By Matt Cole
My old employer CalPERS just suffered a humiliating defeat in its vote against Exxon’s board of directors. Its losing streak continued last week when the House Judiciary Committee grilled it over the Climate Action 100+ “climate cartel,” which helps pension funds like CalPERS coordinate with asset managers and non-profits to kill fossil fuels. CalPERS is the group’s brains and brawn, founding it and using its $500 billion weight to pressure companies like Exxon to fall in line. Here are five questions I wish Congress had asked it.
- What is the investment case that cutting fossil fuel production will increase Exxon shareholders’ returns?
Interim CIO Dan Bienvenue began by asserting “Climate change is an existential risk” and answered questions about CalPERS’ anti-fossil fuel actions by repeating “Climate change is real.” Clearly, CalPERS wants to portray all opposition to its activism as disagreement with science itself. But there’s a long leap between the claim that climate change is real and the conclusion that producing less oil will make an oil company more money.
Scientists don’t say climate change is an existential risk: as one review of the research puts it, “a century of climate change is about as bad as losing a year of economic growth.” Ending fossil fuel use would cost an energy-starved world far more, especially as AI guzzles electricity. The argument that Exxon must destroy its business to save it is political, not financial. Congress could expose that if it pressed the activists for hard evidence instead of ceding them the scientific high ground.
- Would CalPERS ever use its ownership in oil companies to artificially boost its green energy investments?
If cutting oil and gas production doesn’t make the Exxons and Chevrons of the world more money, who does it benefit? The green energy industry CalPERS recently pledged to invest $100 billion in.
In early 2023, California released SB 252, which required CalPERS to divest from fossil fuels. The pension opposed it, rightly noting that divesting over social goals would hurt its returns but affirming its “strong commitment to the reduction of GHG emissions.” Half a year later, it made its gigantic climate solutions promise.
The Judiciary Committee focused on Climate Action 100+’s war on fossil fuels, but that goes hand-in-hand with its attempt to artificially drive demand to wind and solar energy, which raises its own issues about fiduciary duty and anticompetitive behavior. I asked CalPERS’ PR chief about this conflict of interest in a public exchange—no answer. Maybe Congress would have better luck.
- Where’s that $100 billion in new green investments coming from?
The math is simple: CalPERS has $500 billion, which is already invested in a variety of assets it presumably believes will maximize risk-adjusted returns. It doesn’t have a spare $100 billion for green investments lying around. Asset allocation is a zero-sum game: if it puts 20% of its portfolio into climate solutions, it has to take it from somewhere else. Where, and at what cost? If divesting from an industry hurts portfolio returns, as CalPERS learned when it missed out on almost $4 billion by divesting from tobacco, shifting massive assets from some classes into one politically favored one amounts to the same thing.
- If CalPERS’ DEI practices are about ensuring diversity of perspective, why does it only measure diversity of race and gender? Does it believe different races think differently?
Bienvenue repeatedly refused to answer direct questions about whether CalPERS ever votes for or against board directors based on their skin color. Doing so would be, well, obviously racist. This should’ve been a softball.
The Committee can press the question by zeroing in on the fact that the “key highlights” of CalPERS’ DEI investments report only highlights diversity related to race, gender, and “historically underrepresented groups.” It doesn’t identify a single example of voting or engaging to improve diversity of “skill sets” or “competencies,” unless you define those through the lens of race or gender.
Does CalPERS govern its portfolio companies on the theory that men are from Mars and women are from Venus? Does it assume that white people and black people have different skill sets and competencies? Its beneficiaries deserve to know.
- If all this ESG investing is about making money, why are your returns so low?
Those beneficiaries, current and would-be retirees, are the ones who ultimately pay for all these wasteful experiments in ESG investing. CalPERS has made a habit of underperformance: it reported a 5.8% return last year, in-line with its 5-year average. That falls far short of the roughly 7% it needs to hit to meet its future obligations—on its current course, it’s on-track to meet only 72% of its retirees’ funding needs.
That chasm was the reality I struggled to defy every day as a CalPERS portfolio manager. The absence of any urgency to close it was why I had to leave to defend our capitalist system elsewhere. ESG investing promises nebulous profits in some far-off future, but my friends and family whose retirements rely on CalPERS need it to perform better today instead of doubling down on its money-losing ways.
Matt Cole is CEO at Strive Asset Management
This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
CalPERS should be renamed SCalPERS.
