From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: Ash Williams, CIO of the mighty Florida State Board of Administration (SBA), doesn’t think it’s all about size—but it sure doesn’t hurt to be one of the big pensions currently in demand.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: Ladd—chairman emeritus of BNY Mellon’s Standish asset management unit—joined the fixed-
income specialist firm in 1962. Just think how much you’d have to say if you started working for your current firm when Kennedy was president.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: How social media led to a story on the Fairfax County Employees Retirement System's usage of risk-balanced investing. Paula Vasan reports.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: With portfolios emerging from the danger zone, a reexamination of asset allocation buckets may be in order. Aran Darling reports.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: Limited partners, be warned...misaligned incentives may be pushing private equity firms to purchase assets they otherwise wouldn't. Benjamin Ruffel reports.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: The secular trend in favor of LDI is gathering steam--but many plan sponsors of smaller and mid-sized corporate plans are trying to resist its lure. Benjamin Ruffel reports.
The Governmental Accounting Standards Board has approved new accounting standards for US public pensions that aim to improve their accounting and financial reporting.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: Europe’s most sophisticated pensions are taking power back from their asset managers. By the end of the decade, will this be the exception—or the rule? Elizabeth Pfeuti reports.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: Norway’s sovereign fund is pioneering a new investment model based on transparency and ethics. Worthy, but is it working? Elizabeth Pfeuti reports.
From aiCIO Magazine's June Issue: David Blanchflower—the Bruce V. Rauner Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College—lets policymakers on both sides of the Atlantic have it.
Pension experts in the United Kingdom and United States have called for regulatory changes to lower the exploding liabilities of pension plans caused by rock-bottom interest rates.