Current:Home > MyNew Mexico native will oversee the state’s $49B savings portfolio amid windfall from petroleum -Prime Capital Blueprint
New Mexico native will oversee the state’s $49B savings portfolio amid windfall from petroleum
View
Date:2025-04-16 12:44:02
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — A state cabinet secretary and former economist to the Legislature was selected Wednesday to oversee New Mexico’s $49 billion nest egg of savings and trust accounts at the State Investment Council.
As state investment officer, Albuquerque native John Clark will oversee financial assets including the New Mexico land grant permanent fund — built largely from petroleum production on state trust lands since the 1970s to benefit schools, hospitals and other public institutions.
The 11-member investment council — a board of elected and appointed officials with Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham serving as chair — conducted a nationwide search that generated more than 80 applications.
Clark in 2019 joined the Economic Development Department and rose this year to acting cabinet secretary at an agency that administers annual incentives worth hundreds of millions of dollars aimed at creating private employment opportunities, from job-training grants to film production “rebates” that can offset nearly one-third of local spending.
Prior to that, he worked as an analyst and chief economist to the budget and accountability office of the Legislature.
Steve Moises retired on Oct. 1 after a 13-year stint as state investment officer. Clark starts work at an annual salary of $285,000.
Management of New Mexico’s state investments has taken on increasing significance amid an unprecedented surge in state government income from oil and natural gas production in the Permian Basin that overlaps southeastern New Mexico and portions of western Texas.
Voters last year approved an increase in annual distributions from the land grant fund to public schools and early childhood education programs. At the same time, state lawmakers have been setting aside billions of dollars in surplus state income each year in a variety of trust accounts for the future, in case the world’s thirst for oil falters.
The State Investment Council oversees New Mexico’s early childhood education trust, created in 2020 to generate investment earnings and underwrite an ambitious expansion of public preschool, no-cost child care and home nurse visits for infants. The fund already holds roughly $6 billion.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Are You Ready? The Trailer for Zoey 102 Is Officially Here
- Alabama Public Service Commission Upholds and Increases ‘Sun Tax’ on Solar Power Users
- This doctor wants to prescribe a cure for homelessness
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Gas stove makers have a pollution solution. They're just not using it
- Warming Trends: Best-Smelling Vegan Burgers, the Benefits of Short Buildings and Better Habitats for Pollinators
- Inside Clean Energy: What We Could Be Doing to Avoid Blackouts
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Hollywood goes on strike as actors join writers on picket lines, citing existential threat to profession
Ranking
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Ex-Twitter officials reject GOP claims of government collusion
- Panama Enacts a Rights of Nature Law, Guaranteeing the Natural World’s ‘Right to Exist, Persist and Regenerate’
- Armie Hammer and Elizabeth Chambers Settle Divorce 3 Years After Breakup
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Warming Trends: Climate Clues Deep in the Ocean, Robotic Bee Hives and Greenland’s Big Melt
- Following the U.S., Australia says it will remove Chinese-made surveillance cameras
- A Plunge in Mass Transit Ridership Deals a Huge Blow to Climate Change Mitigation
Recommendation
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
Disney CEO Bob Iger extends contract for an additional 2 years, through 2026
Baby's first market failure
Beyoncé tour sales are off to a smoother start. What does that mean for Ticketmaster?
Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
Inside Clean Energy: How Soon Will An EV Cost the Same as a Gasoline Vehicle? Sooner Than You Think.
Big Reefs in Big Trouble: New Research Tracks a 50 Percent Decline in Living Coral Since the 1950s
Watch a Florida man wrestle a record-breaking 19-foot-long Burmese python: Giant is an understatement