PROPOSAL:
Approve AQMD Annual Investment Policy and Delegation of Authority to
Appointed Treasurer to Invest AQMD Funds
SYNOPSIS:
State law requires a local government entity annually to provide a
statement of investment policy for consideration at a public meeting and
to renew its delegation of authority to its treasurer to invest or to
reinvest funds of the local agency.
COMMITTEE:
Investment Oversight, February 15, 2002, Recommended for Approval
RECOMMENDED ACTIONS:
- Approve the attached Annual Investment Policy.
- Approve the attached resolution delegating authority to the Los
Angeles County Treasurer to invest and reinvest AQMD funds.
Barry R. Wallerstein, D.Env.
Executive Officer
Background
Changes to the Government Code, which took effect in 1996, require that a
statement of investment policy be transmitted annually to the oversight
committee and legislative body of a local agency for consideration at a
public meeting. In addition, more recent changes to state law (Gov’t. Code
Section 53607) require that a local agency’s legislative body annually renew
its delegation of authority to its Treasurer to invest or to reinvest funds
of the local agency.
Board action on April 12, 1996 approved a recommendation to minimize AQMD
investments in the Los Angeles County Pooled Surplus Investment Portfolio (PSIP),
by directing staff to work with the Los Angeles County Treasurer (AQMD’s
Treasurer) to make specific investments on behalf of the AQMD. This change
required the development of an annual statement of investment policy
specific for the AQMD. Sperry Capital, AQMD’s investment consultant, working
with staff of the AQMD and the Los Angeles County Treasurer’s office,
developed the attached statement of investment policy. This policy sets
forth the investment guidelines for the AQMD with the objective of ensuring
that funds are prudently invested to preserve principal and provide
necessary liquidity while earning a market average rate of return.
For 2002, the investment policy has been revised to incorporate the
provisions of AB 609, which affects the California Government Code section
on local agency investments. AB 609 (effective January 1, 2002) changes the
authorization for local agency investments from surplus money to money in
the treasury not required for the immediate needs of the local agency. It
also changes the definition of eligible banks for repurchase agreements;
revises the guidelines for investing in commercial paper by eliminating the
current dual percentage system and instead capping the total amount at 25%;
and adds negotiable CDs issued by savings associations and state and federal
credit unions to the list of financial institutions in which local agencies
may invest. AB 609 prohibits the legislative body, treasurer or other
official having custody of the money from investing in negotiable CDs of a
state or federal credit union if a member of the legislative body or other
official or employee with decision-making authority also serves on the board
of directors or a committee of that credit union. In addition, the
Investment Oversight Committee at their meeting on February 15, 2002 amended
the Investment Policy to prohibit SPI investments in securities which are
currently under "Credit Watch – Negative" by any of the three nationally
recognized rating agencies.
For the past 25 years the County of Los Angeles has provided treasury
management services to the AQMD. These services are limited to the
processing of payroll and accounts payable warrants and the investment of
the AQMD’s cash balances. In April 1996 and again in June 2000 the Governing
Board reviewed the treasury management options available to the AQMD and
elected to continue with the services provided by Los Angeles County.
Resource Impacts
The cost associated with AQMD treasury management operations is included
in the FY 2001-02 Budget.
Attachments
- AQMD Annual Investment Policy
- Delegation of Authority Resolution
South Coast Air Quality Management District
Annual Investment Policy
- PURPOSE
This Annual Investment Policy (the "Policy") sets forth the investment
guidelines for all general, special revenue, trust, agency and enterprise
funds of the South Coast Air Quality Management District (AQMD). The
objective of this Policy is to ensure temporarily idle funds
money in the Treasury not required for the immediate needs of AQMD are
prudently invested to preserve principal and provide necessary liquidity,
while earning a market average rate of return.
AQMD funds deposited with the Los Angeles County Treasurer may only be
invested in the Los Angeles County Pooled Surplus Investment Portfolio or
in Special Purpose Investments as authorized by this Policy. The AQMD
Annual Investment Policy conforms to the California Government Code (the
Code) as well as customary standards of prudent investment management.
