http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/03/business/pension-funds-can-only-guess-at-private-equitys
-cost.html


Pension Funds Can Only Guess at Private Equity's Cost
MAY 1, 2015 
Fair Game 
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON   
 
Partnership agreements outlining private equity firms' practices are as closely 
guarded as
the recipe for Coca-Cola.

Indeed, when it comes to secrecy, few industries do it better than private 
equity. To
outsiders, the lucrative business of borrowing money, buying companies and 
hoping to sell
them later at a profit is as impenetrable as a lockbox. Rates of return and 
hidden costs
are difficult to identify, even for investors in these deals.

While top-line fees associated with these funds are well known - management 
typically
charges investors 1 to 2 percent of assets and about 20 percent of portfolio 
gains - many
charges are hidden from view. These include transaction fees, legal costs, 
taxes,
monitoring or oversight fees, and other expenses charged to the portfolio 
companies held
in a fund.

Those undisclosed charges are a meaningful drag on returns.

How meaningful? Very, according to a recent report by CEM Benchmarking, a 
Toronto-based
consulting firm specializing in pension fund performance analysis.

It estimated that more than half of private equity costs charged to United 
States pension
funds were not being disclosed.

CEM concluded that the difference between what funds reported as expenses and 
what they
actually charged investors averaged at least two percentage points a year. For 
a $3
billion private equity portfolio, that would add up to $61 million.

And this estimate, CEM acknowledges, is probably low. It comes from Dutch 
pension fund
data, and Europeans pay far less to private equity firms than pension funds in 
the United
States typically do, investment experts say.

A 2007 academic paper that was updated in 2009 and published in The Journal of 
Economic
Perspectives points to far larger costs in private equity funds. The paper, 
"Beware of
Venturing Into Private Equity," by Ludovic Phalippou, a professor at the Said 
School of
Business at Oxford, found that the average private equity buyout fund charged 
more than 7
percent in fees each year.

Some pension beneficiaries may find it shocking how many fees in their funds' 
investments
are undisclosed. But it does not surprise Curtis M. Loftis Jr., the state 
treasurer of
South Carolina. For years, Mr. Loftis has been pushing for more transparency 
regarding
costs levied on the private equity and hedge fund investments overseen by his 
state's $30
billion Retirement System Investment Commission.

"It's a mammoth undertaking to understand the complexity of these costs, 
especially in
private equity," Mr. Loftis said in an interview. "We've hired a third-party 
administrator
to try to validate fees and expenses, and after more than a year and three 
months, they
still don't have a handle on them all."

One reason the South Carolina pension fund's costs are so difficult to assess 
is that it
relies more heavily than the typical pension fund on complex investments in 
hedge funds,
real estate and private equity. According to Mr. Loftis, who is a member of the 
investment
commission, those holdings account for 47 percent of the retirement system's 
assets.
That's more than double the 21 percent median holding of such investments by 
pensions
nationwide, according to the National Conference on Public Employee Retirement 
Systems.

Certainly, these complex and sizable holdings have raised the South Carolina 
pension
fund's expenses. While not a complete assessment, costs identified by the state 
last year
were $468 million, or 1.56 percent of assets. The median pension fund paid 0.57 
percent of
assets, by comparison.

South Carolina is far ahead of most other states, however, in trying to 
determine every
nickel in fees that it's incurring in its private equity holdings. The state 
investment
commission hired CEM Benchmarking to conduct an analysis; that assignment 
created the
basis for the consulting firm's new study about disclosure failures nationwide.

Mr. Loftis said private equity firms had been able to obscure their costs 
partly because
of fuzzy accounting rules. The Governmental Accounting Standards Board states 
that
investment-related costs should be reported as expenses if they are "separable 
from
investment income and the administrative expense of the pension plan." This, 
along with
the practice of not detailing specific costs for such things as transaction 
expenses and
monitoring fees, essentially lets funds decide which fees are separable, 
leaving most
investors unaware.

J. J. Jelincic, a member of the California Public Employees' Retirement System 
board since
2010, has often raised the problem of fee transparency in the fund's private 
equity
investments. Mr. Jelincic, who before joining the board was on the Calpers 
staff for 24
years, said in an interview that being in the dark on fees created problems for 
the
overseers of the $300 billion pension fund.

"You don't think to negotiate on fees that you're not aware you're being 
charged," he
said. "As a trustee I'm really concerned about not knowing what we're paying on 
private
equity. We may be getting a really good deal, we may be getting a really bad 
deal. I just
don't know."

The CEM report also notes that even those cost disclosures provided by many 
private equity
funds are understated. After investors objected to the excessive fees 
associated with
private equity, most firms began to offset some costs, returning a portion of 
them to fund
holders. But such rebates only give the illusion of a fee reduction, CEM said, 
because
those fees are also being charged to the portfolio companies in the fund, 
reducing the
ultimate value to investors.

"There is not a broad consensus within the industry on what is a cost," said 
Mike Heale, a
principal at CEM Benchmarking. "Clearly we think there should be disclosure and
standardized reporting on everything that the investor doesn't get to keep."

The new scrutiny on secret fees in private equity is more than welcome, Mr. 
Loftis said.
But his experience suggests that private equity firms won't open up more 
without a tough
fight.

"South Carolina has come a long, long way," Mr. Loftis said. "But the average 
pension plan
out there does not have a guy like me hounding them. I wish every treasurer 
would speak up
or every investment commission would speak up. Every pension plan in the nation 
is paying
too much, and it's being hidden."
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