Gilmore “has a fine reputation”, said Richard Ennis, founder of Ennis Knupp & Associates, a consultancy that works with public pension plans, adding that the new CIO’s “first challenge” would be to generate the excess returns that Calpers had failed to achieve for more than a decade.
The Sacramento-based pension giant has in recent years been grappling with mediocre performance and a low funding status. The pension plan reported an annual return of 5.8 per cent in the 12 months ending June 2023 following a negative 6.1 per cent in the previous year. That fell well below the 6.8 per cent target.
The underperformance contributed to a 72 per cent funded ratio last year, compared with a national average of 78 per cent, according to Equable Institute, a New York-based think-tank.
Gilmore came to Calpers with a stellar record as the New Zealand Super Fund under his leadership reported annualised returns of more than 10 per cent over the past decade.
Before joining the New Zealand Super Fund in 2019, Gilmore was chief investment strategist at Australia’s Future Fund, another sovereign wealth fund where he managed portfolio strategy and overlays as well as investment risk. He has also held roles at AIG Financial Products, Morgan Stanley, the IMF and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.
Written by: Sun Yu in New York
© Financial Times