You donโ€™t want to partner with states. Your hard-earned money is too valuable. When states get in trouble, youโ€”the investing classโ€”are the ones they go to first with palms outstretched. Thatโ€™s exactly whatโ€™s playing out in Stockton, California, as creditors (investors) are getting scalped while the pensions go untouched.

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Pensions combine the two most destructive forcesโ€”money and politicians. Digging through the minutiae of a pension gives you a front-row seat to observe the destructive forces at work. Take Rhode Island, for example. It has allocated 25% of its plan to alternative investments, or hedge funds and private equity. Enormous fees are paid to these guys for an investment that a) is illiquid and b) has a subjective price.

There are a lot of retired teachers out there who have no idea how poorly their money is being invested. Rhode Island General Treasurer Gina Raimondo is now responsible for overseeing the $7-billion pension. Guess how much she managed before being elected? The answer is $5 millionโ€”and it was in private equity. Does anyone care how she did? It doesnโ€™t appear that they do. As Ted Siedle of Forbes reports:

Thereโ€™s no prudent, disciplined investment program at work hereโ€”just a blatant Wall Street gorging, while simultaneously pruning state workersโ€™ pension benefits. Itโ€™s no surprise that some of Wall Streetโ€™s wildest gamblers have backed her so-called pension reform efforts in the state legislature. Former Enron energy trader emerges as a leading advocate for prudent management of state worker pensions? Thatโ€™s more than a little ironic.

Whatโ€™s happened to date in Rhode Island is unprecedented in public pension history and, given the myriad risks involved, should be setting off alarms: A little-known money manager hired by the stateโ€™s pension to manage a paltry $5 million succeeded in getting herself elected as state Treasurer. That means sheโ€™s now responsible for overseeing the entire $7 billion.

As states continue to run out of money, and they will, private-sector investors will be the first to lose. Thatโ€™s why I donโ€™t really care how munis are doing. I donโ€™t want to partner with states. But as the money dries up and expected returns arenโ€™t met, states will continue to find money wherever they can. Based on Rhode Islandโ€™s fiduciary malfeasance, bankruptcy may come sooner rather than later. And the real kicker is that Rhode Island is being propped up as the template for โ€œgoodโ€ pension reform.[/expand]