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Proxy Monitor Recommends Lone Star Shareholders Dissidents In a contested election, Guy Adams, is seeking to unseat Jamie Coulter, the company's chairman and CEO. Mr. Adam's objective is to enhance the independent representation on this board and to bring change and accountability to a board he believes has supported unacceptable corporate governance practices and a management team he believes has failed to return sustainable value to shareholders. Two month's after Adams filed his solicitation materials, Lone Star sued seeking to prevent him from soliciting or accepting proxy votes. The company alleged that Adams filed misleading proxy materials but a federal judge ruled he could proceed after correcting two errors in his filing. The company also implicated a highly-regarded institutional investor, claiming that Adams was a "stalking-horse" for the investment fund and "not a bona fide Lone Star investor." In doing so Lone Star alienated at least a few investor groups who found the move to be arrogant and offensive. "Proxy Monitor ultimately asked and answered two questions: To the first question, we answered no. Not in terms of its compensation decisions, not in terms of its governance practices, and certainly not in terms of fully appreciating its fiduciary role nor respecting the shareholder franchise (including those "activist pension funds" with "unknown political agendas"). Indeed, we believe that management's over-the-top response to Mr. Adam's exercise of his ownership rights, lends itself to support the dissident's concerns about the board's commitment to an impartial and high-quality decision-making process, not to mention its good judgment. Institutional Shareholder Services also reportedly supports the dissident slate. Rationalization of SRI Codes Predicted Corporate social responsibility have proliferated so much that leaders in the field say theyre worried about company confusion and fatigue, as well as inconsistency. At the recent conference of Social Accountability International, Michael Goldstein, chairman of Toys R Us, and Mil Niepold, director of programs at Verite, said the proliferation of codes has left many suppliers "reeling." The publication Ethical Performance predicts that "ultimately institutional investors will force a rationalization because they require standardized measurement tools in order to assess companies." From the July issue of BizEthics Buzz, a free service of Business Ethics magazine. Just e-mail your postal address to BizEthics@aol.com and theyll send you a sample issue and include a special introductory offer for new subscribers. SRI Codes Meeting Benchmark Resolutions asking companies to improve worker standards -- or adopt those set forth by the International Labor Organization -- were among the top vote-getters of 138 social policy shareholder proposals that came to votes during annual meetings. Of the 27 proposals garnering support from 10 percent or more of shareholders, 15 addressed global labor standards or fair employment in the United States and Northern Ireland. The highest votes were at two companies with operations in Burma -- Unocal Corp. (23% and McDermott International (16%). The International Labor Organization and other rights monitoring groups have raised alarm about the extensive use of forced labor in Burma, also known as Myanmar, which is run by a military junta. Among the other social issues proposals getting support of 10% or more were ones linking executive pay to social criteria at AT&T, Boeing, FleetBoston Financial and Unocal, and a resolution asking Chevron to report on its controversial plans to drill in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). Another ANWR resolution -- filed with ExxonMobil -- fell just shy of the 10% mark. Transparency Begins at Home Pax World Funds, home of the original socially responsible mutual fund to be made available to investors, announced another milestone: The fund family is now the first in the socially responsible investment (SRI) world to provide complete details on the Web about the voting at its own annual meetings. The new step by Pax World also is a rarity in the broader mutual fund world, which has been slow to divulge the specifics of the voting behind closed doors at investment companies. Information is now available about the most recent annual meeting of shareholders held on June 14, 2001. Voting tallies are accessible on such matters as the selection of fund Directors and public accountants, as well as other key administrative functions. In May 2000, Pax World was among the first mutual fund families to announce that it would publish its proxy voting in individual portfolio stocks. This information, provided in conjunction with Proxy Monitor, has become one of the most popular areas of the Pax World Funds Web site. ASCS Survey The American Society of Corporate Secretaries, with membership at 3/31 of 4,256, reports that
Directors Survey The Segal Company has conducted "The Annual Study of Small-to-Midsize and Large Public Company Boards: 2001" which examines the compensation of directors of companies by size group and reports on director's fees, non-cash compensation, stock-option grants and stock held.
