Transparency should be the rule in Kentucky pensioners' long-running challenge to hedge funds • Kentucky Lantern (2024)

Commentary

Davids v. Goliath in Franklin Circuit Court

The details are still a bit sketchy, but it is clear that attorneys representing the parties in Kentucky’s pension litigation will return to Franklin Circuit Court for a hearing in Tia Taylor, et al. v. KKR & Co, LP, et al. on Monday after Judge Thomas Wingate gave the green light for the case(s) to proceed.

In a nutshell, the case pits state pensioner Davids against hedge fund/private equity Goliaths in an action seeking damages “from some of the biggest names in finances,” based on alleged “breaches of fiduciary duty and other bad conduct in the sale and management of custom hedge funds” in relation to the woefully underfunded Kentucky state pension fund.

The playing field has been leveled, at least to some extent, by the pensioners’ legal team — led, writes finance and economics authority Yves Smith, “by Michelle Lerach, with her formidable and controversial husband, one-time top securities litigator Bill Lerach.” But for their dogged pursuit of the financial giants — against ostensibly overwhelming odds — the cases might have ended several years ago.

In her blog “Naked Capitalism,” Smith writes: “After yet another long detour from the original case, Mayberry v. KKR, first filed in 2017 and now replaced by overlapping new actions, Judge Wingate has finally completed what must have been the painful process of evaluating the merits of a very large number of motions to dismiss.”

“The giant fund managers are almost certain to be most afraid of discovery, since the sharp practices they used with Kentucky Retirement Systems were very likely to have been replicated at other public pension funds.” – Yves Smith, writing in “Naked Capitalism”

On May 1, Judge Wingate “issued orders on the extremely large number of motions to dismiss. The magnitude of that task, plus getting his arms around the very large body of past filings (generated before Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd recused himself in 2022) presumably accounted for the substantial delay. The compact orders are well reasoned,” Smith writes. “They seem even more credible by rejecting the idea that the Attorney General could properly represent the Tier 3 plaintiffs, and denying the motions to dismiss of the hugely powerful defendants, KKR, Blackstone, PAAMCO, and private equity kingpins Henry Kravis, George Roberts, Steve Schwarzman, and Tomlinson Hill personally.”

“The stakes here are much higher than the potentially meaty recoveries. Private equity and hedge funds fetishize secrecy because, too often, their conduct will not stand up to scrutiny. The giant fund managers are almost certain to be most afraid of discovery, since the sharp practices they used with Kentucky Retirement Systems were very likely to have been replicated at other public pension funds. Even the limited discovery so far uncovered more misconduct and allowed the plaintiffs to add to their claims,” Smith writes.

Our interest in the culture of secrecy that pervades Kentucky’s pension system and the ensuing litigation — aimed, at least in part, at avoiding oversight and accountability — began with coverage in the late, great “Insider Louisville,” by reporter Joe Sonka, of the retirement system’s refusal to comply with Senate Bill 2, enacted in 2017. That law required the retirement systems “to improve transparency regarding the administration of the (retirement) systems” by posting on its website the contracts for the investment managers of the Kentucky Retirement Systems (KRS) and the Teachers’ Retirement Systems (TRS).

Sonka reported that “nearly 100 contracts have not been posted to the pension plans’ respective websites, and many of those that have been posted are heavily redacted.” The retirement systems deferred to the predictably self-serving investment managers in determining what would and would not be posted — state law notwithstanding.

A few years later, we were outraged by the refusal of the retirement systems, now reconfigured under the Kentucky Public Pension Authority umbrella, to release a copy of a $1.2 million taxpayer funded Calcaterra Pollack consultant’s report resulting from an investigation of “‘any improper or illegal activities’ in billions of dollars in hedge fund deals that led to the lawsuits alleging wrongdoing.”

In a scathing opinion, Franklin Circuit Court Judge Phillip Shepherd ordered release of the report. He reasoned:

“A full review of the Calcaterra Pollack report gives rise to questions as to whether the purpose and intent of the report was to fully expose all the relevant facts (and to determine if the KPPA and its employees made mistakes), or if the report was commissioned to cover up or minimize those mistakes in an effort to convince the (attorney general) to not pursue claims that could prove embarrassing to the current or former management of KPPA.”

“The public paid $1.2 million for this report,” Shepherd ruled, “(t)he public has a right to know its contents and decide if it got what it paid for.”

Secrecy? You bet! And that is why this complex litigation commands our attention.

Plaintiffs/pensioners’ attorneys reacted swiftly to Judge Wingate’s May 1 orders rejecting defendants/financial investment monoliths’ slew of motions to dismiss.

Within days, pensioners’ counsel filed a motion for a hearing before Judge Wingate. Scheduled for 9 a.m. Monday, May 20, that hearing will, we understand, address at least in part pensioners’ motion for open proceedings and open discovery — that thing most vigorously resisted by defendants.

By any measure, Monday’s hearing is the critical next step in determining what direction the litigation will take and to how much the public will be privy.

