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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Robinson
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/10/07
HB
SHORT TITLE
Severance Tax Fund Investments
SB 865
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SB 739
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
State Investment Council (SIC)
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 865 allows the State Investment Council (SIC) to invest a maximum of nine percent
in New Mexico private equity investments, raising the cap from the current six percent.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The fiscal impact is indeterminate. While the return on private equity assets can be higher than
traditional investments in equity and fixed income, the risks are much higher as well. The SIC is
currently authorized to invest up to six percent of the STPF in a program that targets NM
investments. One method is to invest in NM-based private equity funds with a focus on NM-
based opportunities. The New Mexico Co-investment program, however, directly invests in NM
companies with other private equity funds. This second NM program is considered an
“economically targeted investment" or ETI.
The NM Private Investment Program (NMPEIP) has committed $300 million, $175 million of
which has been invested. Last year the program lost its $7 million investment in TCI Medical
when that company failed. Eclipse recently received FAA certification and has begun delivery
pg_0002
Senate Bill 865 – Page
2
on aircraft to clients, giving the program a significant boost. One exit strategy is for Eclipse to
take the company public.
SIC (note: MM refers to millions and IRR is “internal rate of return"):
Currently the SIC has invested $175MM in NM companies through NMPEIP, not including
additional commitments and follow-on investments of approximately $125MM. To
approach allocation targets for the program, the SIC uses a multiplier to help reflect the lag
between commitments and actual funding of companies or private equity funds, which
commonly invest over several years, with the life of the investment relationship between
limited partner and fund lasting a dozen years or more. This multiplier also helps account for
return of investment through distribution triggered by various forms of investment exit (i.e.
IPO, buyout, etc). The program is nearing its maximum total investment under the current
6% cap.
As of 9/30/06 the SIC has seen $25MM in return of capital from this program, and based on
current valuations has an annualized IRR of 8.31% over the life of the program.
It is very difficult to compare private equity investments to other types of investments since the
value is based on an appraisal rather than being determined by the market as is the case with
stocks and bonds. There is only one way to definitively assign a value to a private equity
investment: when the position is liquidated either by sale or by failure. 8 of 38 companies listed
in an SIC report to the House Appropriations and Finance Committee on February 1, 2007, have
been liquidated or acquired. This means that only 20 percent of the number of investments
through the NM private equity program (NMPEIP) can be definitively quantified.
Private equity investments are long term investments. A typical investment does not show any
return for several years due to the nature of the investments. They are typically start-up
companies or struggling companies that will not have any revenue in the beginning. Additional
investments will come from more liquid assets whose returns are also more transparent. It is
unclear where the additional funds to increase the portfolio allocation to nine percent will come
from but presumably the more transparent and more liquid assets such as stocks or bonds will be
the source. The severance tax permanent fund already has a 12 percent target for private equity
(six for NMPEIP and six for national programs). Adding in hedge funds and real estate and the
total allocation to alternative investments makes up a quarter of the portfolio.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
SIC:
The NMPEIP is classified as an economically targeted investment, or ETI. Like all ETIs, it
has dual mandates of returning profit on its investment while also assisting with economic
development, industry building and job creation efforts here in NM. While the bulk of
investments under NMPEIP have come in the last five years, and taking into consideration
that this is significantly a young program, it appears to be having success on both sides of the
equation.
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Senate Bill 865 – Page
3
The SIC’s new advisor for the NMPEIP, Sun Mountain Capital, produced the following
economic impact estimates, on a conservative basis, as of 12/31/06:
• The NMSIC has invested, directly and indirectly through NM Private Equity/Venture
Funds, in 38 NM Companies:
o Those companies have hired 1,928 employees
o Have annual payroll of almost $130MM
o Make annual NM purchases of $49MM
o Have raised more than $1 Billion from investors
o Pay an average salary of $67,295 (almost X2 NM Avg.)
o Have an annual economic impact of $179MM on NM
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
SB 739 increases the amount SIC can invest in film projects.
NF/csd