Irrespective of these Policy provisions, should the provisions of the Code
be or become more restrictive than those contained herein, such provisions
will be considered immediately incorporated in this Policy and adhered to.
The investment of bond proceeds will be governed by state law and the
permitted investment provisions of relevant bond documents.
- SCOPE
It is intended that this Policy cover all funds (except those funds
invested in the two retirement systems covering AQMD employees and 457
deferred compensation plan funds) and investment activities under the
direction of the AQMD and deposited with the Los Angeles County Treasurer.
- OBJECTIVES
The objectives of this Annual Investment Policy, in priority order, are
SAFETY OF PRINCIPAL, LIQUIDITY, AND MARKET RATE OF RETURN.
- Safety of Principal. The primary objective of AQMD is to
reduce credit risk and interest rate risk to a level that is consistent
with safe and prudent investment management. Credit risk is the risk of
default or the inability of a debt issuer to make interest or principal
payments when due. Credit risk is minimized by investing in only
permitted investments and diversifying the portfolio according to this
Annual Investment Policy so that no one type of issuer or issue will
have a disproportionate impact on the portfolio. Interest rate risk is
associated with price volatility introduced by extending the maturity of
instruments purchased. Interest rate risk is controlled by limiting the
maturity exposure to acceptable levels.
- Liquidity. AQMD funds will be invested to ensure that normal
cash needs and scheduled extraordinary cash needs can be met. Cash flow
forecasting will be used to determine the current and projected future
needs of AQMD and the ability of AQMD to make Special Purpose
Investments. AQMD shall invest funds in instruments for which there is a
secondary market and which offer the flexibility to be easily sold at
any time with minimal risk of loss of either the principal or interest
based upon then prevailing interest rates.
- Market Rate of Return. AQMD’s funds shall be invested to
attain a market average rate of return through economic cycles
consistent with maintaining risk at a prudent level.
These objectives are to be achieved in part through the diversification
of AQMD investments among the Los Angeles County Pooled Surplus
Investment Portfolio and Special Purpose Investments. The combination of
the Pooled Surplus Investment Portfolio and the Special Purpose
Investment of AQMD funds in the State of California Local Agency
Investment Fund will provide significant diversification, safety of
principal and liquidity for the programs of the AQMD. Other Special
Purpose Investments in an AQMD separate account will experience market
price changes due to interest rate risk consistent with longer maturity
investments that are permitted by this policy.
- RESPONSIBILITIES
The Governing Board. The AQMD Governing Board is responsible for
establishing the Annual Investment Policy and ensuring investments are
made in compliance with this Policy. This Policy shall be reviewed
annually by the Governing Board at a public meeting pursuant to Section
53646(a) of the California Government Code. The Los Angeles County
Treasurer has been appointed Treasurer of AQMD. The Treasurer shall be
appointed at least annually by the AQMD Governing Board.
The Treasurer. The Treasurer is responsible for making
investments and for compliance with this Policy pursuant to the delegation
of authority to invest funds or to sell or exchange securities made in
accordance with Code Section 53607. The Treasurer shall submit a monthly
report of investment transactions to the AQMD Governing Board. If the AQMD
Governing Board appoints as Treasurer someone other than the Los Angeles
County Treasurer, the new Treasurer shall be responsible for making
investments and for compliance with this Policy or such other Policy which
may be adopted by the Governing Board at that time.
The Chief Financial Officer. The Chief Financial Officer, based
on information provided by the Treasurer, shall submit a quarterly report
to the Governing Board in accordance with Code Section 53646(b). The Chief
Financial Officer is responsible for preparation of cash flow forecasts
for AQMD funds as described below. The Chief Financial Officer will
recommend specific individual investments for the Special Purpose
Investments to be made by the Treasurer.