Our minds return to the Boston Globe/STAT’s successful legal battle to unseal discovery in Kentucky’s Purdue Pharma OxyContin litigation in 2018.

Writing for the appellate panel in a 72-page opinion that resembled a treatise on public access to court records, but that was inexplicably depublished by the Kentucky Supreme Court, Judge Glenn Acree wrote:

“Kentucky’s presumption of public access to court records is broad because ‘every citizen and taxpayer has an interest in the manner in which the government is operated (and to) . . . determine whether public officials are properly fulfilling the functions of their office . . . ‘ Every claim of the Commonwealth against another, including the claim against Purdue, is the property of the people regarding which the public has a legitimate concern. On that basis, the right of access supersedes even the right to privacy (‘right of privacy does not extend to affairs with which the public has a legitimate concern.'”)

With the exception of the Purdue Pharma OxyContin litigation, we can conceive of no public issue in which Kentucky’s citizens and taxpayers have a greater — or more “legitimate” — interest and financial stake than Kentucky’s state pension. This fact clearly militates in favor of openness in the proceedings and records produced in discovery.

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Transparency should be the rule in Kentucky pensioners' long-running challenge to hedge funds • Kentucky Lantern (2024)

FAQs

Do pension funds use hedge funds? ›

In addition, pension funds are progressively more prepared to invest in a broader range of products – from emerging market debt or equity, high yield fixed income, property, commodities, illiquid investments etc. Hedge funds are increasingly used as instruments to facilitate this new investment approach.

What are the disclosure requirements for hedge funds? ›

Hedge funds will be required to disclose more information about operations and strategies and to report separately on each component of a fund. They must also separately report details on their crypto investment strategies, which the regulators have set apart from reporting on cash and cash equivalents.

Why are hedge funds exempt from many regulatory filings such disclosing their investments to investors or providing earnings reports? ›

Managers of hedge funds only need to be registered as investment advisers if they meet certain assets under management thresholds. Offerings of interests in hedge funds are not required to be registered under the Securities Act of 1933 because they are structured as private placements rather than public offerings.

What is one disadvantage of a hedge fund? ›

Key Takeaways. Hedge funds employ complex investing strategies that can include the use of leverage, derivatives, or alternative asset classes in order to boost return. However, hedge funds also come with high fee structures and can be more opaque and risky than traditional investments.

Who controls pension funds? ›

Pension funds are typically managed by companies (employers). The main goal of a pension fund is to ensure there will be enough money to cover the pensions of employees after their retirement in the future.

What is the 2 and 20 rule for hedge funds? ›

The 2 and 20 is a hedge fund compensation structure consisting of a management fee and a performance fee. 2% represents a management fee which is applied to the total assets under management. A 20% performance fee is charged on the profits that the hedge fund generates, beyond a specified minimum threshold.

How much money do you need to be considered a hedge fund? ›

It is not uncommon for a hedge fund to require at least $100,000 or even as much as $1 million to participate. Unlike mutual funds, hedge funds avoid many of the regulations and requirements within the Securities Act of 1933.

How much net worth do you need to have to be in a hedge fund? ›

While hedge fund investors have no set average income, many high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) who invest in hedge funds have annual incomes exceeding $200,000 or net assets of at least $1 million, excluding their primary residence.

What is an illegal hedge fund? ›

Hedge fund fraud refers to illegal or deceptive practices carried out by hedge funds, which are investment funds that use various strategies to generate returns for their investors. These frauds can take various forms and typically involve the manipulation of financial information or the misuse of investor funds.

What are hedge funds exempt from? ›

Part 3 explains how the exemption of hedge funds from regulation under the Investment Company Act enables the funds' investment advisers to avoid regulation under the Advisers Act but, more importantly, to remain free from the limitations on the fees the advisers may collect.

Are hedge funds unethical? ›

If legality is the chief concern then hedge funds should be just fine. If, however, you define ethical as not causing and/or profiting from situations that have negative financial consequences for people less fortunate than yourself, you might have an issue.

How are pension funds invested? ›

How Pension Funds Invest Their Money. The traditional investing strategy for a pension fund is to split its assets among bonds, stocks, and real estate. An emerging trend is to put some money into alternative investments, in search of higher returns and greater diversity.

What is hedging in pensions? ›

The goal of the liability-hedging portfolio is to reduce the volatility of the plan's assets relative to the present value of liabilities due to passage of time and changes in the liability discount rate.

What is a hedge ratio for pension funds? ›

Interest rate hedging involves managing the fixed income assets of the DB plan to ensure the plan is insulated from changes in interest rates. For a plan whose interest rate hedge ratio is 100% (i.e., 100% hedged), its assets and liabilities should change by the same amount when interest rates change.

Why do pension funds hedge against interest rates? ›

Most pension funds put a part of their investments in fixed-income securities with a duration of about five years. This means that there is a large mismatch with the interest-rate risk of the liabilities. Pension funds may therefore choose to match the interest-rate risk.

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