Rodney June, Chief Investment Officer of the Los Angeles City Employees’ Retirement System (LACERS), will step down in July 2026, with the search for his replacement commencing in May.
June’s retirement marks the end of his tenure overseeing LACERS’ $22 billion portfolio, prompting the board to begin succession planning to ensure a smooth leadership transition.
The leadership change comes as public pension funds face evolving market conditions and increased scrutiny over investment strategies, including allocations to private credit and alternative assets.
As LACERS seeks a new CIO, will the next leader tackle its funding gap and governance challenges more effectively?
How vulnerable are pension funds like LACERS to ongoing stress in software-heavy private credit portfolios?
Could the recent surge in individual and 401(k) allocations to private credit expose new investor groups to hidden dangers?
With $480 billion in private debt maturing soon, could refinancing risks trigger broader market disruptions?
Are rising private credit fund redemptions just a liquidity mismatch, or do they hint at deeper market cracks?
How might AI-driven changes in the tech sector amplify risks for private credit lenders and investors?