The Investment Oversight Committee. The AQMD Governing Board shall
appoint an Investment Oversight Committee. The duties and responsibilities
of the Investment Oversight Committee shall consist of the following:
- Annual review of AQMD’s Investment Policy before it is considered by
the Governing Board, and recommend revisions, as necessary, to the Chief
Financial Officer.
- Quarterly review of AQMD’s investment portfolio for conformance with
AQMD’s Annual Investment Policy diversification and maturity guidelines,
and make recommendations to the Chief Financial Officer as appropriate.
- Provide comments to the AQMD Chief Financial Officer regarding
potential investments and potential investment strategies.
- Perform such additional duties and responsibilities as may be
required from time to time by specific action and direction of the
Governing Board.
It shall not be the purpose of the Investment Oversight Committee to
advise on particular investment decisions of AQMD.
- IMPLEMENTATION
This Policy establishes and defines investable funds, authorized
instruments, credit quality requirements, maximum maturities and
concentrations, collateral requirements, and qualifications of brokers,
dealers, and financial institutions doing business with or on behalf of
the AQMD.
- Standard of Care.
AQMD’s Governing Board or persons authorized to make investment
decisions on behalf of AQMD are trustees and fiduciaries subject to the
prudent investor standard.
The standard of prudence to be used by investment officials shall be
the "prudent person" standard as defined in the Code below and shall be
applied in the context of managing an overall portfolio. AQMD’s
investment professionals acting in accordance with written procedures
and the Annual Investment Policy and exercising due diligence shall be
relieved of personal responsibility for an individual security’s credit
risk or market price changes, provided deviations from expectations are
reported in a timely fashion and appropriate action is taken to control
developments.
The Prudent Person Standard: When investing, reinvesting, purchasing,
acquiring, exchanging, selling, or managing public funds, a trustee
shall act with care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the
circumstances then prevailing, including but not limited to, the general
economic conditions and the anticipated needs of the agency, that a
prudent person acting in a like capacity and familiarity with those
matters would use in the conduct of funds of a like character and with
like aims, to safeguard the principal and maintain the liquidity needs
of the agency.
- Investable Funds.
Investable Funds for purposes of this Policy are the AQMD general,
special revenue, trust, agency and enterprise funds that are available
for investment at any one time including any estimated bank account
float. Investable Funds are idle or surplus funds of the AQMD including
all segregated funds. All bond proceeds are excluded from Investable
Funds. The Cash Flow Horizon is the time period in which the AQMD cash
flow can be reasonably forecast. This Policy establishes the Cash Flow
Horizon for AQMD idle or surplus funds to be three (3) years. The AQMD
cash flow forecast must be updated at least every six months.
When the AQMD Chief Financial Officer determines that the cash flow
forecast can be met, the Treasurer, at the request of the Chief
Financial Officer, may invest a maximum of up to 75% of the minimum
amount of funds available for investment during the Cash Flow Horizon in
Special Purpose Investments ("SPI"), exclusive of investments in the
State of California Local Agency Investment Fund ("LAIF"), in a separate
account outside of the Pooled Surplus Investment ("PSI") Portfolio, in
accordance with this Policy.
- Authorized Investments.
Authorized investments shall match the general categories established
by the California Government Code Sections 53601 et seq. and 53635 et
seq.
Authorization for specific instruments within these general
categories as well as portfolio concentration and maturity limits are
established below as part of this Policy. No investments shall be
authorized that have the possibility of returning a zero or negative
yield when held to maturity; for example: inverse floaters, range notes
or interest only STRIPS. As the California Government Code is amended,
this Policy shall likewise become amended.
AQMD investments or deposits in the County of Los Angeles PSI
Portfolio are governed by the County of Los Angeles Treasurer’s
Investment Policy for Pooled Surplus Funds. AQMD investments or deposits
in the LAIF are governed by the investment policy and guidelines for
LAIF as established by the Office of the Treasurer for the State of
California. Investments in LAIF are an SPI investment and are limited in
amount to the investment limits established for LAIF by the California
State Treasurer.
