The city's investment adviser presented the annual investment report and a proposed administrative update to the investment policy, saying the portfolio offered an attractive yield and remains high-quality and liquid. "The yield to maturity on the portfolio is very attractive at 4.1%," the presenter said, and described a portfolio positioned with an effective duration near 2.7 versus a benchmark around 2.5.
The presenter said the portfolio's market value and allocation mix have enabled modest purchases in March as credit spreads briefly widened, with about 25% of holdings in corporate/medium-term notes and roughly 19.5% in asset-backed and mortgage-related securities. He told commissioners the city's portfolio is short-term, high-quality and insulated from many market shocks.
Staff also reviewed proposed, largely technical policy amendments to reflect state law changes and to clarify administrative roles and authorized investment instruments. One substantive change is to align the policy with SB 858, which amended state law on permitted maximum maturities for certain prime-quality instruments; staff said the update provides modest additional flexibility but does not alter concentration or credit-quality limits in the city's policy.
Commissioners questioned whether the slides reflected the most recent market moves and asked staff to ensure the redline clearly shows dealer- and institution-related best-practice language adopted from the model state guidance. The presenter acknowledged some material was three weeks old and committed to providing any near-term updates if market conditions change materially.
The commission did not take final action on policy language at the meeting; staff recommended, and the commission supported, forwarding the administrative amendments and the annual report to City Council for formal adoption. The commission also requested final redlines and any updated market figures be provided before the council packet is prepared.