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August 26, 2003
SACRAMENTO – The California State Teachers’ Retirement
System has surpassed the $2 billion mark for investing in
the state’s urban and rural communities to help promote
economic growth.
As of June 30, CalSTRS investments in these communities totaled
$2.08 billion, or more than 2 percent of the system’s
approximately $100 billion pension fund. This milestone is
the first time CalSTRS has exceeded its goal of putting 2
percent of its investment into California’s emerging
communities.
“Reaching this target helps our members as well as all
Californians,” said Christopher Ailman, chief investment
officer of CalSTRS. “We are investing to help promote
a better economic future for the state while generating solid
returns for the fund.”
The California investments principally were in credit enhancements,
stocks, real estate, mortgage-backed securities and home loans.
Ailman said credit enhancements are financial instruments
that enable CalSTRS to “lend” its strong credit
rating to community development project bonds in exchange
for a fee.
Examples of such projects include: the California Housing
Finance Authority, the Port of Long Beach, the Irvine Unified
School District, the City of Vallejo, Kern High School, the
San Francisco Conservatory of Music, the Pasadena Rose Bowl
and Mission Viejo.
“Credit enhancements are an excellent way for community
projects to obtain lower-cost financing, which eases the strain
on local budgets,” Ailman said. “And CalSTRS benefits
by generating fee revenues for our investment portfolio.”
CalSTRS has also targeted underserved areas in California.
Examples of these include a $125 million revitalization project
for Hollywood, backed by a fund headed by former basketball
superstar Earvin “Magic” Johnson; and industrial
development funding to support a toy and gifts manufacturing
facility that will create new jobs in Los Angeles.
Because of the program’s performance to date, CalSTRS
is considering raising its state rural and urban investment
target above the 2 percent mark.
CalSTRS’s overall investment in California is conservatively
estimated at about $13 billion. The fund has more than $2.7
billion invested in companies that are either headquartered
or have major operations in the state, including Intel Corp.,
Wells Fargo & Co., Cisco Systems, Chevron Texaco, Hewlett-Packard,
Oracle and The Walt Disney Company.
Ailman said that the CalSTRS investment in California is
probably even more extensive than calculated, because it is
hard to gauge the cumulative impact of investing in other
national and even international companies that have operations
here.
“Even non-U.S. companies such as Nestle, Nokia and
Royal Dutch Petroleum have significant business activity in
the state,” Ailman said. “That translates into
investment in the communities where their employees work and
live.”
CalSTRS administers retirement, disability and survivor benefits
for California’s public school educators in grades kindergarten
through community college, serving more than 715,000 members
and benefit recipients.
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