Equable educates employees, retirees, policymakers, and stakeholders about how to achieve retirement plan sustainability, accountability, and income security.
So... @LAFPP LA Fire and Police Pension is an investor in Vista Foundation Fund IV, the private equity pool used to buy ESO, the company that's been accused of creating financial stress for rural and small public safety departments.
https://t.co/1NC2XQfyAZ
This story from @ByMikeBaker about a venture-backed company potentially financially squeezing rural fire departments is interesting. The PE fund used to back ESO — Vista Foundation Fund IV — is heavily financed with public pension dollars. At least 20 LPs are state ret. systems.
CalPERS is shifting its internal approach to measuring investment success by adopting a "total portfolio benchmark." This approach has pros/cons, but what shouldn't be lost is that CalPERS has always had a single benchmark it should hit—the assumed rate of return.
There is value in having a benchmark for investment performance relative to peers, or relative to what was possible in the market. In practice, though, many public plan investment benchmarks are soft targets that can be gamed by investment managers. Plus the heavy media attention on portfolio benchmarks often obscures the most important target— what actuaries assumed returns would be when calculating contribution rates.
Public plans aren't the same as other institutional investors when it comes to how we should think about their success. Beating the market, or beating other investment managers doesn't always mean a pension fund is appropriately funded. And when investments underperform the assumed return, the price is paid for by taxpayers (higher govt employer contributions) and public employees (higher member contributions, lower pay, or both).
Out TODAY: "Intent of CT's ed finance system is to create a more equitable landscape of resources for educating students," @anthonyrandazzo from @EquableInst. "The way that the state goes about financing (TRB) is running counter to that."
https://t.co/6dfPGaLnyE via @insider_ct
📈New: We published State of Pensions 2025 today, an 80 page financial analysis of state and local plans. Toplines:
- national funded ratio is ⬆️ to 81.4%, this is still very fragile
- investments returned 5.4% for FYE 6/30 on ave, below assumptions
Here's a quick summary 🧵
Today, Equable released the 2025 edition of our annual report, State of Pensions. Despite underwhelming investment returns, public pension funds will see a funded ratio improvement in 2025. Read more here: https://t.co/Izrk1xDdWP
🗞️NEW TODAY: 1 in 3 school districts are cutting classroom priorities because teacher pension costs are devouring K-12 budgets.
Survey data reveals reports from school board members and district admins on what they are cutting explicitly because of growing pension costs. 🧵
#NewBrief: At least one-third of school districts report funding cuts due to rising pension costs in the last five years and it's impacting teacher pay, support programs, and more.
Read it here: https://t.co/TzgnW0bC4p
🧵 NEW: Chicago's big four pension funds have lost ~$1.58 billion since the start of 2025.
$938 million of that came in just the past 7 trading days since the "Liberation Day" tariff announcement.
Here's why this is a particularly serious problem.
UPDATE: When markets closed Friday, the top 25 public pension funds had lost an estimated $140.7 billion in 2025, of which $67b was since the 4/2 global tariff policy. This is less than the "pre-pause" market bottom, but still a significant problem. Let's see what today brings.
Connecting the Dots: It turns out that by making CT teacher pension financing more fair and equitable, the state can also save hundreds of millions of dollars that could be reinvested into education. @CCMAdvocacy@DalioEducation
Learn more: https://t.co/IsSYTLipvK
The 119K Commission (@CCMAdvocacy and @DalioEducation) uncovered high rates of youth disconnection across CT schools.
Do high-need districts deserve more or less state funding for teacher compensation?
Should be a no brainer. https://t.co/KbqLHJSrHh
Don't miss our new brief, which shows a relationship between CT’s investment in teacher retirement and the percentage of disconnected youth in Connecticut public school districts.
@CCMAdvocacy@DalioEducation
https://t.co/IsSYTLipvK
#NewBrief: Connecting the Dots on Disconnected Youth: CT Towns with Highest Percentages of Disconnected Youth Receive Lowest Per Pupil Pension Subsidies from the State
#news#CTPensionSubsidy#CTPress@joedelongCCM@CCMAdvocacy
Read all about it here:
https://t.co/KbqLHJSrHh
Today, Equable released the Year-End Update to State of Pensions 2024. Public pension funds have fared well this calendar year, thanks to strong market performance. Continued Read the report here: https://t.co/HPRggSQLJ7
WHO BENEFITS from the state’s inequitable #CTPensionSubsidy?
↪ More affluent school districts.
42% of Connecticut students come from lower-income families... But they receive only a 32% share of the Per Pupil Pension Subsidy.
https://t.co/RnI350JvaD
On average, the highest performing districts in CT receive $764 more per student from the state to support teacher compensation. #CTPensionSubsidy
Learn more: https://t.co/RnI350JvaD
💡#NotSoFunFact: Connecticut's funding of teacher pension obligations favors wealthier, less diverse, and higher-performing public school districts.💡
Full report here: https://t.co/RnI350JvaD
Today, we released the October Update to State of Pensions 2024. We estimate unfunded liabilities will total $1.29 trillion for the 2024 fiscal year, compared to $1.63 trillion in 2023, as a result of strong market performance. Read the full update here: https://t.co/63p5ohK88I