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News / Business / Clark County Business

New Hampshire pulls $239 million from Ken Fisher in expanding exodus

By Janet Lorin, Bloomberg
Published: October 22, 2019, 5:03pm

New Hampshire’s state pension pulled its $239 million invested with Ken Fisher, bringing the total amount divested from the billionaire’s firm to more than $2 billion.

The move by the New Hampshire Retirement System on Tuesday comes after Fidelity Investments and several pensions withdrew their money after Fisher made lewd comments at an industry conference. New Hampshire’s investment with Fisher represented about 2.6% of the system’s assets, the pension said in a statement.

“The recent statements made by Ken Fisher are not only offensive and inappropriate, they are incompatible with the values of the retirement system and bring into question Mr. Fisher’s judgment,” according to the statement.

Fisher Investments is seeing an intensifying backlash since the firm’s founder made offensive comments about women, spoke of genitalia and then failed to immediately understand the gravity of his words. Fisher later issued an apology earlier this month.

New Hampshire, which hired Fisher in 2001 and manages $9.2 billion in assets, joins pensions in Iowa, Michigan, Boston and Philadelphia that have divested their money.

NEPC, a consultant to more than 350 clients including New Hampshire, issued a recommendation on Oct. 17 that those investing with Fisher terminate the relationship. NEPC cited a letter to investors that Fisher wrote as he faced criticism, saying his response “showed a lack of understanding and appropriate contrition for his behavior.”

Camas, Washington-based Fisher Investments, which managed $112 billion as of September, is also facing scrutiny from other pensions that are reviewing their relationship with the firm.

Fisher Investments was managing about $10.9 billion on behalf of 36 state or municipal government entities, including pension plans, at the end of 2018, according to the firm’s Securities and Exchange Commission registration. That figure is down from $13.2 billion at the end of 2017.

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