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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Zanetti
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/24/08
HB 413
SHORT TITLE Prohibit State Investment in Hedge Funds
SB
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
* See narrative
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Relates to SB150
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
State Investment Council
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 413 would prohibit the investment of state investment council managed assets in a
hedge fund. “Hedge fund" is defined as a private investment fund or pool, including a relative
value fund, market neutral fund, arbitrage fund, or long or short equity fund, the assets of which
are managed by a professional management firm that trades or invests through public or private
markets in securities, commodities, currency, derivatives or similar classes of financial assets or
is not an investment company pursuant to the 15 U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(1) and 15 U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(7)
(defined below).
The prohibition would take effect on July 1, 2008.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The fiscal implications are significant but difficult to calculate. As of 12/31/07, the SIC had total
assets under management of $16.1 billion, including $1.48 billion in its “Absolute Return" asset
pool. The Absolute Return pool is the asset class that includes hedge funds and makes up 9.2
percent of the portfolio. This asset class returned 8.5 percent in calendar year 2007,
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House Bill 413 – Page
2
outperforming a benchmark of the 90-day US Treasury Bill plus 200 basis points which returned
7.3 percent. Over the year, SIC earned $17.8 million more by investing in hedge funds. In
November, 2007, the SIC approved a change to the policy target for this asset class from 10
percent to 15 percent.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to SIC, the SIC’s hedge fund investments primarily focus on an absolute return and
low volatility strategy overall, intended to neutralize market risk, and produce positive returns in
most market environments. Risk is mitigated via diversification among 13 managers which have
exposures to more than 400 individual hedge funds employing various styles and strategies. The
benchmark for this asset class is pegged at a conservative return goal of T-bills plus 200 basis
points. Put simply, the SIC’s hedge funds are meant to help diversify the Fund, provide
protection during down markets, and achieve returns above what has been an increasingly
challenging investment environment in the fixed income arena.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
All of the funds were allowed to diversify when the “legal list," a statutory list of allowed
investments was repealed and replaced with the broader “Prudent Investor" rule which allows
SIC, the Public Employee Retirement Association (PERA), and the Education Retirement Board
(ERB) to invest in a much broader range of investments, including hedge funds, private equity,
and real estate [45-7-601 to 45-7-612 NMSA 1978].
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Relates to SB150 which would add an additional member to the Council.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
HB413 would prohibit future investments but existing investments in hedge funds would not
have to be liquidated because the language refers to future decisions not past ones.
According to SIC, HB 413 fails to adequately define hedge fund, as its broad definition of hedge
fund could be construed broadly to include private equity funds as well as several other
alternative investment vehicles, including real estate partnerships. This imprecision could lead to
disruption of ongoing SIC private equity investments, inclusive of those made in New Mexico
companies or venture funds.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The bill only refers to SIC and hedge fund investments but the PERA and the ERB also invest in
hedge funds.
The LFC reports quarterly on the investment performance of all funds by asset class and time
period. These reports can be found on the LFC web site at
http://legis.state.nm.us/lcs/lfc/lfcpublications.asp
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House Bill 413 – Page
3
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
The SIC will continue to invest the state permanent funds according to the Prudent Investor rule.
NF/bb