The sample in the 2001 study includes 189 large public companies with median annual sales of $17 billion and median net earnings of $932 million as of December 31, 1999. It also includes 180 small-to-midsize companies with median annual sales of $154 million and median earnings of $13 million as of December 31, 1999. This is the fourth study of this type that The Segal Company has conducted. The first two were conducted with Grant Thornton, LLP. Contact Mary Feldman for copies of the complete study report. Challenges to Executive Pay Randall S. Thomas' and Kenneth Martin's paper, "Litigating Challenges to Executive Pay: An Exercise in Futility?", finds that plaintiffs win a greater percentage of the time in compensation cases against closely held companies than against publicly held companies. Plaintiffs average about 30% success in maintaining duty of care claims. With waste claims, plaintiffs succeed about 40% of the time, while for duty of loyalty claims, they win about 35% of the time. Comparison of Takeover Law 'Share Ownership, Takeover Law and the Contestability of Corporate Control' in Company Law Reform in OECD Countries. A Comparative Outlook of Current Trends is th title of Guido Alessandro Ferrarini's paper on corporate control contestability as a policy objective for company law reform. He considers the impact of large shareholdings disclosure on the market for corporate control and posits that legal barriers to takeovers have a limited impact on the contestability of corporate control; their practical effect might simply be to re-orient defensive actions towards different techniques. Ferrarini finds, for example, that legislation directed at mitigating the impact of mandatory bids on transfers of corporate control will lower the number of efficient transfers of control but a higher number of inefficient transfers will be allowed if the bid's price is lower than that paid for the controlling block. Self-Dealing: A Comparative Analysis Luca Enriques, of the Universita' di Bologna, looked at the legal tools employed in the United States, the United Kingdom, Italy, France, and Germany in order to regulate self-dealing. His paper, "The Law on Company Directors' Self-Dealing: A Comparative Analysis," published in the International & Comparative Corporate Law Journal, Vol. 2, 2000, describes the trade-off that any legal system faces in regulating self-dealing (deterrence versus the risk of overkill). It then provides a description of the individual legal tools adopted to regulate self-dealing transactions (i.e., prohibition, disclosure, approval or ratification by the board, approval or ratification by shareholders). His analysis shows that the regulation of self-dealing is more sophisticated and has more bite where equity markets have a longer traditions and dispersed ownership is more common, i.e., in Britain and the United States. The paper concludes with possible explanations for the minor significance of self-dealing regulations in continental Europe, and advocates a reform of the Italian law on self-dealing. Shareholder Activism in Malaysia A minority shareholder watchdog group has been set up in Malaysia to encourage active shareholder participation in listed companies. According to Securities Commission chairman Ali Abdul Kadir, "the watchdog group will be licensed as an investment advisor in order to ensure its independence and is expected to be fully operational by this year." Ali also said corporate success in raising funds hinges directly on their ability to earn good corporate governance reputations. Institutional investors will pay a premium for shares of companies with good corporate governance but will also butally punish companies perceived to practice poor corporate governance. (AFX News, 6/26) Back to the top South Africa Leads South Africa is ahead of other emerging markets in terms of corporate governance, according to Stephen Dover, chief investment officer for Franklin Templeton Investments' global activities. However, he believes institutional investors should be more proactive to ensure independence of directors, protection of minority interests and linking executive remuneration to performance. Monks and Sykes Offer Advice on Myners The central proposal of the Myners review of UK institutional investment, closely modeled on the approach taken on corporate governance by the Cadbury (and subsequent) Codes, is a short set of clear principles of investment decision-making. These would apply to pension funds and, in due course, other institutional investors. As with the Cadbury code, they would not be mandatory. But where a pension fund chose not to comply with them, it would have to explain to its members why not. One of the more provocative recommendations is incorporation of the US ERISA principle on shareholder activism into UK law quoted on p. 92 of the report, making intervention in companies, where it is in shareholders interests, a duty for fund managers. According to the report, managers should have an explicit strategy, elucidating the circumstances in which they will intervene in a company; the approach they will use in doing so; and how they measure the effectiveness of this strategy. In a recent e-mail, corporate governance author and activist Robert AG Monks writes, "There has been so much talk about activism and corporate governance over the last 15 years that it is gratifying finally to contemplate a government formally adopting activism