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California 'pooled' funds said to be on solid ground

November 30, 2007|Tom Petruno, Times Staff Writer

Financial trouble at a huge Florida fund that invested cash for the state's municipalities has turned the spotlight on similar funds nationwide, including in California.

But managers of the California funds say they own little or none of the kind of dicey short-term IOUs that have sent investors fleeing from the Florida fund, causing authorities there to halt withdrawals Thursday.


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In Sacramento, a spokesman for California Treasurer Bill Lockyer said some of the 2,620 municipalities that use the state's $61-billion Pooled Money Investment Account have been calling with questions about the fund's investments.

But "not one participant has withdrawn" from the pool, spokesman Tom Dresslar said.

At the $517-million CalTrust funds, which were set up by the state's counties in 2005 as an alternative to the state pool, "there's been no run whatsoever," said Terry Crow, a Los Angeles-based money manager at Wachovia Corp., which manages the funds.

State investment pools are designed to invest municipal entities' short-term cash to match or beat returns on money market mutual funds.

The corporate and government IOUs that such pools own historically have been safe securities. But Wall Street in recent years has created short-term securities that have been backed by sub-prime mortgages and other high-risk assets.

As U.S. bond and stock markets have reeled since midsummer from surging mortgage defaults, the value of some short-term IOUs has plummeted. That has slammed some investment funds that loaded up on the securities.

In Florida, the Local Government Investment Pool invested about $2 billion in IOUs of so-called structured investment vehicles and other sub-prime-tainted debt, according to a Bloomberg News analysis. As worries about that debt have mounted in recent weeks, some of the pool's municipalities have yanked their money, slashing the portfolio's assets from $27 billion to $15 billion.

Faced with another round of withdrawals Thursday, Florida officials froze the fund.

California's Pooled Money Investment Account holds no structured investment vehicle debt, Dresslar said.

The fund does own $3.7 billion of asset-backed commercial paper, another kind of IOU that often is backed by sub-prime home loans. But Dresslar said just $4.2 million of the fund's asset-backed commercial paper was tied to sub-prime loans.

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