they didn't offer a complete reckoning. The officials' testimony to state lawmakers and letter to one of the state’s largest newspaper chains earlier this year appeared to prove that the state’s fees were well below other states. In fact, the Christie administration’s pension analysis, obtained through an open records request by International Business Times, omitted so-called performance fees that the state is paying to Wall Street. Those levies, which give financial firms a cut of the state’s investment gains, now total hundreds of millions of dollars a year. A Christie administration presentation to state pension trustees also obtained by IBTimes similarly omitted those performance fees.
“Before we change laws related to benefits, we want to figure out how we maximize these investments,” Gordon said. “We certainly want to do as well as the market. If we can do better in an index fund, we should talk about doing that.”
Earlier this year, IBTimes reported that the Christie administration had quietly changed how pension fees were reported. Amid a pay-to-play investigation and general scrutiny of Christie officials delivering pension deals to politically connected financial firms, the governor’s State Investment Council specifically classified $335 million of payments to financial firms as “performance allocations,” allowing the Christie administration to assert that the state paid just $265 million in fees that year.
“We've been very frustrated with the distortions made in the press about this matter,” he told lawmakers. Criticism of the fees “impugns the performance of our professional staff,” he said. At a separate hearing, he added: “The truth is that New Jersey’s management fees and expenses are below the average for peer large public pension funds.”
“It has been 11 years since New Jersey’s pension system began its push into alternative investments,” said Gordon. “Today, $3 out of every $10 in our pension system is invested in hedge funds, private equity, real estate or other alternatives. It is time that we engage in an honest assessment of where New Jersey stands relative to other large pension systems and determine if these investments are truly worth the fees.”Related:
- Investment Advisers Don't Act in the Best Interest of Their Clients: They Siphon from Investors Between $8 Billion and $17 Billion a Year in Fees and Lower Returns
- Financial Elite Scamming the People Out of Their Hard-earned Wages by Charging High Fees for Pension Plans and 401(k) Accounts
- Pension Funds are Money Pots for the Biggest Risk-takers on Wall Street
- Public Pension Funds Became Money Pots for the Biggest Risk-takers on Wall Street
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