Exhibit 4
Transcription
Exhibit 4
Exhibit 4 Hewitt EnnisKnupp | September 17, 2013 State Universities Retirement System Presentation to the Board of Trustees and Staff October 17, 2013 To protect the confidential and proprietary information included in this material, it may not be disclosed or provided to any third parties without the approval of Hewitt EnnisKnupp. Exhibit 4 Discussion Topics Executive Summary Investment Performance Analysis and Monitoring Overview of HEK – Performance Reporting – Proposed SURS Team – Manager Monitoring – Organization and Business Model DC Capabilities – Consulting Philosophy Closing Remarks – Staffing and Resources – Fees – Trustee and Staff Education – Competitive Advantages Investment Policy and Asset Allocation – Commitment to SURS – Asset Allocation – New Ideas SURS | October 2013 2 Exhibit 4 Executive Summary Exhibit 4 Overview of Hewitt EnnisKnupp Over 270 U.S. investment consulting professionals (total staff of over 300); more than 600 worldwide $2.2 trillion in assets under advisement in the U.S.; more than $4.2 trillion in global assets #1 Industry Rankings Over 470 U.S. investment consulting clients covering: Total U.S. Client Assets – Corporate and Public Pension Plans – Defined Contribution Retirement Plans Number of 401(k) Plans – Endowments and Foundations – VEBAs Number of DB Plans – Specialty Assets Independent and objective advice—100% of revenue derived from consulting clients Number of Plans >$200 million Investment Manager and Capital Market Research structured as global practices Source: P&I Magazine,2012 Experience SURS | October 2013 Depth of Resources 4 Analytical Capabilities Exhibit 4 Hewitt EnnisKnupp Experience AUA # of Clients Traditional Consulting $2.2 Trillion 387 Public Fund Clients $1.9 Trillion 42 Breakdown of Client AUM Specialty Services Private Equity $35 Billion 40 Real Estate $20 Billion 50 Hedge Funds $25 Billion 70 Clients by Asset Size We are an institutional investment consulting firm advising sophisticated clients SURS | October 2013 5 Exhibit 4 Hewitt EnnisKnupp’s Competitive Advantages Public Fund Expertise Full Suite of Services Proactive Advice Proven Track Record with SURS SURS | October 2013 More public sector experience than any other firm Experience with systems with funding and other challenges Unique Fiduciary Services team that specializes in public fund nuances and governance Best-in-industry DB and DC plan capabilities Boutique Global Real Estate practice Specialized Global Asset Allocation and Investment Policy teams ensure thought leadership Dedicated global manager research team Thought leadership on plan structure, investment policy, market events, investment trends, and risk management Research driven recommendations Forward looking perspective Above benchmark-results Strong relationship with the Board and Staff Culture of partnership to report to the Board while serving as an extension of staff 6 Exhibit 4 Proven Track Record with SURS SURS and HEK enjoyed a successful 20+ year relationship During our prior relationship with SURS we helped to: – Earn an annualized net of fee return of 10% (and outperform the benchmark) – Rank in the 34th percentile of public funds over the 10-year period – Outperform other Illinois public funds – Select an efficient asset allocation – Enter new asset classes (REITs, TIPS, Global Equity, Non Core Real Estate, Portable Alpha) – Evaluate managers across all asset classes – Initiate infrastructure investments – Create an Opportunity Fund – Allocate to PPIP managers – Respond to initiatives from the Illinois legislature – Implement and evaluate the Manager Diversity Program – Navigate difficult market environments (rebalanced in first half of 2009) SURS | October 2013 7 Exhibit 4 Evolution of Hewitt EnnisKnupp Over Past Three Years Greater global presence: – U.S. Enhanced communication with clients, including: – Europe – Monthly webinars – Canada – HEK Blog – Idea Forum Growth in resources: – Dedicated manager research team has grown from 45 to over 70 New client tools, including: – Medium-term views – Specialized Operational Due Diligence team – Client portal (broad distribution in 2014) – Material growth in the alternatives group – Reporting – New Global Asset Allocation team – Enhanced alternatives New investment consulting offerings, including delegated solutions for: – Investment Policy Services team has grown from 10 individuals to 17 – Endowments/foundations – Defined benefit plans – Specialized DC Consulting Practice SURS | October 2013 – Defined contribution plans 8 Exhibit 4 How We See Our Role SURS Circumstances Role of the General Consultant • Forward-thinking organization • Innovative investment program • Experienced staff and knowledgeable Board • Counsel to Board on all investment and related issues • Partner to staff to solve problems and monitor the program • Provide Board clear articulation and understanding of potential investment strategies – risks and benefits – to support prudent decision making • Counsel to Board on real estate investment policy • Provide market environment coverage on the asset class Role of the • Identify real estate opportunities Real Estate • Monitor and benchmark the program Consultant HEK Strengths: Trusted Advisor, Breadth & Depth of Resources, Rich Experience SURS | October 2013 9 Exhibit 4 Overview of the Firm Exhibit 4 SURS Team and Resources State Universities Retirement System Client Investment Team PJ Kelly and Cate Polleys, Lead Consultants Brandon Patterson and David Rose, co-Consultants Russ Ivinjack, Senior Advisor Supporting Consultants and Analysts Global Investment Investment Policy Global Asset Management Services Allocation Fiduciary Services Team 70+ Professionals Average of 12 Years Experience 17 Professionals Average of 15 Years Experience 10 Professionals Average of 13 Years Experience 7 Professionals Average of 22 Years Experience Client Practice Areas Defined Contribution SURS | October 2013 403(b) Corporate Alternatives 11 Public Endowment & Foundation Exhibit 4 Dedicated Global Real Estate Consulting Team Global Real Estate Consulting Team / Resources North American Team UK/European Team U.S. Shared Resources Catherine Polleys Nick Duff Monitoring and Compliance (Partner & Co-Head of Global Real Estate) (Partner & Co-Head of Global Real Estate) Christopher Brandely Chae Hong Richard Cooper Nolan Sauls Florian Ghiurau David Rose, CPA Jani Venter Tim Zukowski Canadian Team Kirloes Gerges Justin Menze SURS | October 2013 Operational Due Diligence Richard Spivey Ben Abramov Chris Goodeve-Ballard 12 Exhibit 4 Business Model and Consulting Philosophy Business Model Consulting Philosophy Clients must come first -- we are fiduciaries Building implementable solutions for clients is key 100% of our revenue is derived from investment consulting No payments from investment managers or other service providers SURS | October 2013 13 Investment policy and asset allocation come first Understand and control risk exposures Pursue an efficiency or an opportunity approach Maintain a long-term perspective Base decisions on accepted theoretical principles and sound empirical data Costs matter Exhibit 4 Hewitt EnnisKnupp: Depth of Resources Consulting staff of over 270 investment professionals – 187 employees based in Illinois Highly credentialed employees: – 57 CFAs – 15 CAIAs – 18 FSAs – 39 Additional certifications including PhD, ACA, AIF, ASA, CEBS, CERA, CFP, ChFC, CIPM, CLU, CPA, EA, FIA, FLMI, PRM, QKA, QPA, and RPA 38 graduates of public Illinois universities 105 professionals with advanced degrees Leaders with experience: – 51 Partners average 21 years in the industry We have built a highly capable, practitioner-based consulting team SURS | October 2013 14 Exhibit 4 Representative Clients SURS | October 2013 15 Exhibit 4 Educational Opportunities Event Description Board/Committee Meetings Review market events and address manager issues Answer questions about the portfolio HEK University One day training sessions offered to all HEK clients Topical sessions addressing investment and fiduciary issues Networking opportunities with peers HEK Client Conference Two day event offered every 18-24 months Includes internal and external key note speakers Breakout sessions on specific topics relevant to HEK clients Presentation of HEK research HEK Alternatives Conference One day conference exploring issues specific to alternative investment portfolios Investment Strategy Webinars Monthly webinars available to clients Updates on HEK research and market events Customized Retreats / Educational Meetings In depth sessions on investments or fiduciary issues per the client’s request Fiduciary Training Overview of fiduciary responsibilities Research Papers Access to all HEK white papers and other research pieces SURS | October 2013 16 Exhibit 4 The Importance of Diversity At the firm… – HEK and our parent company are dedicated to creating and maintaining a diverse workplace – Approximately 50% of the HEK Chicago office is woman and/or minorities – Our firm is fully compliant with Equal Employment Opportunity policies and laws – Aon’s Director of Corporate Human Resources serves as the firm’s Equal Employment Opportunity Compliance Officer – Through our parent company, Aon, mentoring and support is offered to many employee demographics • Business Resource Groups (BRGs) and Local Diversity Councils (LDCs) – Aon recognized as a good place to work for women and minorities: • Named to the Top 50 “Out Front Companies for Diversity Leadership: Best Places for Diverse Managers to Work” by Diversity MBA Magazine (Diversity MBA