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From Governings About the awards | 2004 awards introduction GOVERNINGS PUBLIC OFFICIALS OF THE YEAR
Tough Customer Taking Wall Streets money managers to task.
Moore controls the states $60 billion pension fund and, like many other investors, he grew unhappy with the advice he was getting from money managers. Moore was paying close to $100 million a year in fees for financial services that, he thought, were doing an inadequate job of watch-dogging the accounting practices of companies in which they were investing North Carolinas money.
So Moore has banded together with other state pension officers to force changes in the ways that Wall Street does business. At Moores insistence, nearly every major money manager has, in turn, become much more aggressive about looking for discrepancies in the balance sheets of publicly traded companies, making corporate blowups such as Enron and WorldCom less likely. My desire to have an impact in this area came first out of anger, just like any other shareholder, the 44-year-old Moore says. I thought as a customer not as a regulator, not as a politician but purely as a customer I could demand better customer service. Institutional investors own a good-sized chunk of virtually every publicly traded company in the country. But state pension funds only got into the equities market relatively recently. Their long fixation on bonds had made them lazy investors. Part of the governance crisis has been that shareholders have been very passive about critically evaluating management proposals for the firm, says Espen Eckbo, founding director of the Center for Corporate Governance at Dartmouth Universitys Tuck School of Business. Moore figured his best source for advice about how to shake things up was New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who had been dubbed Wall Streets Top Cop by Time magazine for his aggressive prosecution of investment houses. Spitzer put Moore in touch with New Yorks comptroller and soon California came on board as well, offering Moore some serious money and clout to back his crusade. Acting for a group of states, Moore wrote a proposal that money managers could either sign on to, or watch their business go elsewhere. It was a statement of pretty basic fiduciary principles, such as separating research analysts from firm brokers and demanding greater transparency and corporate responsibility from the companies they invest in. Ultimately, every major underwriter in the country got on board. Moore now is working on similar principles for mutual funds. He sits on the executive board of the New York Stock Exchange, where he is pushing to strengthen auditing standards. Hes also been one of the loudest voices in the battle between shareholders and management at Disney. And Moore has been aggressive at home as well, persuading the legislature to give him greater flexibility in investment. Hes now able to put up to 5 percent of his portfolio into private equities and venture capital, as well as buy lower-rated corporate bonds. Hes a big believer that the more diverse his portfolio, the less the funds overall risk, even if small portions of it are in riskier investments. So far, its all paid off, with North Carolina enjoying the second-highest rate of return of any state pension fund while lowering its risk. North Carolina is one of only two states whose funds have assets that can meet their liabilities. Moore knows that hes got to earn a good rate of return for that to remain the case. Some skeptics say Moore is hoping his moves pay off politically as well, since hes widely rumored to have his eyes on the governors race in 2008. Moore represented the sixth generation of his family to serve in the North Carolina House, but his congressional ambitions were drowned by the national Republican tide in 1994. Hes getting some fantastic exposure among the financial circles and people in the know, says state Representative Jim Crawford. But, he adds, Moore got better exposure as head of the state public safety department, when he coped with some high-profile storms. Moore even co-authored a book about Hurricane Floyd in 1999. The man on the street is much more interested in hurricanes, Crawford says. People are just not as interested in pensions. Alan Greenblatt Copyright © 2004, Congressional Quarterly, Inc. Reproduction in any form without the written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Governing, City & State and Governing.com are registered trademarks of Congressional Quarterly, Inc. |