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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Varela
DATE TYPED 3/07/05
HB 387/aHBIC/aHAFC
SHORT TITLE Financial Advisor Procurement Code Exemption
SB
ANALYST Geisler
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
See Narrative Recurring Pension Funds and,
State Permanent
Funds
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Duplicates: SB 61
Relates to: SB 60, SB 392, HB 389
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
State Investment Council (SIC)
Public Employees Retirement Association (PERA)
Educational Retirement Board (ERB)
General Services Department (GSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HAFC Amendment
The House Appropriations and Finance Committee amendment to House Bill 387 deleted HBIC
amendment #1 (additional analysis showed that the HBIC amendment was not necessary).
Synopsis of HBIC Amendment
The House Business and Industry amendment to House Bill 387 amends 13-1-98 (D) to clarify
that general financial consultants referenced are providing services related to the issuance of
public securities.
pg_0002
House Bill 387/aHBIC/aHAFC -- Page 2
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 387 is sponsored by the State Permanent Fund Task Force and exempts from the pro-
curement code contracts for investment advisory services, investment management services and
investment-related services entered into by the Educational Retirement Board (ERB), Public
Employees Retirement Association (PERA) and State Investment Council (SIC).
Significant Issues
According to testimony provided by the investing agencies to both the State Permanent Fund
Task Force and the Legislative Finance Committee, it take a minimum of six (6) to ten (10)
months to award a contract for investment managers or investment related programs under the
current procurement code. This hampers the ability of these agencies to be responding in a timely
manner to changes in market conditions or investment manager performance. By exempting in-
vestment related services from the procurement code, the agencies (with approval of their gov-
erning boards) can streamline the procurement process which will improve their ability to man-
age their investment portfolios.
GSD suggests that the implementation process undertaken by these agencies to streamline the
procurement process should identify how the agencies will insure fairness and the best price for
the taxpayers
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
HB 387 will assist the investing agencies in meeting their performance measures. They antici-
pate they will be able to issue requests for proposals and subsequent contracts in a more efficient
timeframe. This will improve annualized investment returns while reducing the risk of the port-
folio, which will contribute these agencies exceeding their internal benchmarks for investment
return.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
By streamlining the ability to contract for investment-related services, the investing agencies
should be able to enhance returns on its portfolio while reducing overall risk. In addition, the
agencies will have the authority to consider transition costs as an evaluation factor in the RFP
process. In a typical RFP, transition costs for hiring a new investment manager can easily run 10
to 50 basis points (a basis point is 1/100 of a percent).
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The investing agencies will develop an internal purchasing policy with guidelines for the con-
tracting for investment-related services and the use of internet-based search resources. If given
the authority to reduce time periods for published notices and amendments, the award of invest-
ment manager contracts and transitioning of portfolio assets may occur in market-sensitive time-
frame.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Duplicates Senate Bill 61. Relates to Senate Bill 60, and House Bill 389/Senate Bill 392, all of
pg_0003
House Bill 387/aHBIC/aHAFC -- Page 3
which propose to improve the investment efficiency of ERB, PERA, and SIC by eliminating the
legal list of investments and making the Prudent Investor Act the governing authority over in-
vestment decision making.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Procurement Process for Investment Agencies
The investing agencies frequently conduct several investment manager searches per year. These
searches are conducted in compliance with the New Mexico Procurement Code, NMSA 1978,
§13-1-1 et seq. For each RFP issued, approximately 50 responses are received, all of which must
be evaluated. On average, each procurement is a minimum 6-month process.
Under the procurement code, multi-term contracts for professional services may not exceed 4
years. The practical implications for investment-related services are significant for the investing
agencies. When contracting with an investment manager, an RFP must be issued for the invest-
ment product(s) under that manager’s control during the last year of the 4-year contract term.
Often, the outcome of the RFP is to award contract to the same investment manager after of a 6-
month procurement process.
In addition, the agencies currently are unable to consider transition costs as an evaluation factor
in the RFP process. In a typical RFP, transition costs for hiring a new investment manager can
easily run 10 to 50 basis points. Further, certain asset classes private equity require long-term
investments for gains to be realized. Specifically, investment in real estate and require a time
horizon to longer than 4-years to realize gain.
In the event of a contracted investment manager’s negative performance, the investment agency
may decide early termination of the contract is appropriate. Unfortunately, procuring for an al-
ternative investment manager that deals in the same investment product is at best a 6-month
process. The procurement code precludes agencies from contracting with the “runner-up” in the
previous RFP for the investment product. The only alternative available to agencies is to transi-
tion a terminated manager’s portfolio to an existing manager under contract who often manages
another product. As a result, an investing agencies overall asset allocation portfolio can be nega-
tively impacted.
Lowest Cost versus Best Value
The procurement code contemplates contracting for services based on the “lowest” bid or cost.
For trustees of a investment funds, the primary purpose is to select investment managers on the
basis of the expected investment return vs. risk, net of cost, rather than the provider with the
lowest operating cost. Since most investment manager contracts are negotiated using perform-
ance fees, factors such as performance and securities exchange commission charges or investiga-
tions are more relevant to manager selection than cost.
Streamlining the Procurement Process
The investing agencies have researched internet-based software applications that allow institu-
tional investors to research, evaluate and select investment products across asset classes and ve-
hicle types. One such software application has a database of approximately 750 investment
managers and 3,500 products. The investing agencies believe that use of a software application
pg_0004
House Bill 387/aHBIC/aHAFC -- Page 4
of this type would provide the administrative convenience of allowing most, if not all, of its re-
sponses to a request for proposals (RFP) to be received on-line for easy search and comparison.
The investing agencies will need to issue a RFP for such an internet-based software application.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL.
The investing agencies will continue to comply with the procurement code provisions as they
relate to procurement of investment-related services and will miss an opportunity to enhance
management of the funds.
GGG/yr:njw