Magazine, 2011) • Named, by Working Mother 2011, as one of the 100 Best companies – Aon Cornerstone is a dedicated business unit charged with proactively sourcing and vetting diverse businesses to address the specific diversity and inclusion needs of our clients across the nation • Nearly 170 Minority Business Enterprise firms have been hired through the program SURS | October 2013 17 Exhibit 4 The Importance of Diversity In our research process… – Databases open to all managers – We recognize that these databases are not perfect so we have an open door policy – Established an internal team from different investment areas to ensure robust MFPD-owned manager coverage: • Meets quarterly to compare information on market events, review progress, and to share information on new firms • Tasked with developing a list of MFPD-owned managers in each asset class to be monitored closely for the purpose of continuing in our approval process – Our manager evaluation framework does not set barriers like assets under management or years in business that would unduly screen out any type of manager SURS | October 2013 18 Exhibit 4 Policy and Asset Allocation Exhibit 4 Investment Policy Indications for Driving Factors Governance Risk Tolerance Time Horizon Most Flexible More opportunistic More alternatives Greater reliance on active risk More strategic Less alternatives Greater reliance on market risk Most Strategic Higher Risk Budget More alternatives Greater Reliance on active risk Less alternatives Less reliance on market risk Lower Risk Budget Longest Most illiquid alternatives (liquidity premium) Return-seeking over diversification in risk premiums No illiquid alternatives Diversification over returnseeking Shortest More alternatives Greater reliance on market risk Market impact? Less alternatives Greater reliance on active risk Smallest Portfolio Size Largest SURS | October 2013 20 Exhibit 4 Key Risks for Public Pension Plans Types of Risk Time Horizon Risk Management Tools and Controls Return Shortfall Assets do not grow with liabilities Investment return & contribution less than liability growth Long Term (10+ years) Funding policy Plan design Investment policy Assumptions & methods Liquidity Cannot liquidate assets efficiently to meet needs Lose control of asset allocation Short to Medium Term (<5 years) Funding policy Benefit accruals Use of Illiquid investments Scenario analysis Monitoring Investment Asset allocation (policy) Investment structure Manager selection Rebalancing Scenario (or path risk) Factor Short to Medium Term (<5 years) Investment policy statement – static/dynamic – asset allocation – rebalancing – manager guidelines – monitoring/roles & responsibilities Risk budgeting Monitoring / dashboards Medium term views Regression and scenario analysis Others? SURS | October 2013 21 Exhibit 4 Special Considerations for Underfunded Systems Given SURS’ funded ratio (41%*), we believe the Board should seek to understand how the growing liabilities impact the optimal asset allocation and investment strategy for the Fund As a mature plan, negative cash flows call for careful liquidity planning and a key consideration in asset allocation decisions The risk posture of the fund should balance the competing objectives of investing for safety and liquidity versus investing to potentially materially grow assets Scenario Planning will help to bring to light these and other important considerations on an ongoing basis and provide an important planning tool for all key stakeholders *as of June 30, 2012 SURS | October 2013 22 Exhibit 4 Sample Scenario Analysis: Baseline Forecast Results (Assumed Asset Return is 7.1%, Amounts in $ Billions) 40% $14.0 35% $12.0 % of Fund Assets Needed for Liquidity 30% $10.0 Assets in $ Billions 25% $8.0 20% $6.0 15% $4.0 10% $2.0 5% $- 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 $9.8 $9.0 $8.2 $7.3 $6.4 $5.3 $4.2 $3.0 Net Outflow $0.7 $0.8 $0.8 $0.8 $0.8 $0.9 $1.0 $1.1 $1.1 $1.2 $1.2 $1.3 $1.3 $1.4 $1.4 $1.4 $1.4 $1.4 $1.4 $1.4 Liquidity Need 6% 6% 6% 6% 7% 7% 8% 9% 9% 10% 11% 12% 13% 14% 16% 17% 19% 23% 27% 34% Assets $12.2 $12.3 $12.3 $12.4 $12.5 $12.5 $12.5 $12.3 $12.1 $11.8 $11.4 $10.9 $10.4 2023 SURS | October 2013 23 0% Exhibit 4 Sample Scenario Planning: Probability of Liquidity Needs Exceeding 10%, 20% and 25% of Total Plan Assets 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 25% 0% 0% 0% 0% 1% 4% 6% 10% 14% 17% 20% 25% 28% 32% 37% 40% 43% 46% 48% 51% 53% 20% 0% 0% 0% 1% 3% 6% 10% 13% 17% 21% 25% 28% 33% 37% 41% 44% 47% 50% 52% 54% 56% 10% 0% 1% 5% 11% 15% 22% 28% 36% 40% 46% 50% 54% 57% 59% 62% 63% 64% 65% 66% 67% 67% SURS | October 2013 24 Exhibit 4 The Changing Role of the Public Retirement Boards Basic trust law separates the roles of the settlor (the creator of the pension trust), the trustee (the