The Mercury News

California teachers’ pension fund reports record gain on investment­s

- By Wes Venteicher

The California State Teachers’ Retirement System on Monday reported a 27.2% return on its investment­s for the fiscal year that ended in June, a record high driven by a booming stock market and private equity gains, according to a news release.

The return drove the total value of CALSTRS’ investment fund to $308.6 billion, according to the release, up from $246 billion a year earlier.

“We’ve built our portfolio for long-term performanc­e, but this year’s results were nothing short of spectacula­r,” Chief Investment Officer Christophe­r Ailman said in the release. “These are record-breaking numbers — the highest returns we’ve seen since the late 1980s.”

The return nearly quadrupled the fund’s target of 7% for the fiscal year ending June 30.

The system, which administer­s retirement benefits for about 975,000 teachers, retirees and beneficiar­ies, is the second-largest state-run pension system in the U.S., after the California Public Employees’ Retirement System.

CalPERS also reported a big year, closing it out at $469 billion with a 21.3% return.

The record-high returns follow a volatile year during which stocks initially plummeted as a result of the coronaviru­s before rebounding to new record highs as corporatio­ns thrived and the federal government took actions to stimulate the economy.

CalSTRS’ stock holdings grew 41.8% for the year, while its private equity investment­s returned 51.9%.

CalPERS’ stocks increased by 36.3% while its private equity investment­s gained 43.8%.

Both pension systems are underfunde­d, lacking the assets to cover all of their long-term obligation­s.

CalPERS’ big year boosted its funded status to 82%, up from about 71% a year earlier, meaning the system has 82% of the as

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