A clear violation of their fiduciary duty.
It’s OK, Mr Cole. California state employees will get their full pensions. CalPers’ financial under performance will be covered by we, the California taxpayers.
California, 10% when you earn it and 10% when you spend it. Plus fees, fines and charges.
Luxury! Australia, +38% when you earn it, 10% when you spend, and a raft of underhand taxes and levies to mop up any leftovers.
Luxury!
UK 20-45% when you earn it, 20% (VAT) when you spend it and yet we still have potholes on our roads that would put craters on the moon to shame.
It gets better – wait for the inevitable federal bailout.
state retirement plans are going to be the ruin of this nation, if nothing else does
The problem is with the underlying idea, which we come across yet again: the idea that anything Calpers can manage to make Exxon do will have any effect at all on either global emissions or the global climate.
Whether there is a climate crisis is not the point. The point is that even if there is, it will develop with or without Exxon. Close down the US, and it will still develop.
The only way to combat this nonsense is to insist, every time climate is given as the justification for a policy, on getting an answer to the question how much difference this policy will make. Mostly it will be none.
Climate is mostly a bad reason for what we want to do on instinct.
I applaud the writer, Matt Cole for taking the High Road out the door over ESG investment for retirees and for the personal risk in doing so and speaking out about it. I am encouraged that morality in the postmodern world that has engulfed us still hasn’t been sidelined.
Very nice. I can’t see why ESG and DEI shouldn’t be illegal.
Why? In a democratic society people should be free to invest according to whatever
criteria they like. Some people want to invest to make money others for political or social reasons. But either way it is their money and they are free to spend it as they wish.
You forget about basic financial duty.. to maximise profit and return.
Virtue-seeking destruction of profits, after they have taken people’s investments, should therefore be illegal.
Many people and states have chosen to take their funds out of these garbage virtue-seeking corporations.
Then why are some companies forced into ESG and DEI? If a company doesn’t have the correct ESG score or DEI record they are listed as firms that should not be invested in.
I suspect very few investors give the topic much thought. Some people of course will do so and brag about it to virtue signal. Almost everyone wants profit from their investments- the more the better.
Well, it is NOT “their money ” and they are not “free to spend it as they wish.”
It is not money for “spending”, it is other people’s investments for investing on their behalf for the highest return.
Your kinda free is it Izaak?
A signature Biden law aimed to boost renewable energy. It also helped a solar company reap billions (msn.com)
What a dumb a**. The people benefited by CalPERS have NO voice in how THEIR money is invested.
companies aren’t democracies
actually, many people pushing to invest for political or social reasons- don’t really want to reach into their pockets, take out a wad of money and hand it over for those purposes- if told there will be little or no profit, and probably a loss- but they’ll push for OTHERS to make such investments
time to blend those acronyms together- must be a way to do it …. hmmm…
CalPERS has a non elected board of directors, so voters cannot change the direction of investments of their tax money as there is no method to do so.
Our measurement and recording of temperature values is claimed to show temperatures are rising in an environment where climate change has been politicised, confirmation bias has been allowed to rule over scientific methods, and integrity of purpose and lack of care.in eliminating bias (e.g. meteorologists with a vested interest in more propaganda) is not being given value or being listened to. This suggests there is a fear of the truth similar to that seen within, for example, global political structures like the WHO and the UN during COVID-19. These bodies are in the suppression of truth business and always have been.
Until systemic biases and politicising are eliminated from our assessment processes the truth will remain the thing to be hidden and not to be discovered at any price. Perhaps all our politicians, academics and scientists should be asked why this unwelcome daily anomaly is not being dealt with by each and every one of them and publicly eliminated at source in the manner currently aimed at honest to goodness people. If you can cancel truth tellers then you most certainly can do the same with the liars, cheats and charlatans parading as public spirited champions of saving a planet that is doing mighty.fine on its own thank you very much. .
Well said lass! Too many people are worrying about nothing of importance, whilst elites are cutting down our social options and freedoms under the disguise of saving us from hobgoblins!
“Interim CIO Dan Bienvenue began by asserting “Climate change is an existential risk””
Probably doesn’t have the most elementary understanding of the subject- and therefore should keep his trap shut about it.
I am retired from the state of California. They say politics makes for strange bedfellows. I spent a lot of years paying union dues that were used to make donations to politicians I would never vote for.