overseer of the trust), and the beneficiary (the recipient of trust benefits) The governmental entities that are the settlors usually set the benefit structure and the contribution levels The public retirement boards and the systems they govern usually make investments and pay benefits; in some instances the boards also impact the contributions For many severely underfunded plans, it has become obvious that there is no way that investments alone can solve the problem and make the plans actuarially sound We have seen the roles “blurred” when state legislatures or local governments have asked trustees to help them solve the problems of underfunding Some requests are made informally and others are made through statute; more collaboration is taking place now than ever before From a fiduciary perspective this is tricky because trustees are to act solely and exclusively for the benefit of the beneficiaries and not for the benefit of the settlors SURS | October 2013 25 Exhibit 4 SURS Expected Risk and Returns SURS Current Policy Allocation Annualized Return (10 Year Forecast) Standard Deviation (10 Year Forecast) Annualized Return (30 Year Forecast) Standard Deviation (30 Year Forecast) 32.0% 7.3% 19.5% 7.3% 19.5% Private Equity 6.0 9.4 26.0 9.4 27.0 Non-U.S. Equity 21.0 8.0 21.6 8.2 21.9 Global Equity 8.0 7.7 19.5 7.8 20.0 Fixed Income 21.0 3.1 4.0 4.5 5.5 TIPS 4.0 2.7 4.5 3.6 4.5 Real Estate 7.0 7.3 14.5 7.3 14.5 Opportunity Fund* 1.0 7.9 16.5 7.9 16.5 100.0% 7.1% 13.4% 7.5% 13.6% 5th Percentile -- 14.2% -- 11.6% -- 25th Percentile -- 10.0 -- 8.5** -- 50th Percentile -- 7.1 -- 7.5 -- 75th Percentile -- 4.3 -- 6.6** -- 95th Percentile -- 0.4 -- 3.6 -- Probability of Achieving 7.75% -- 44% -- 46% -- U.S. Equity Total Fund * Please note that the projected return and risk represent the Infrastructure asset class. ** Represents the 35th and 65th percentiles. SURS | October 2013 26 Exhibit 4 HEK Portfolio Implementation Principles: Two Paths to Success Efficiency and Opportunity describe two approaches to constructing a total portfolio SURS | October 2013 Efficiency • Simplicity • Achieve market returns at minimum cost • Heavy use of indexing • Little or no alternatives Opportunity Go BIG! • Strong reliance on skill • Accept increased cost and complexity to achieve above-market returns • Open to substantial traditional active risk • Substantial alternatives allocation • Implement Medium Term Views 27 Exhibit 4 Best Ideas New Opportunities Private Market Debt Reinsurance Equity Insurance Risk Premium Measurably Improve Risk and Return Outcomes Improve Returns Re-envision approach to active management Control Risk Restructure fixed income portfolio SURS | October 2013 28 Exhibit 4 Possible Asset Allocation SURS | October 2013 29 Exhibit 4 Real Estate Consulting Advice Begins with In-Depth Real Estate Knowledge Real Estate Market Research – In-depth knowledge of: • real estate fundamentals (e.g. supply/demand, occupancy, rents), and • capital market indicators (e.g. interest rates, liquidity issues, fund flows, expected returns) – Identify and monitor current market trends and issues; • keep clients abreast of tactical concerns – Database subscriptions include: fundamentals, transactions, economic indicators, and capital market factors – Participate in industry conferences and organizations Investment Universe Research – Cover all quadrants of commercial real estate; public, private, debt and equity – Extensive qualitative and quantitative analysis employed to evaluate each manager’s capabilities – A combination of proprietary investment databases and external vendor subscriptions are utilized – Expected returns are modeled by our internal Investment Policy Services group for guidance on relative attractiveness of real estate versus other asset classes at any point in the economic cycle Peer Universe Surveys – Access to over 160 clients provides us significant insight into investment trends and best practices across the asset class SURS | October 2013 30 Exhibit 4 How is the Real Estate Cycle Progressing? Stages of Fundamental Recovery in the Real Estate Market Cycle We Are Here Construction Reignites YE 2012 Growth in Rental Rates Apartments Hotels YE 2011 Office Declining Vacancy Industrial Retail Net Absorption Turns Positive Demand Drivers Rebound YE 2009 YE 2010 Source: HEK 6.30.13 SURS | October 2013 31 Exhibit 4 SURS Portfolio at a Glance – June 30, 2013 Style Diversification Portfolio Snapshot Current Real Estate Total Portfolio Current Allocation $963 million 6.5% Policy Allocation 7.0% Managers 7 Funds/ Product s Non-Core 11% Core 28% 10 Program has evolved over time with allocations to: – US REITs: 2000 – US Core & Value Added: 2005 & 2006 – Global REITs: 2007 – Non-Core Direct and Fund of Funds: 2009 – Present Global REITs 38% US REITs 23% Heavy