In June, the Pew Center on the States released
a report broadly critical of the health of state pension plans, singling out
Louisiana’s as one of the most endangered fiscally. This prompted a release
from LASERS, subsequently effectively
rebutted by Pew and in this space. Only weeks later, it sent out a release
crowing about its investment performance – which in reality wasn’t
anything to write home about.
This month, the New Orleans
Times-Picayune, first in a news
article, and subsequently and more obliquely in a piece
by an opinion columnist, criticized the underfunded nature of LASERS and other state
pension funds. Thus, LASERS issued a release
deflecting from a couple of points made in the article but in no way disputing
the facts – like the other major state fund, the Teachers
Retirement System of Louisiana (which also tries, less strenuously, to
fight its own rearguard
action against deserved criticism) is badly underfunded. Its defense? At (then)
58 or so percent funded, it isn’t really in bad shape.
Its next move was to use the boilerplate from the release in June and pump
in some new statistics from the now-available 2012 Comprehensive
Annual Financial Report and an updated consultants report, hoping to divert attention from the larger issue. Thus the world
is informed that “LASERS Posts Strong
Investment Performance” and “LASERS earned a 9.0 percent annualized return for
the 10-year period ended September 30, 2012.”
One may wonder how the return got that high
relatively, because in the decade period breathlessly reported in June it was
only 6.17 percent. That’s because one poor year rolled off and a relatively
decent one got included. But it doesn’t change the fact that LASERS has underperformed
a buy-and-hold strategy of the Standard and Poor’s 500 over the same period –during
the decade of 9 percent average annualized return, the S&P returned 10.42
percent.
The two aren’t directly comparable – LASERS constantly
is shifting money in and out because of employee and state contributions
rolling in and pension payments rolling out and it has a somewhat different mix
of investments. Still, the significant gap makes one wonder what all the fuss
is about in terms of a presumed absolute superior performance.
Especially when it’s important to note that
the true metric of fund performance is not in “annualized return,” but in “actuarial
return,” which accounts for the forecasted inflows and outflows. Here, since
LASERS began reporting this rate of return in 1998, it’s averaged since then annually
only about 5 percent – well below the target on which the state bases its
contribution figure and that asked of employees, that has decreased from 8.85
to 8.25 and now to 8 percent.
This performance gap is a prime reason why
the unfunded accrued liability continues to grow for LASERS – now up to $7.1
billion or an increase of 10 percent over last year, decreasing its funded
status to only 56 percent. Because of this, even though employee contributions
were down about 3 percent, employer – taxpayer, that is – contributions increased
14 percent in order to meet constitutional obligations.
Finally, the one year performance of the fund
actually was negative, as it lost $9.6 million (about one-thousandth of its
overall invested assets) from fiscal year 2011 to 2012. Adding the greater
amount of payouts to contributions during the year, and the fund is down $160
million on the basis of assets needed to fund future obligations. Simply, LASERS’
position deteriorated during the past year.
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