as a national policy and taking specific steps in order to implement that policy." He also includes a link to a recent posting to his own site, a letter to the Myners Commission with some specific suggestions entitled "Principles of Institutional Investment Decision Taking: A Response to the Treasury's Requested Consultation on the Myners Proposals," by Robert A G Monks (author of The New Global Investors: How shareholders can unlock sustainable prosperity worldwide and Allen Sykes (who recently wrote Capitalism for Tomorrow: Reuniting Ownership and Control). Monks and Sykes argue that government retirement policies have fundamentally altered the previously existing state of shareholder control by encouraging development of pension funds, which are now majority shareholder. "No longer do individuals have the power to require accountability because government created fiduciaries have majority control which they choose not to exercise." "Only government action can remedy the fault created by government inaction." Under absentee ownership, managements have become self-governing, self-perpetuating and self-serving. "This concentration of power has led to widely recognised abuses by executive directors, to often huge remuneration packages poorly related to performance, and to takeovers and mergers frequently driven by managements' motives rather than shareholders' interests." In both America and Britain the most active fiduciary shareholders are public sector pension funds, even though they are largely staffed by personnel with little or no professional business experience. This is because of the more direct conflicts of interests faced by funds in the private sector. Investment institutions have trustee and fiduciary duties to their beneficiaries to act solely in their interests but cannot exist without corporate business. The crux of the problem is that institutional investors are powerless to fulfill their fiduciary duties to it and there is at present no enforcing mechanism. I also raised this issue years ago in an essay entitled Fiduciary Responsibilities For Proxy Voting where I noted that the Pension Welfare Benefits Administration had never taken an enforcement action against a fiduciary for failing to monitor or for voting a proxy contrary to the best interests of plan participants. Referring primarily to the Myners recommendation to incorporate an ERISA type duty for fund managers to intervene in companies where it is in shareholders interests, Monks and Sykes indicate the result is "by far the boldest and most far reaching of any major official enquiry on institutional investment for a generation, and on corporate governance ever." However, they believe that voluntary efforts are likely to be "stillborn," since the risk-cost-benefit ratios are likely to be unfavorable for pioneering activists as compared to their passive competitors who also reap the benefits of their action. To address these concerns, Monks and Sykes recommend the following:
Additionally, the authors call for a regulator to enforce the law and express their belief that once market forces have been established there may be no further need for such government enforcement. While I strongly agree that enforcement is the key and am eager to see the Myners recommendations implemented, along with the reforms called for by Monks and Sykes, I think the best long term answer may lie in developing a framework which 1) allows the members and beneficiaries of trust funds to have more say in their governance, 2) provides a clear framework for disclosing how proxy voting and other fiduciary decisions are made, and 3) provides a clear avenue to sue for breach of duty. As Monks and Sykes indicate, "no-one looks after other people's assets as well as their owners." Back to the top CalPERS Approves $250 Million Investment to Relational Investors The action increases CalPERS' investment in Relational to $750 million. Relational's investment strategy often involves two steps. The fund makes a moderate investment and begins to communicate with the company's management, board of directors and other investors. Depending on the outcome of the communications, the firm may increase its investment to gain more leverage in negotiations with management. In cases of persistent underperformance or where other factors warrant, Relational may submit shareholder proposals or seek board representation. As of March 31, 2001, Relational made 34 investments. Examples include Apria Healthcare Group, Mattel, and Waste Management. Annualized returns on realized investments have exceeded more than 70%, versus an approximately 24% return for the same period for the S&P 500 Index. Shareholders Less Patient Russell Reynolds Associates annual survey of institutional investors finds that investors in a bearish market increasingly willing to act. Fifteen-percent of investors polled reported having called for a CEOs' termination within the past year. Ninety-four-percent of all respondents cite a company's financial performance as among the most important factors influencing investment decisions. Eighty-five-percent point to poor strategy and lack of vision as key early warning signs indicating that a CEO is in trouble. With regard to CEO compensation, overwhelming majorities of those polled feel that boards should link CEO compensation more directly to performance and that CEO severance packages are excessive (93 percent and 89 percent, respectively). Most