tilt towards publicly traded real estate signifies an importance of liquidity REITs have been a strong contributor to overall performance for the program Significant non-US exposure through REITs and non-Core fund of funds (~25% of RE program) – Most exposure comes from the Global REIT mandates (~60% non-US within allocation) HEK would recommend style allocations dependent upon goals for the program SURS | October 2013 32 Exhibit 4 Investment Performance Analysis and Monitoring – – Performance Reporting Manager Monitoring Exhibit 4 Performance Reporting Monthly reports – High level market and economic developments – Typically includes performance summary of asset classes and Total Fund asset allocation relative to policy targets Quarterly reports – Market review – Executive summary • Performance summary (vs. benchmark and peers) and asset allocation for Total Fund and asset class levels • Total Fund attribution analysis, risk/return analytics – Investment Managers • Performance summary Absolute and relative to benchmarks and peers • Excess return and cumulative wealth analyses • Risk/return charts and statistics • Attribution and portfolio characteristics Ability to provide custom exhibits based on your needs and circumstances SURS | October 2013 34 Exhibit 4 Global Investment Management – Our Overarching Beliefs Customized solutions achieve client goals There is no single right way to successful fund management Active management can add value Globally sourcing investment managers results in better outcomes Dedicated, specialist investment teams with accountability work best Independence is critical SURS | October 2013 35 Exhibit 4 Manager Monitoring – Our Dedicated Team More than 70 dedicated manager research professionals covering traditional and alternative strategies, including operational due diligence Christopher Riley Equities Global Regional Style Size 19 researchers Catherine Polleys & Nick Duff Real Estate Lennox Hartman Fixed Income Peter Hill Liquid Alternatives Government IG Credit Emerging Market Debt Absolute Return LDI Cash Direct Hedge Funds Fund of Hedge Funds Currency Commodities Core Value add Opportunistic REITs Timber Agriculture Direct Private Equity Fund of Funds Infrastructure Global Regional 12 researchers 12 researchers 8 researchers 12 researchers Operational Due Diligence Leaders—Richard Spivey, Chris Goodeve-Ballard Technical Analysts/Support Staff 7 Associates SURS | October 2013 36 Karen Rode Private Equity Exhibit 4 Manager Research Evaluation Process 1 7 Initial inputs News flow Quantitative screens Portfolio analysis Intro meetings Implementation of research Meetings Manager selections 2 Pre-meeting Discuss key issues Set the agenda Share with manager On-going monitoring Communication with Clients Quarterly Reviews 6 Global Manager Monitor Database Rating sheet 3 Review and update Share with manager We ask the questions Listen to the answers 5 4 Rating decision Full airing of issues with consultants and specialists SURS | October 2013 Manager visit Post meeting Do they do what they say they do? Rating recommendation 37 Exhibit 4 Our Rating Criteria and Rankings Factor Criteria Rating Business Profitability, stability & spread of ownership, client base, remuneration policy 1-4 Investment Staff Quality, depth of resource, team dynamic, staff turnover 1-4 Investment Process Competitive advantage, repeatability, skill, implementation 1-4 Risk Management Embedded in process, independent verification, mix of measurements 1-4 Operational Due Diligence Operational controls, valuation of assets, independent directors, 3rd party vendors Pass/ Conditional Pass/ Fail Performance Analysis Consistent with stated process, risk adjusted, persistent 1-4 Client Service – responsiveness and flexibility Terms & Conditions Fees – appropriate and competitive for the product? 1-4 Best practices in documentation Overall Buy / Hold / Sell Rating Key: 4 = Strong, 3 = Above average, 2 = Average, 1 = Weak SURS | October 2013 38 Exhibit 4 DC Capabilities Exhibit 4 A Deep DC Practice Strong Practice Leadership and Accountability Kevin Vandolder, CFA Diane Vallerie Improta Leslie Smith Drew McCorkle, JD DC Investment Practice Leader 403(b) Investment Practice Leader DC Plan Operations Practice Leader Fiduciary Governance Practice Leader Key Areas of Concentration Stable Value Off the Shelf Target Date Funds Investment Policy & Advice 403(b) Consulting Fee Benchmarking Plan Design Jacob Punnoose Steve Tagarov Brian Abshire John Doyle Beth Hanig Michele Ward David Swallow Dan Pawlisch Jan Raines Linda Boarman Craig Harris Rob Reiskytl Lifetime Income Custom Target Date Funds Recordkeeper/ Vendor Evaluation Legal/Compliance & Operations Retirement Communications Fiduciary Oversight Steve Shepherd Jay Dinunzio Scott Fisher Eric Friedman Rhonda Jinks Eric Brager Dan Schwallie Joe Steen Barb Hogg Erika Illiano Bridget Steinhart Gena Buchwald Dedicated Resources Rob Austin Danielle Farmer Joe Hass Stephen Lauko Darren Moran Diane Smola Steve Benjamin Scott Fiedler Amanda Janusz Dessy Leintz Corey Meyers Paul Sylvia Juliette deCarteret John Flagel Zofia Kaczmarczyk Nathalie Luke Michelle Nhan Mark Tavares Craig de Guzman Dan Fletcher Becky King Mark Manning Matt Stone Beth Thatcher John Doyle Greg Fox Chris Kohler Frances McDonald Claire Shaughnessy Sherry Zhou Investments SURS | October 2013 Ongoing Monitoring Vendors and Design 40 Governance Exhibit 4 DC Plan Philosophy Investment structure is the most important component of the investment program as it will: – Shape how participants invest their assets – Impact the employees’ perceived value of the plan – Address diversification concerns We believe a plan’s investment options should offer a sufficient range of choice to allow participants to form well-diversified portfolios, given a reasonable range of risk and return circumstances We recommend that defined contribution plans have a structure that: – Includes target date retirement funds – Offers a limited number but diversified series of “core funds” “Asset Class” menu (better) “Objective-based” menu (best) – Is competitive in fees SURS | October 2013 41 Exhibit 4 Typical Challenges Facing DC Participants Insufficient Savings Inadequate Savings and Distribution Tools Poor Diversification and High Cost and Too Rich in Cost Not Enough EnoughReturn Return Not SURS | October 2013 Focusononefficiency efficiencyand andincome incomeadequacy adequacy • Focus Auto-enroll,auto auto-escalate, and re-enroll • Auto-enroll, -escalate and re-enroll • Adjust Optimize matching company contributions contributions to encourage through design the“reach” and • Stop leakagebehavior participant • Focus Focusonongetting gettingparticipants participantstotoefficient efficientfrontier frontier MoveDC DCinvestment investmentoption optionstructure structureforward forwardto manage key risks • Move to manage key cost risksinvestment program • Re-affirm lowest Re-affirm low cost investment program • Simplify the investment option structure Simplify the investment option structure • Broaden the investment mandates Broaden the investment • Focus on consistent alpha mandates capture 42 Exhibit 4 DC Design Philosophy The Solutions A New Governance Framework The Problems Participant Gaps The Barriers Plan Sponsor Gaps Insufficient Savings Inefficient Plan Design Redesign Plan Structure and Communications Poor Investment Choices Inefficient Investment Design Redesign Investment Structure and Offer Help Growing Retirement Needs Ineffective Guiding Metrics Accurately Monitor and Measure Efficacy SURS | October 2013 43 Exhibit 4 Moving the DC Investment Structure Option Forward to Manage Key Risks Participant Risk to Manage HEK DC Solution Core Line Up Return Shortfall • Growth Capital Markets Volatility • Income Unexpected Inflation Longevity SURS | October 2013 • Capital Preservation • Inflation Protection • Lifetime Income Solution 44 Asset Allocation Custom Target Date Funds Exhibit 4 DC Solution: Sample Menu Consolidation Tier 1: Target Date (“TD”) Funds TD Income Tier 2 & 3: Multiple Choice Asset Class Menu Objectives Menu Current Better Best Practice TD 2015 TD 2020 Large Cap Large Cap Growth Opportunity Small/Mid Cap Value Small/Mid Cap Core Small & Mid Cap Additional Strategies Small/Mid Cap Growth TD 2025 TD 2030 Non-US Value Non-US Index Growth TD 2040 TD 2045 TD 2055 sophisticated High Yield Bonds Global REIT Hybrid Equity investors/ Other Specialty Funds Core Bond TD 2050 Core Bond Index Stable Value/Money Mkt Core Plus Bond Additional Strategies Income Capital Preservation Preservation Inflation Inflation Capital Other Low Risk FI SURS | October 2013 for Complex Portfolios for Non-US Equity Non-US Growth TD 2035 Brokerage Window Large Cap Value Large Cap Index TD 2010 Tier 4: 45 participants Exhibit 4 Closing Remarks and Q&A Exhibit 4 Fees If we have over or underestimated your needs, we are able to adjust our scope and fees One asset liability study, real estate and private equity pacing models, MDP Program review and monitoring, SMP consulting, and all travel is included for the five year period Calendar Year Year 1 Ye a r 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Annual Retainer (GC Only) $380,000 $390,000 $403,000 $415,000 $427,000 Annual Retainer (RE Only) $95,000 $100,000 $105,000 $110,000 $115,000 Annual Retainer (GC and RE) $465,000 $480,000 $498,000 $515,000 $532,000 Additional Fees: – Public Market Searches: $25,000 - $65,000 – Private Markets Searches: $50,000 - $75,000 – Custodian/Securities Lending Search: $50,000 - $75,000 – Additional MDP Manager level due diligence: $65,000* – DC Provider Searches: $75,000 *includes meeting with MDP managers every 12 – 24 months, and an overall acceptable/unacceptable assessment SURS | October 2013 47 Exhibit 4 Hewitt EnnisKnupp’s Competitive Advantages Public Fund Expertise Full Suite of Services Proactive Advice Proven Track Record with SURS SURS | October 2013 More public sector experience than any other firm Experience with systems with funding and other challenges Unique Fiduciary Services team that specializes in public fund nuances and governance Best-in-industry DB and DC plan capabilities Boutique Global Real Estate practice Specialized Global Asset Allocation and Investment Policy teams ensure thought leadership Dedicated global manager research team, including alternatives Thought leadership on plan structure, investment policy, market events, investment trends, and risk management Research driven recommendations Forward looking perspective Above benchmark-results Strong relationship with the Board and Staff Culture of partnership to report to the Board while serving as an extension of staff 48 Exhibit 4 SURS & Hewitt EnnisKnupp -- a Strong Partnership Custom solutions for large, sophisticated institutional investors Resources to assist with all aspects of investment programs Specialized real estate team housed within the practice Proven history of commitment, excellence, and innovation in serving public funds Will bring you honest, robust, and forward-thinking advice No conflicts of interest: no “pay to play”, soft dollar or commission recapture arrangements We would be honored to serve as SURS’ investment consultant, and would strive to exceed all of your expectations Experience SURS | October 2013 Depth of Resources 49 Analytical Capabilities Exhibit 4 Appendix – Presenter Biographies – Additional Information Exhibit 4 Presenter Biographies Exhibit 4 Presenter Biographies Primary consultant for several Hewitt EnnisKnupp retainer and project clients Chair of U.S. Investment Committee, the group responsible for vetting all HEK research and setting firmwide investment beliefs Works with Ernst & Young, Federal Thrift Savings Plan, Gloucester Insurance, National Grid USA, OSRAM Sylvania, and Teacher Retirement System of Louisiana representing over $350 billion in assets Previously served as the lead consultant to SURS Joined the firm in 1994 B.S. degree in finance from the Northern Illinois University M.B.A. degree from DePaul University’s Kellstadt Graduate School of Business Russ Ivinjack Senior Partner PJ Kelly, CFA, CAIA Partner SURS | October 2013 Joined the firm in 1996 and holds the title of Partner Leads one the firm’s client advisory groups Conducted asset liability and asset allocation studies for several multi-billion dollar investment programs with severe funding issues Assisted in the implementation of customized hedge fund and private equity programs for several multibillion dollar public pension plans Currently works with Arkansas Teacher Retirement System, Central Pension Fund, the International Union of Operating Engineers, Kentucky Teacher Retirement System, Marian Health Systems, Montgomery County Public Schools, Pennsylvania State Education Association, and the Ohio Operating Engineers representing over $46 billion in assets Frequently speaks before industry groups on a broad range of topics pertaining to public clients CFA and CAIA charterholder and a member of CFA Institute and the CFA Society of Chicago Contributed to the International Foundation Trustee Handbook (2012) 52 Exhibit 4 Presenter Biographies Catherine Polleys, CRE Partner David Rose, CPA Senior Consultant SURS | October 2013 Co-leads the firm’s Global Real Estate group; joined the firm in 2009 with over 20 years of practitioner experience directing activities in both public and private, domestic and global real estate investment sectors Currently works with a confidential Taft Hartley client, the Nebraska Investment Council, Ohio Public Employees’ Retirement System, San Diego County Employees Retirement Association, and the South Carolina Retirement System Prior to joining Hewitt EnnisKnupp, was the Director of Research for real estate at Fidelity Investments and previously served as the Vice President and Director of Strategic Consulting at Torto Wheaton Research Other work experience includes private real estate development and investment management in both the U.S. and Southeast Asia B.Sc. in civil engineering from Brown University; M.S. in real estate development from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Past-chairman of the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries’ (NCREIF) Board of Directors and Research Committee; current Chair of the NCREIF Defined Contribution Committee Active member of the research committee and research infinity group at the Pension Real Estate Association (PREA); a Hoyt Fellow and Counselor of Real Estate (CRE) Leads consulting assignments for a select number of Hewitt EnnisKnupp retainer and project clients Leads the new product manager research process; also a senior manager researcher across the full spectrum of real estate - core, non-core and REIT managers Champions the real estate securities real estate style areas for manager research Lead lecturer for real estate at HEK University sessions Currently works with a confidential Taft Hartley client, the Nebraska Investment Council, and the South Carolina Retirement System Joined the firm in 2008 and has nine years of industry experience Previous industry experience includes PricewaterhouseCoopers and Walton Street Capital B.S. in Business Administration – Finance & Accounting from The Ohio State University Certified Public Accountant (CPA) 53 Exhibit 4 Presenter Biographies Serves as a consultant in the firm’s client advisory group Currently works with Ernst & Young, a confidential corporate client, the Kansas City Employees' Retirement System, the New York State Teachers' Retirement System, Trinity School, and the University of Illinois Alumni Association Projects include asset allocation and peer review for $90 billion public fund and DB glidepath implementation for $5 billion corporate pension plan Prior to joining Hewitt EnnisKnupp, worked as a research analyst at an investment consulting firm for three years, where he serviced a number of institutional clients and worked in the firm’s alternatives group performing due diligence and research on hedge fund investment strategies B.B.A. and M.S. degrees in finance from the University of Memphis Holds the Chartered Alternatives Investment Analyst designation Brandon Patterson Consultant, CAIA SURS | October 2013 54 Exhibit 4 Additional Information Exhibit 4 HEK Research Recently Released: Public Funds Can Compete Harvesting the Equity Insurance Risk Premium Measuring Success in Fixed Income Go Big or Go Home: The Case for an Evolution in Risk Taking Conviction in Equity Investing Inflation Risk and Real Return The Opportunity Allocation: A Tool to Provide Maximum Flexibility with Implementation Tales from the Downside: Risk Reduction Strategies Improving DC Plan Investment Governance: A Call to Action Rethinking Fixed Income: Challenging Conventional Wisdom Hedge Fund Replication Coming Soon: Investing in Real Assets Role of Alternative Beta New Rules for Asset Allocation SURS | October 2013 56 Exhibit 4 Our Full Suite of Real Estate Services Services Description Hewitt EnnisKnupp Implementation Policy Development & Strategic Planning Due Diligence Conduct due diligence searches and prepare diligence reports Assist with closing process and term negotiations Maintain a customized deal log of investment opportunities 9 In-depth due diligence using our unique analytics and global resources 9 Utilize our knowledge of best practices globally to assist with the closing process and negotiation of terms Monitoring, Reporting and Risk Management Provide customized quarterly performance reports Review funds’ compliance with valuation policies and other risk metrics Assist staff with liquidation of interests, distribution of securities, restructuring of distressed investments 9 Back-office team assists with monitoring and reporting 9 Customized risk metrics are provided to continually track compliance of your portfolio 9 Our dedicated researchers are continually monitoring the market place and tracking current trends/risks Education Present educational materials to Board & Staff as needed, including market overviews and updates on topical issues 9 Provide tailored education and training sessions 9 Keep Board & Staff abreast of market cycle and on-going concerns, risks or opportunities Communications Meet with Board, Investment Committee, and Staff as needed 9 We are available in person or via phone as frequently as client prefers SURS | October 2013 Review Investment Policy Statement Review existing program and benchmarks Prepare cash flow pacing analyses Develop investment program to match client’s risk/return spectrum 57 9 Detailed understanding of your program that serves as a basis for our recommendations 9 Recommend enhancements or changes to existing portfolio and benchmark measurements 9 Regularly share our market insight Exhibit 4 Real Estate Sector Specific Knowledge Base Apartments Core Kirloes Gerges Justin Menze Warehouse / R&D Value-Added Chae Hong Styles Jani Venter Office Opportunistic Jani Venter Property Types Chae Hong Hotel Debt / CMBS Catherine Polleys Tim Zukowski Retail REITs Justin Menze David Rose Timber / Farmland Tim Zukowski Regions US / Rest ofDomestic World Catherine Polleys SURS | October 2013 UK / Europe Canada Nick Duff / Richard Cooper Ben Abramov 58