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View Full Version : "CalPERS Is Near Insolvency; It Needs A Bailout Soon"




Swordsmyth
02-25-2018, 02:55 AM
Steve Westly (https://www.mercurynews.com/2017/07/30/steve-westly-california-pensions-are-its-206-billion-elephant-in-the-room/), former California controller and Calpers board member - manager of the largest public pension fund in the US, made a stunning admission, confirming everything:
"The pension crisis is inching closer by the day. CalPERS just voted to increase the amount cities must pay to the agency. Cities point to possible insolvency if payments keep rising but CalPERS is near insolvency itself. It may be reform or bailout soon."

The pension crisis is inching closer by the day. @CalPERS (https://twitter.com/CalPERS?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) just voted to increase the amount cities must pay to the agency. Cities point to possible insolvency if payments keep rising but CalPERS is near insolvency itself. It may be reform or bailout soon.https://t.co/RjThekwvNB
— Steve Westly (@SteveWestly) February 22, 2018 (https://twitter.com/SteveWestly/status/966774615254228993?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) Westly was referring to an editorial (https://t.co/RjThekwvNB)laying out "the essence" of California’s pension crisis, exposed last week when the $350 billion California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS) made a "relatively small change" in its amortization policy.
Specifically, the CalPERS board voted to change the period for recouping future investment losses from 30 years to 20 years. While this may not sound like much, the bottom line is that it would require the California state government and thousands of local government agencies and school districts "to ramp up their mandatory contributions to the huge trust fund."
As author Dan Walters observes (https://t.co/RjThekwvNB), with client agencies – cities, particularly – already complaining that double-digit annual increases in CalPERS payments are driving some of them towards insolvency, the new policy - which kicks in next year - will raise those payments even more.

“What we are trying to avoid is a situation where we have a city that is already on the brink, and applying a 20-year amortization schedule would put them over the edge,” a representative of the League of California Cities, Dane Hutchings, told the CalPERS board before its vote.
CalPERS, however, has no choice because as both Walters and Westly claim, America's largest public pension fund itself is on the brink, "and the policy change is one of several steps it has taken to avoid a complete meltdown."
As we have reported previously (https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-09-13/calpers-slashes-pension-payments-retirees-two-more-california-towns-90), the Calpers system, once more than 100 percent funded, now has scarcely two-thirds of what it would need to fully cover all of the pension promises to current and future retirees. And that assumes it will hit an investment earnings target of 7%per year, that many authorities criticize as being too optimistic.
Last In December we also reported that the increasingly panicked fund, decided to boost its stock allocation to 50% in order to raise its future liability discount rate to 7%, as any reduction in stock allocations would also lead to a lower discount rate which in turn which would require more contributions from cities, towns, school districts, etc. and could bring the whole ponzi crashing down.Amusingly, one Calpers board member argued to raise the equity allocation even higher, to 60%, so that the discount rate was greater than the current 7% in order to make the books appears "better."
Ironically, it was just a decade ago that Calpers' lofty equity allocation resulted in a staggering losses, and the current dead end. The trust fund lost about $100 billion in the Great Recession and never has fully recovered. In December 2016, Calpers voted to lower its earnings projection to 7.0 (https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-12-21/calpers-board-votes-maintain-ponzi-scheme-only-50bps-reduction-discount-rate)% – it had been 7.5% – hoping to avoid another disaster were the economy to turn sour; since then it has been taking quiet steps to lever up its equity exposure once again.
Meanwhile, officials fear that were it to experience another big investment loss, it would pass a point of no return and never be able to pay for pension promises.
On the other hand, "protecting" CalPERS means getting more money from its client agencies, which could drive some of them into insolvency, as Hutchings said. This is not a hollow threat: three California cities have already gone bankrupt in recent years, in part because of their ever-increasing pension burdens, and payments have escalated sharply since then.
So on one hand, CalPERS is doing what it has to do to remain financially solvent, but on the other hand its self-protective steps threaten local government solvency.
That’s the crisis in a nutshell.
As Walters suggests, one way out would be to modify benefits in some way.

City officials, for instance, have suggested reducing automatic cost-of-living escalators in pensions over a certain mark, such as $100,000 a year.
However, the CalPERS board, dominated by public employee organizations and sympathetic politicians, has spurned such pleas: it is almost as if, once promised generous retirement benefits, public workers would rather take the entire system down, than see their own pensions reduced, even modestly.

More at: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-02-24/former-calpers-board-members-shocking-admission-calpers-near-insolvency-it-needs

acptulsa
02-25-2018, 07:50 AM
How is that a "stunning admission", or even news?

http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?506358-CA-Brown-pushes-42-gas-tax-increase-to-pay-for-state-pension-fund

Meanwhile, back down at the boondoggle...

http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?495798-California%92s-64-Billion-Bullet-Train-To-Nowhere-Gets-Delayed-%85-Again

phill4paul
02-25-2018, 09:03 AM
I don't consider a city not being able to give tax ticks a "crisis."

oyarde
02-25-2018, 10:55 AM
It does not need a bailout . Once CalExit is complete the utopia will be free to fund it by whatever means are necessary , they can go door to door with the swat teams collecting peoples change jars . They need to think outside the box . They will have no constraints .

seapilot
02-25-2018, 12:26 PM
JP Morgan is likely going to rescue them again as before, with higher interest rates.

Danke
02-25-2018, 02:36 PM
They could sell off all those tribal lands to the Chinese to fund the pensions.

timosman
02-25-2018, 02:39 PM
Cooking books at 7.5% APY doesn't work anymore?:confused:

oyarde
02-25-2018, 03:02 PM
Cooking books at 7.5% APY doesn't work anymore?:confused:

Well , they lost 100 billion last recession . Just think what the next recession will do to them , likely drop it to 25 percent funded or so. They should have pd me to invest it for them . I may not have beaten 7 percent long term but they would still be 100 percent funded .

oyarde
02-25-2018, 03:26 PM
They could sell off all those tribal lands to the Chinese to fund the pensions.

I doubt californio owns those lands , but they should start selling the state parks .

acptulsa
02-25-2018, 03:54 PM
I doubt californio owns those lands , but they should start selling the state parks .

Selling all those beaches would pay up all the bills, fatten up the pension fund, and pay for the Boondoggle Rail Road besides.

And it would get every surfer in the state registered to vote, too. And get 3/4 of Sacramento fired.

oyarde
02-25-2018, 04:36 PM
Selling all those beaches would pay up all the bills, fatten up the pension fund, and pay for the Boondoggle Rail Road besides.

And it would get every surfer in the state registered to vote, too. And get 3/4 of Sacramento fired.

A train for every californian.