noteworthy among this year's findings may be that succession planning is a major concern of the institutional investor community. Eighty-one-percent of investors surveyed are troubled by the perceived failure of companies to properly groom internal CEO candidates. Most investors believe that companies in their country adhere to sound corporate governance practices; notable exceptions include Japan (3 percent) and Australia (37 percent). Two-thirds of investors surveyed have voted for a shareholder resolution within the past year; 15 percent have sponsored a resolution. The survey, titled "CEO Turnover in a Global Economy," was conducted for Russell Reynolds Associates by Wirthlin Worldwide, an international opinion research organization, and is based on interviews with more than 300 institutional investors from six countries: Australia, Canada, France, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. High Plains Continues Reforms Ethanol makers, High Plains (O-HIPC), moved to de-stagger its board of directors. Lawndale Capital Management's Andrew Shapiro noted, "that High Plains voluntarily and pro-actively adopted this governance improvement is quite refreshing. We hope more companies will follow High Plains' lead and come to the realization that good corporate governance adds shareholder value." Back to the top eRaider Triumphs in Goldfield Proxy Contest Unlike most dissident groups, eRaider's Goldfield Shareholder Value Slate candidate ran on a platform that pledged not to break up the company, fire management or impose similar radical changes. Instead, it promised more aggressive oversight of management, highlighting low stock ownership among incumbent outside directors, and to raise Goldfield's profile in the investing community. Corporate Governance and the Indian Private Sector A new book by that title has been authored by Jairus Banaji and Gautam Mody, two visiting fellows of the University of Oxford who studied corporate governance in the context of large private sector companies in India, against a changing regulatory background and mounting public concern ((1998-2000). The study consists of two reports:
The authors recommend that:
Available from Orient Longman Limited, Kamani Marg, Ballard Estate, Mumbai 400 001, Tel: +91 022 261 6918, 261 6919, Fax: +91 022 2691278; E-mail: longmans@bom7.vsnl.net.in. Special 10% discount on orders for 6 copies and above. Phantom FDI The staggering increase in foreign direct investment into Hong Kong last year suggests a growing flight of hot money out of China with Hong Kong at considerable risk to its financial reputation. FDI into Hong Kong climbed from about $14.7 billion in 1998 to $24.4 billion in 1999 to a staggering $64.3 billion last year, far in excess of the $38 billion in offshore investment that poured into mainland China. Over the same period that $64.3 billion flowed in last year, about $62.9 billion described as outward FDI left the city. Under IMF guidelines, FDI is defined as when an investor based in one country acquires an asset in another country with the intent to manage that asset. Money from tax havens and the mainland made up almost 70% of Hong Kong's FDI inflows according to official statistics. Apart from mainland money, the boom in Taiwanese investment in the mainland could also explain some of the influx because the island's businesses are forced to conceal their transactions to avoid Taipei's restrictions on cross-strait economic ties. Analysts see much of the inflow as due to tax avoidance and disguised capital flight from domestic corporations which overprice exports and the "re-nationalize" the money, taking advantage of generous tax breaks and other incentives extended to foreign investors. Apparently, Beijing has been trying to curb illegal outflows but it is extremely difficult for governments to tackle this problem when the international banking system is so accommodating. (China's Money Laundry, Far Eastern Economic Review, 6/21 issue) See also People's Republic Of Cheats in the same issue. "Half of all business contracts signed in China are fraudulent in some way, officials say, while two-thirds of all state firms cook their books." According to recent officially published figures:
Phantom Wealth Thomas Parker is the author of What If Boomers Can't Retire : How to Build Real Wealth Security, Not Phantom Wealth. An article based on his book appears in the May/June issues of the Conference Board's magazine of ideas and opinion, Across the Board. Parker argues that baby boomers will all want to cash their stock in upon retirement and the result will be an insufficient number of workers continuing in employment to pay the prices boomers expected. Stocks are a dangerous way to fund your retirement unless you sell them all out long before 2008 because of demographics. Parker argues that we should value the stocks in our retirement portfolios conservatively at cost or market, whichever is lower. "Gains should not be recorded until the stocks have been sold and the gains have become cash in hand." What would that do for a portfolio the size of CalPERS, which recently dipped about $20 billion? He has good points. Many with dotcom investments would agree with his assessment that "phantom wealth often comes before the company has created real wealth by adding to the pie, and sometimes it vanishes before additions have been made to the pie. The article and book are certainly spurring debate. The same