AQMD funds and segregated funds that are invested by the Treasurer in
an SPI separate account outside of the County of Los Angeles PSI
Portfolio or LAIF are subject to this Policy. AQMD funds invested in an
SPI separate account will be governed by various approved lists that may
be established and maintained by the Los Angeles County Treasurer.
- Maximum Maturities.
The maximum maturity of any SPI investment shall be five (5) years.
The weighted average maturity of the SPI separate account portfolio may
not exceed three (3) years. Maturity shall mean the nominal maturity of
the security, or the unconditional put option date, if the security
contains such provision. Term or tenure shall mean the remaining time to
maturity when purchased.
- Diversification Guidelines.
Diversification limits ensure that at the time of investment the AQMD
SPI separate account portfolio is not unduly concentrated in the
securities of one type, industry, or issuer, thereby assuring adequate
portfolio liquidity should one sector or issuer experience difficulties.
The diversification limits outlined below for an individual investment
instrument and issuer/counterparty are expressed as the maximum
percentage of the total AQMD SPI separate account portfolio invested by
the Los Angeles County Treasurer.
Instrument |
Maximum %
of SPI Portfolio |
1. U.S. Treasuries |
100% |
| 2. Federal Agencies & U.S. Government Sponsored
Enterprises |
100% |
| 3. Los Angeles County Pooled Surplus Investment
Portfolio |
100% |
| 4. State of California Local Agency Investment Fund |
100% |
| 5. State of California & Local Agency Obligations |
Not Allowed |
| 6. Shares of Money Market Mutual Funds |
15% |
| 7. Bankers Acceptances |
40% |
| 8. Negotiable Certificates of Deposit |
30% |
9. Commercial Paper
If weighted average maturity of all CP is >31 days
If weighted average maturity of all CP is <31
days |
25%
15%
30% |
| 10. Medium Term Maturity Corporate Securities |
30% |
| 11. Mortgage Securities or Asset-backed Securities |
20% |
| 12. Repurchase Agreements |
50% |
| 13. Reverse Repurchase Agreements |
Not Allowed |
| 14. Variable and Floating Rate Securities |
30% |
| 15. Derivative Securities |
Not Allowed |
| |
|
Issuer/Counterparty |
Maximum %
of SPI Portfolio |
| Any one Federal Agency or U.S. Government Sponsored
Enterprise |
50% |
| Securities of a single issuer or its related entities |
10% |
| Any one Repurchase Agreement or other collateralized
counterparty name |
50% |
- Permitted Investments.
- U.S. Treasuries.
Direct obligations of the United States of America and securities
which are fully and unconditionally guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by the full faith and credit of the
United States of America.
U.S. Treasury coupon and principal STRIPS are not considered to be
derivatives for the purpose of this Annual Investment Policy and are,
therefore, permitted investments pursuant to the Annual Investment
Policy.
- Federal Agencies and U.S. Government Sponsored Enterprises.
Obligations, participations, or other instruments of, or issued by,
a federal agency or a United States government sponsored enterprise.
- Los Angeles County Pooled Surplus Investment Portfolio.
The County of Los Angeles Pooled Surplus Investment Portfolio is a
pooled fund managed by the County Treasurer whose permitted
investments are authorized in the Code and are governed by the
Treasurer’s Investment Policy with credit requirements and maturity
limits established by the County Treasurer and adopted by the County
Board of Supervisors.
- State of California Local Agency Investment Fund.
LAIF is a pooled fund managed by the Office of the State Treasurer
whose permitted investments are identified in the Code and whose
credit requirements and maturity limits are established by the State
Treasurer.
- State of California and Local Agency Obligations.
Not allowed as a Special Purpose Investments.
- Shares of Money Market Mutual Funds.
Credit requirements for approved money market funds shall be
limited to ratings of AAA by two of the three largest nationally
recognized rating services or managed by an investment advisor
registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission with not less
than five years’ experience and with assets under management in excess
of five hundred million dollars ($500,000,000), and such
investment may not represent more than ten percent (10%) of the total
assets in the money market fund.
