Once the gold standard for fund governance,
What went wrong? Davis points to the hiring in 2002 of former
Those fears have been realized, according to Davis. Allison not only pushed the fee hike through on some funds (word is that if the re-vote failed he had a plan to fold the funds into another group of funds that does charge a higher fee), but he also implemented 12b-1 marketing fees on others. When they kick in next year, Davis offered, those funds will no longer be a bargain.
The independent directors on TIAA-CREF's fund boards should also shoulder some blame, Davis said, as they rubber-stamped the 12b-1 fees.
"Having independence clearly isn't the same thing as asserting it," Davis said.
TIAA-CREF, however, still does many things right, he offered. It doesn't roll out flavor-of-the-week funds that jeopardize the long-term goals of investors, it consistently preaches diversification and holding for the long-term, and hasn't altogether abandoned its well-known role as a corporate activist.
"Despite its admirable attributes," Davis added, "TIAA-CREF is headed in the wrong direction."
The staff of Money Management Executive ("MME") has prepared these capsule summaries based on reports published by the news sources to which they are attributed. Those news sources are not associated with MME, and have not prepared, sponsored, endorsed, or approved these summaries.