issue of Across the Board contains commentaries from Ken Goldstein of the Conference Board, corporate governance notable Robert A. G. Monks, and Jeremy J. Siegal of the Wharton School. In my opinion, Parker is raising important issues but offers little in the way of solutions. Instead of recommending more money be funneled into smaller more risky ventures as he seems to, I'd recommend that we require our pension and mutual funds to act more like owners instead of speculators. If they were to take a growing role in governance, we'd have greater disclosure and fewer bubbles. In addition, corporations think they are surrounded by gadflies at annual meetings now; just wait until we retire! I know people who are amassing wealth and investments primarily so that they can wield power in their old age. They're not going to cash out. They hope to keep building wealth through eternal vigilance. Back to the top ISS Backs Goldfield The Goldfield Corporation (Amex: GV) announced that Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) recommended that shareholders vote FOR management's slate of director nominees at the Company's Annual Meeting, scheduled to be held on June 19, 2001, rather than the dissident nominees proposed by an e-Raider activists. However, Aaron Brown, eRaider co-founder provides perspective. According to him, ISS "supported eRaider's (eRaider.com Inc.) dissident recommendations over managements on two out of the three agenda items. On the third item ISS took a neutral stance, recommending an independent outside director with mining or electrical construction experience (eRaider's original proposal) over eRaider's and management's nominees." "Goldfield adopted many of our proposed changes in order to win the neutral verdict on one item," Brown stated. "John Sottile indicated he would resign from the nominating committee of the board, thus opening up the board to independent nominees. Further he said he would have no objection to the board redeeming his preferred stock, which gives him controlling voting rights in some circumstances, despite representing only about 1.5 percent of the shares outstanding. He finally answered questions about a missing $583,000 that shareholders have been asking for ten months. Outside members of the board increased their holdings of Goldfield stock from a low of $375 among all members to $65,000 and officers of the Company bought another $425,000. Sottile outlined a long-term strategy that impressed ISS, but had never before been communicated to shareholders. Even if we lose on every agenda item, we have won most of what we set out to accomplish." There appears to an inaccuracy here one party or the other but it also appears that eRaider may be on the verge of a victory dispite that lack of full support from ISS. Social Choice for Social Change's Response to Editorial in Pensions&Investments (see Limits to Activism, CorpGov.Net, May) We are writing to present the context of our protest tactics that you judge "extremist" ("Brokers, not soldiers," April 30, 2001). In particular, our group decided to carry signs in front of the high-rise residence of CEO John Biggs only after several years of using less confrontational means failed to convince the firm to heed its own survey, which found that 81 percent of participants support positive investing in its socially responsible Social Choice Account. We want TIAA-CREF to invest in companies Instead of brokers seeking protection against protesters, perhaps they should pay more attention to what activists--and shareholders--are saying. More often than not, protests escalate because people in powerful positions fail to listen to reasonable arguments in support of popular causes. Back to the top BusinessWeek's Barker to Fidelity's Johnson BusinessWeek's Robert Barker offers advice to Fidelity's Abigail Johnson (Offering Advice to Abby, 6/18/01), indicating that "Fidelity does little to explain the key legal fact of life for every investor in every mutual fund: when investors buy in, they become the outright owners of the fund." Barker expresses his disappointment that Fidelity's trustees are almost nonexistent on fidelity.com; he found only their names on the last page of the fund's annual reports. As an example, he notes a new name on the list, Marie L. Knowles, indicating that investors can only find out about her by obtaining an "obscure Securities & Exchange commission filing called 'Statement of Additional Information.'" Fidelity is not alone in leaving its trustees in obscurity. He found no mention of directors at Janus and only the barest of description at T. Row Price, although the Vanguard Group did a much better job. "By early next year, the SEC will force funds to include basic information on trustees in annual reports. That's why now is the moment to steal a step on your rivals...Encourage your independent trustees to take a high profile. Highlight their watchdog role in your marketing materials and new-account applications." I would add that disclosing how Fidelity votes its proxies would also go a long way in helping the owners of the fund know if trustees are doing their job. Such disclosures would be welcomed not only by those interested in the many social issues raised in proxies but also by those looking for the correlation between good governance and increased profitability. eRaider's Shareholder Value Battle Goldfields management has countered eRaider's Shareholder Value Slate challenge