- Bankers Acceptances.
Bankers acceptances must be issued by national or state-chartered
banks or a state-licensed branch of a foreign bank. Credit
requirements for banker’s acceptances shall be a minimum of "2-A/B"
for IBCA Fitch or "P-1/Aaa" for Moody’s
Investors Service.
Maximum maturities for banker’s acceptances are 180 days.
- Negotiable Certificates of Deposit.
Negotiable certificates of deposit must be issued by national or
state-chartered banks, or a state-licensed
branch of a foreign bank, savings associations and state or federal
credit unions. Credit requirements for bank
negotiable certificates of deposit shall be a minimum of "2-A/B"
for IBCA Fitch or "P-1/Aaa" for Moody’s
Investors Service. The AQMD will not purchase negotiable certificates
of deposit of a savings association or credit union as Special Purpose
Investments if an AQMD Board member or a member of management staff,
with investment authority, also serves on the Board of Directors or a
committee of that savings association or credit union.
Maximum maturities for all negotiable certificates of deposit are
three (3) years.
- Commercial Paper
Credit requirements for approved commercial paper issuers include
(1) a Standard and Poor’s (S&P) short term rating of "A-1" or better
AND a Moody’s Investors Service short term rating of "P-1" or
better, (2) a minimum of either Moody’s Investors Service or Standard
& Poor’s outstanding long term debt rating of "Aa/AA2" or better, (3)
incorporation and operations in the United States and having total
assets in excess of one billion dollars ($1,000,000,000), and (4) may
not represent more than ten percent (10%) of the outstanding paper of
the issuing corporation.
Maximum maturities for commercial paper are 270 days.
- Medium Term Maturity Corporate Securities.
Credit requirements for medium term maturity corporate securities
shall be limited to a minimum debt rating of "AA-" from Standard &
Poor’s OR a debt rating of "Aa3" from Moody’s Investors Service.
Floating rate medium term notes may be used if interest resets at
least quarterly.
Maximum maturities for medium term maturity corporate securities
are three years.
- Mortgage Securities or Asset-backed Securities.
Credit requirements for any mortgage pass-through security,
collateralized mortgage obligations, mortgage-backed or other
pay-through bond, equipment lease-backed certificate, consumer
receivable pass-through certificate, or consumer receivable backed
bond shall be rated "AA" or its equivalent or better by a nationally
recognized rating service, and issued by an issuer having a "A" or
better rating by a nationally recognized rating service for it’s
long-term debt.
The maximum maturity for Mortgage or Asset-backed Securities shall
be five years.
- Repurchase Agreements.
All repurchase transactions must be collateralized by U.S.
Treasuries or Agencies with a market value of 102% for collateral
marked to market daily, entered into with a commercial bank or
broker-dealer which is a recognized primary dealer and evidenced by an
executed Public Securities Association form of Master Repurchase
Agreement signed by the Treasurer and on file with both the County
Treasurer and the primary dealer.
The maximum maturity of a repurchase agreement shall be 30 days.
- Reverse Repurchase Agreements.
Reverse repurchase agreements are not allowed except as part of
investments in the County of Los Angeles Pooled Surplus Investment
Portfolio and the State of California Local Agency Investment Fund.
- Variable and Floating Rate Securities.
Variable and floating rate securities are instruments that have a
coupon or interest rate that is adjusted periodically due to changes
in a base or benchmark rate. Investments in floating rate securities
must utilize commercially available U.S. denominated indices such as
U. S. Treasury bills or Federal Funds. Investments in floating rate
securities whose reset is calculated using more than one of the above
indices are not permitted, i.e. dual index notes.
Variable and Floating Rate Securities that are priced based on a
single common index are not considered derivative securities.
The maximum maturity is five years for U.S. Treasury and agency
obligations and three years for corporate obligations.
- Derivative Securities.
Not allowed as Special Purpose investments.
