Fatcow Icon
From the S.C. treasurer’s office
by The Honorable Curtis M. Loftis Jr.
S.C. Office of the State Treasurer
Mar 09, 2013 | 948 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

State Treasurer Curtis Loftis requests investment commission disclose additional $106 million in hedge fund fees in annual report to general assembly

Treasurer Loftis cites state law that directs all fees should be included in annual reporting.

State Treasurer Curtis M. Loftis Jr. requested Monday that approximately $106 million in additional fees paid to hedge fund managers be disclosed by the South Carolina Investment Commission in its annual report and financial statements. Treasurer Loftis sent a letter to pension fund consultants Hewitt ennisknupp (HEK) outlining the non-reporting.

“Fully complying with state law to present all known fees such as the approximately $106 million in previously undisclosed fees will encourage other states to follow our lead,” Treasurer Loftis said. “These fees are a hidden drag on public pension plans in South Carolina and around the country. Transparency is the only way to ensure that the money contributed by taxpayers and public service employees is effectively managed.”

South Carolina’s investment expenses for fiscal year 2012 were $296 million, while making only $125 million. Adding the $106 million of non-reported fees would bring the 2012 expense to $402 million. SC pays one of the highest fee rates in the country while consistently being in the bottom 35 percent in earnings.

“Without knowing the true cost of our investments, we cannot know how much money we actually make,” Treasurer Loftis said. “The public and members of the General Assembly deserve to know the grand total of our investment expense so we can assess how best to invest the pension funds.”

Treasurer Loftis wrote in a letter to the Commission’s consultant: “These $106,826,917 bottom-layer fees are not presently disclosed as investment expenses in our annual report even though they were fees incurred by the plan. I believe this oversight can be remedied this fiscal year by including the bottom-layer fees in the disclosure in our annual report, in a footnote to the financial statements of the retirement system, and in future reports concerning fees by Hewitt and other consultants.”



Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Weather
Sponsored By:

Lottery
Sponsored By:

Stocks
Sponsored By:

Gas Prices
Sponsored By:

Featured Businesses
Recipes
Sponsored By: