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Hissyspit

(45,790 posts)
Mon Aug 25, 2014, 12:43 PM Aug 2014

Gov. Christie Shifted Pension Cash to Wall Street, Costing New Jersey Taxpayers $3.8 Billion [View all]

This discussion thread was locked as off-topic by pinto (a host of the Latest Breaking News forum).

Source: International Business News

@davidsirota: Docs show @GovChristie's move to give Wall St pension cash has cost taxpayers $3.8B - or $1200 for every NJ household http://t.co/JFnwBSgI3t/s/1juV

Gov. Christie Shifted Pension Cash to Wall Street, Costing New Jersey Taxpayers $3.8 Billion

By David Sirota@davidsirotad.sirota@ibtimes.com

on August 25 2014 8:16 AM

Gov. Chris Christie's administration openly acknowledged that more New Jersey taxpayer dollars were going to land in the coffers of major financial institutions. It was 2010, and Christie had just installed a longtime private equity executive, Robert Grady, to manage the state's pension money. Grady promoted a plan to put more of those funds into riskier investments managed by Wall Street firms. Though this would entail higher fees, Grady said the strategy would "maximize returns while appropriately managing risk."

Four years later, New Jersey has secured only half the promised results. The state has sent more pension money to big-name Wall Street firms like Blackstone, Third Point, Omega Advisors, Elliott Associates and Grady's old firm, The Carlyle Group. Additionally, the amount of fees the state pays financial managers has more than tripled since Christie assumed office. New Jersey is now one of America’s largest investors in hedge funds.

The “maximized returns” have yet to materialize.

Between fiscal year 2011 and 2014, the state’s pension trailed the median returns for similarly sized public pension systems throughout the country, according to data from the financial analysis firm, Wilshire Associates. That below-median performance has cost New Jersey taxpayers billions in unrealized gains and has left the pension system on shaky ground. Meanwhile, New Jersey is now paying a quarter-billion dollars in additional annual fees to Wall Street firms -- many of whose employees have financially supported Republican groups backing Christie’s reelection campaign.


Between 2009 and 2013, New Jersey has paid an additional $439 million in fees to Wall Street International Business TImes/Hanna Sender
Those who originally opposed the state's shifting of pension funds into hedge funds, private equity, venture capital, real estate and other “alternative investments” see the below-average returns as no accident but an inevitable byproduct of the strategy: The Christie administration has effectively taken money from retired state workers and delivered the cash to Wall Street money managers.

Read more: http://www.ibtimes.com/gov-christie-shifted-pension-cash-wall-street-costing-new-jersey-taxpayers-38-billion-1667622

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In this case 401K would have been much better for employees than a pension. cbdo2007 Aug 2014 #1
Maybe he could settle for $12 billion and avoid a prosecution and prison like everyone else? Fred Sanders Aug 2014 #2
Talk about closing down casinos in New Jersey, sounds like Christie opened up his very own.... tomm2thumbs Aug 2014 #3
Harrumph. My investment advisor is Warren Buffett, and Warren Buffett says.... mahatmakanejeeves Aug 2014 #4
Christie is only doing the job he was paid to do. PeoViejo Aug 2014 #5
christie is worse than i would have ever thought samsingh Aug 2014 #6
Pension funds have no business being placed in risky investments to begin with,,,,,,, benld74 Aug 2014 #7
This is part of Citizen's United BrotherIvan Aug 2014 #8
I think the Ohio Governor... ReRe Aug 2014 #16
It is robbing the coffers of the state and there should be a law against it! BrotherIvan Aug 2014 #18
JAFRSFM lark Aug 2014 #9
Well sure, but the Wall Streeters deserve that money. They work hard, ya know? Scuba Aug 2014 #10
Momentary dyslexia for me on that headline IDemo Aug 2014 #11
Slush fund for Wall Street. nt wolfie001 Aug 2014 #12
Christie, did you do that? You dumb fuck, you. Enthusiast Aug 2014 #13
LOL, an expensive game of hot potato, little more. closeupready Aug 2014 #14
I believe former NJ Gov. Christine Whitman (R) also dipped into state pension funds somehow LiberalEsto Aug 2014 #15
This is my future this clown is playing with. bklyncowgirl Aug 2014 #17
Did hedge fund traders/owner, Marc & Chelsea Mezvinksky get some of that action? Divernan Aug 2014 #19
Good, well sourced background / analysis piece, but not Late Breaking News. Locking. pinto Aug 2014 #20
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