- Investment Agreements (For Bond Funds Only).
Investment Agreements or Fully Flexible Repurchase Agreements, shall
provide a fixed rate of return with liquidity, usually one-to-seven days
withdrawal notice with no penalties, to meet cash flow needs of the
AQMD. Investment Agreements may be with any bank, insurance company or
broker/dealer, or any corporation whose principal business is to enter
into such agreements, if:
- at the time of such investment,
- such bank has an unsecured, uninsured and unguaranteed
obligation rated "Aa2" or better by Moody’s Investors Service and
"AA" or better by Standard & Poor’s, or
- such insurance company or corporation has an unsecured,
uninsured and unguaranteed claims paying ability rated "Aaa" by
Moody’s Investors Service and "AAA" by Standard & Poor’s, or
- such bank or broker/dealer has an unsecured, uninsured and
unguaranteed obligation rated "A2" or better by Moody’s Investors
Service and "A" or better by Standard & Poor’s (and with respect to
such broker/dealer rated "P-1" by Moody’s Investors Service and
"A-1" by Standard & Poor’s); provided, that such broker/dealer or
"A" rated bank also collateralize the obligation under the
investment agreement with U.S. Treasuries or Agencies.
- The agreement shall include a provision to the effect that if any
rating of any such bank, insurance company, broker/dealer or
corporation is downgraded below the rating existing at the time such
agreement was entered into, the AQMD shall have the right to terminate
such agreement.
- Collateralization shall be at a minimum of 102%, marked to market,
at a minimum, weekly.
The maximum term for an Investment Agreement for bond proceeds will
be governed by the permitted investment language of the bond
indenture.
- Rating Downgrades.
Securities that are currently under "Credit Watch-Negative" by any of
the three nationally recognized rating agencies are not permitted SPI
investments under this Policy.
The AQMD SPI separate account may from time to time be invested in a
security whose rating is downgraded below the quality criteria permitted
by the Annual Investment Policy. Any security held as an investment
whose rating falls below the investment guidelines or whose rating is
put on notice for possible downgrade shall be immediately reviewed for
action by the Chief Financial Officer. The decision to retain the
security until maturity, sell (or put) the security, or other action
shall be approved by the Treasurer.
- Securities Safekeeping.
Securities shall be deposited for safekeeping with a third party
custodian in compliance with Code Section 53608.
- Review and Monitoring of Investments.
The Chief Financial Officer will submit to the Governing Board the
quarterly reports on investments prepared by the Office of the State
Treasurer for LAIF and the Treasurer for the Pooled Surplus Investment
Portfolio and AQMD funds invested in Special Purpose Investments. The
Chief Financial Officer will review at least monthly the transactions
and positions of AQMD funds invested in Special Purpose Investments
outside of LAIF or the Pooled Surplus Investment Portfolio.
Approved March 1, 2002
Resolution No. 02-_________
A Resolution of the South Coast Air Quality
Management District Board delegating authority to the Treasurer of the
County of Los Angeles to invest and reinvest funds of the South Coast Air
Quality Management District.
WHEREAS, the Governing Board of the South Coast Air
Quality Management District desires to reaffirm the appointment of the
Treasurer of the County of Los Angeles as Treasurer of the South Coast Air
Quality Management District; and
WHEREAS, the Governing Board of the South Coast Air
Quality Management District pursuant to Section 40527 of the Health and
Safety Code has authority to appoint a Treasurer; and
WHEREAS, the Governing Board of the South Coast Air
Quality Management District pursuant to Section 53607 of the Government Code
is required to annually renew the delegation of authority to its Treasurer
to invest or to reinvest funds, or sell or exchange securities of the
District;
THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Governing Board of
the South Coast Air Quality Management District hereby delegates to the
Treasurer of the County of Los Angeles the authority to invest and to
reinvest funds of the South Coast Air Quality Management District.
AYES:
NOES:
ABSENT:
Date: _______________
_________________________________
Clerk of the District Board
/ / / |