October
30, 2019
SPRINGFIELD, IL – The Teachers’ Retirement
System Board of Trustees has given preliminary approval to a $5.14 billion
state contribution to the System for fiscal year 2021, a 6.9 percent increase
over the current fiscal year’s government contribution of $4.81 billion.
The Board also announced that the TRS
investment portfolio generated a positive 5.15 percent return, net of fees,
during fiscal year 2019.
In approving the FY 2021 preliminary
contribution, the trustees noted that the $5.14 billion is derived from a
funding formula in state law that deliberately underfunds the System. The FY
2021 statutory contribution falls $3.2 billion short of the amount of money
that actuaries calculate would “fully fund” the cost of TRS pensions in the
coming year, or $8.34 billion.
“Any way you look at it, $5 billion is a lot
of money. But because the state has underfunded TRS every year for 81 years, a
contribution that further shortchanges the System will make our overall
financial position worse in the future,” said TRS Executive Director Dick
Ingram. “We have enough money on hand to pay all pensions into the future. But
for every $1 TRS does not receive now means the state will have to pay nearly
$3 in the future to eventually pay all our upcoming obligations. The unpaid
debt gets bigger.”
Approximately 75 percent of the FY 2021
contribution is dedicated to paying off a portion of the TRS unfunded
liability, which grew during FY 2019 by 3.7 percent to $78.1 billion. Only a
quarter of the state contribution is dedicated to the actual cost of teacher
pensions.
With the growth of the unfunded liability in
FY 2019, the funded status of TRS remained relatively stable at 40.6 percent,
compared to 40.7 percent in FY 2018. Total long-term liabilities for TRS grew
3.5 percent during FY 2019, to $131.5 billion. The previous year’s total
liability was $127 billion.
The TRS Board is required each year to certify
the state’s annual contribution to the System for the next fiscal year. That
preliminary contribution is then reviewed by the State Actuary before it is
included in the state budget for the upcoming year.
TRS ended fiscal year 2019 on June 30 with
$52.65 billion in assets, an increase of 2.2 percent for the year. Gross of
fees, the TRS return for FY 2019 was 5.8 percent. Long-term TRS investment
returns continue to exceed the System’s long-term assumed return rate of 7
percent. For FY 2019, the 30-year return was 8.04 percent. Since the current
investment portfolio was implemented in 1982, the TRS return is 9.37 percent.
“The long-term investment returns are the most
important numbers for our members,” Ingram said. “These timeframes reflect the
long-term relationship that TRS has with its members, both as active educators
and as retirees. The long-term returns also indicate a successful investment
program that values steady growth and strong risk management over several
generations.”
TRS investments have recorded positive returns
in each of the last 10 years following the worldwide financial crisis of
2008-2009. All returns in this chart are net of fees:
Fiscal
Year TRS
RETURN
2019
+ 5.2%
2018
+ 8.5%
2017
+12.6%
2016
+ 0.01%
2015
+ 4.0%
2014
+17.4%
2013
+12.8%
2012
+ 0.8
2011
+23.6%
2010
+12.8%
During
the Board of Trustees’ regularly scheduled October meeting, the TRS investment
staff reported the following actions:
- Within the
System’s $7.24 billion Private Equity Portfolio:
- The
commitment of $24 million to Sunstone Partners, of San Mateo,
California. Sunstone currently administers $19.2 million in TRS
assets.
- The
commitment of $45 million to Zelnick Media Capital, of New York,
New York. This is a new relationship for TRS.
- Within the
$7.4 billion Real Estate Portfolio:
- The
commitment of $60 million to Exeter Property Group, of
Conshohocken, Pennsylvania. Exeter currently administers $28.9 million
in TRS assets.
- Within the
$13.97 billion Global Income Portfolio:
- The
commitment of $500 million to Intermediate Capital Group, of
London, United Kingdom. This is a new relationship for TRS.
- The
commitment of $500 million to Hayfin Capital Management, of
London, United Kingdom. This is a new relationship for TRS.
- The
commitment of $125 million to Beach Point Capital Management, of
Los Angeles, California. Beach Point currently administers $90
million in TRS assets.
- The
commitment of $125 million to Cerberus Capital Management, of New
York, New York. This is a new relationship for TRS.
- Within The
$5.5 billion Diversifying Strategies Portfolio:
- The commitment
of $100 million to Kirkoswald Capital Partners, of New York, New
York. Kirkoswald currently administers $200 million in TRS
assets.
- The
commitment of $50 million to Brevan Howard Asset Management of
the Bailiwick of Jersey. Brevan Howard currently administers $172.5
million in TRS assets.
- The
redemption of $200 million from Bridgewater Associates, of
Westport, Connecticut. Bridgewater continues to administer $259
million in TRS assets.
- The
redemption of $75 million from KeyQuant, of Paris, France.
###
About
Teachers’ Retirement System
The
Teachers’ Retirement System of the State of Illinois is the 37th largest
pension system in the United States, and provides retirement, disability and
survivor benefits to teachers, administrators and other public school personnel
employed outside of Chicago. The System serves 434,313 members and had assets
of $52.65 billion as of June 30, 2019.
Dave
Urbanek
Director
of Communications
Teachers’
Retirement System of the State of Illinois
Teachers’
Retirement System must comply with current state and federal laws, even in the
event of an employee’s factual or legal misstatement or a benefit
miscalculation. This correspondence is not personal tax or legal advice.
Correspondence sent electronically to and from TRS should not include Social
Security numbers and may be subject to disclosure under the Illinois Freedom of
Information Act. To protect private or confidential information, please contact
TRS immediately if this message is received by mistake and destroy this
correspondence and its attachments without reading, printing or saving.
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