Washington
State Investment Board
Recent Press Releases
On
ENRON Bankruptcy
February
4, 2002
ENRON IMPACT Q&A
Question:
Will the state's investments in Enron reduce my
retirement benefit?
No.
Retirement benefit payments of retired members,
and future retired members, of defined benefit
retirement plans are not impacted in any way by
the Enron bankruptcy (or the bankruptcy of any
other company).
There
are both class action and bankruptcy cases. The
Investment Board will seek to participate actively
in the class action, and is assessing the bankruptcy
case, working through the State Attorney General's
Office.
The
retirement benefits for members of defined benefit
retirement plans are not affected by the investment
return of the funds (positive or negative). The
retirement benefits in defined benefit plans are
calculated on a formula based on years of service
and salary. The benefit level is guaranteed by
the state and the retiree does not take on any
investment risk. Therefore, the retirement benefit
payments received by retirees are not reduced
in any way due to Enron investments in the retirement
fund portfolio.
The
state's defined benefit retirement plans are:
Teachers' Retirement System (TRS) Plans 1 and
2, Public Employees' Retirement System (PERS)
Plans 1 and 2, School Employees' Retirement System
(SERS) Plan 2, Law Enforcement Officers' and Firefighters'
(LEOFF) Plans 1 and 2, the Washington State Patrol
Retirement Plan, and the Volunteer Firefighters'
Retirement Plan.
Question:
What is the impact of the Enron bankruptcy on
the funding status of the state's defined benefit
retirement funds?
Due
largely to tremendously strong investment returns
over the past 20 years, averaging in excess of
13 percent annually, the funding status of the
state's defined benefit retirement plans is sound.
The
defined benefit retirement funds of the state
are invested together in a single investment portfolio
known as the retirement commingled trust fund
(CTF). The CTF is invested across six major asset
classes: U.S. equity, non-U.S. equity, fixed income,
real estate, private equity, and cash equivalents.
Only about one-third of the fund is invested in
U.S. equity (Enron stock falls under the category
of U.S. equity). The CTF portfolio owns no company
stock outright, thus never has held any Enron
stock directly. However, the U.S. equity portion
of the portfolio is passively invested in a broad
market U.S. stock index fund (Wilshire 5000).
Up until November 2001, Enron was one of the nearly
5000 companies represented in the U.S. Stock Market
Index Fund. While we estimate that the loss to
the index fund relative to Enron's failure was
about $13 million (out of a $16.1 billion U.S.
equity portfolio, or about eight one-hundredths
of one percent), it was easily overwhelmed by
the fourth quarter gain in this fund of 11.7 percent.
The
retirement CTF's larger exposure to Enron is in
the form of three bonds held in the fixed income
asset class. These bonds had a face value of $70
million and have a current market value of about
$13.3 million. The $56 million decline in market
value of these bonds represents a very small portion
of the $10.1 billion bond portfolio.
The
total $69 million loss (estimated impact on stock
index plus loss of value in the bonds) represents
0.17 percent of the total value ($41.2 billion)
of the retirement CTF, a figure which was overwhelmed
by the strong fourth quarter CTF investment gain
of 4.56 percent.
December
20, 2001
Enron Corp. Bankruptcy
The
Washington State Investment Board has decided
to seek co-lead plaintiff status in class action
suits against Enron Corp. and related persons
and organizations. Enron declared bankruptcy on
December 2, after disclosing accounting and financial
problems. Subsequently, Enron has announced plans
to sell up to $6 billion in assets.
The
Investment Board had both stock (at one time valued
at about $12 million, now less than $1 million)
and bonds of $112 million (worth approximately
$20 million today). About $70 million of the bonds
were in various retirement funds managed by the
Board.
Since
the stock was part of an index fund managed by
Barclay's Global Investors, after the S&P
500 index dropped Enron, so did Barclay's - hence
the Board currently has no exposure to Enron stock
.
There
are both class action and bankruptcy cases. The
Investment Board will seek to participate actively
in the class action, and is assessing the bankruptcy
case, working through the State Attorney General's
Office.
The
WSIB will seek to do all it can to re-coup what
it can in this extremely appalling situation,"
said Executive Director James Parker. "In
terms of the entire $54 billion portfolio, the
Enron exposure actually was relatively small.
Pension participants, the vast majority of whom
are in defined benefit plans, can be assured that
their pensions will not be affected as a result
of the Enron bankruptcy."