by spending more than 1.5% of the Goldfields market capitalization on a proxy fight and trying to reverse the companys 95-year-old policy of cumulative voting for directors, which gives dissidents a better chance of gaining a seat. If management fails to overturn cumulative voting, it now plans to adjourn the meeting before electing directors. eRaider is soliciting proxies for Goldfields annual meeting on June 19, 2001. eRaider strongly advises all shareholders to read the proxy statement or by emailing info@eRaider.com, or a free copy is available from: Goldfields market capitalization declined from over $100 million in 1969 to $5 million in 1998, despite the injection of additional shareholder capital. If it had performed in line with the S&P 500 over that period, Goldfield share would be priced about $75 rather than the current $0.66. The stock has rebounded 76% from its low since eRaider announced it had accumulated shares in the company and invited stockholders to its Internet message board to use them as a resource to revitalize the stock. (6/10/01) Watch for June 19th News of Internet-Organized Victory eRaider.com Inc. filed a definitive proxy statement to run a dissident slate of directors at Goldfield Corp. (AMEX: GV). eRaider is unhappy with the level of oversight offered by the existing Goldfield board so it has nominated a short slate of Sam Rebotsky (a 25-year shareholder and CPA), Aaron Brown (eRaider CEO and finance professor) and Deborah Pastor (eRaider portfolio manager and MBA). Other participants in the solicitation are Martin Stoller (communications professor), Paul Zarowin (accounting professor), David Groelinger (CFO of Riddel Sports) and Scott Lodin (Chief Counsel of Andrx). Union-Based Shareholder Activism The Council of Institutional Investors (CII) reports that CII member union funds file 58% of all proxy resolutions in 1999. Georgeson, a proxy solicitation firm, said they filed 43% of those dealing with corporate governance in 1998. Nneka Fletcher discusses the trend in ISSue Alert, 3/2001. She points to labor based web sites such as ATTInsider.com and the AFL-CIO's Executive Paywatch. Critics argue that shareholder activism is being used simply as another tactic to further collective bargaining. Some inside labor are concerned that maximizing shareholder value may take away from traditional concerns. Fletcher, however, concludes that union shareholder activists bridge the gap between shareholders and stakeholders. If shareholder value is maximized using excellent corporate governance practices, the company will perform better with increased profits also trickling down to employees in the form of pay raises. The way I see it is that unionized employees typically receive higher compensation. Shareholder activism is one more tool in a long tradition of working smarter and ensuring that unionized workplaces are more efficient. "CalPERS Effect" Updated Stephen Nesbitt, senior managing director and a principle of Wilshire Associates, updated his assessment of the impact of CalPERS' good governance campaign. CalPERS has been a leading activist in the US corporate governance movement since its beginnings. Indeed, CalPERS has been the prime instigator of many aspects, including annual focus lists for poor performance and governance, which CalPERS awards each proxy season. Nesbitt, who's firm has provided CalPERS with advice concerning firms to be targeted, assessed the performance of the 95 firms awarded this dubious distinction, beginning in 1987 through November 2000. Key finding: "Despite underperforming the S&P 500 Index by 14 percentage points for the five years up to CalPERS' shareholder activism, the 95 companies that were targeted by the system from 1987 to 2000 have outperformed the S&P 500 Index by 14 percentage points over the subsequent five-year period." (The "CalPERS Effect" on targeted company share prices, Directorship, 5/01) The obvious lesson is that poorly managed corporate assets present a substantial opportunity to obtain a premium on investments. However, the implication is that such turnarounds are not merely regression to the mean but are the result of intervention by CalPERS. Resources spent on identifying and rectifying poor corporate governance can be profitable. Both Nesbitt and CalPERS have been asserting such for years. I assume that Nesbitt has earned money over the years by providing his advice to CalPERS. What strikes me as absurd, however, is that, as far as I know, CalPERS has still never made a move to increase its holdings in target firms prior to announcing their intention to seek changes. Although they have benefited financially from their annual Focus List because their existing holdings include most top US firms, they continue to forgo additional revenues that any private investor, such as Warren Buffett, would not fail to mine by increasing his stake prior to announcing his efforts to add value at the firm through corporate governance activism. Perhaps this is because almost half the Board members are elected by members of the System who do not benefit directly from increased earnings? Most of the System's gains have gone back to employers in the form of lowered contribution rates and members of the System have seen little in the way of increased benefits. If they shared more directly in the gains, wouldn't the "CalPERS Effect" be mined more deeply? Back to the top
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