State Universities Retirement System of Illinois
Transcription
State Universities Retirement System of Illinois
Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS OCTOBER 2009 State Universities Retirement System of Illinois Marc Weidner Managing Director Danita Johnson Investment Manager Larissa Herczeg Vice President Allison Shaw Vice President Global Consultant Relations This material is intended solely for the recipient, and should not be reproduced, copied, or re-transmitted. Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Table of Contents Franklin Templeton Investments Page 2 Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors Page 3 Proposed Program Page 10 Investment Process Page 13 Performance: Track Record Page 15 Appendix Page 16 This presentation is intended only as a general overview of the Franklin Templeton Private Real Estate strategy and is for informational purposes only and should not be construed or relied upon as investment advice. It has been provided to the recipient to discuss a potential or existing investment advisory relationship and may not be reproduced or used for any other purpose. It is intended only for institutional investment consultants or institutional investors. It is not meant for the general public. Information provided in this presentation is as of 6.30.09 unless otherwise indicated. Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Franklin Templeton Institutional—Firm Overview Franklin Templeton Institutional offers a full range of institutional investment capabilities from six distinct investment management platforms. FRANKLIN TEMPLETON INVESTMENTS Total Combined Assets Under Management (AUM): US$451.2 Billion1 Franklin Global Advisers Templeton Mutual Series Franklin Templeton Fixed Income Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors Darby 19472 1940 1949 19713 19844 1994 Focus Global, International, & U.S. Equity Global, International, & Emerging Markets Equity Global & U.S. Equity; Distressed Debt Global & Regional Fixed Income Global Real Estate Emerging Markets Private Equity & Mezzanine Finance Style Growth, Core Core Value Deep Value Single Sector, Multi-Sector Multi-Sector, Multi-Region Multi-Sector AUM1 US$96.1 Billion US$115.4 Billion US$51.7 Billion US$155.4 Billion US$3.7 Billion US$1.7 Billion Established FRANKLIN TEMPLETON INSTITUTIONAL Institutional AUM: US$132.4 Billion1 Single Business Development, Relationship Management, and Consultant Relations Platform 1. Source: Franklin Templeton Investments, as of 6.30.09. Assets under management (AUM) combine the institutional and non-institutional AUM of U.S. and non-U.S. investment management subsidiaries of the parent company, Franklin Resources, Inc. [NYSE: BEN], a global investment organization operating as Franklin Templeton Investments. Institutional AUM is the combined institutional assets of Franklin Templeton Institutional, LLC, and its affiliates. Figures for the assets under management above may not correspond precisely to the assets under management for the units of Franklin Templeton Investments as defined for purposes of the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®). For GIPS® purposes, Franklin Global Advisers and Franklin Templeton Fixed Income are both units of the firm Franklin. Numbers may not equal 100% due to rounding. Please note that the table above does not include Bissett Asset Management or Bissett’s SMA business (combined AUM of US$10.7 billion as of 6.30.09), Fiduciary Trust Company International (AUM of US$8.2 billion as of 6.30.09), or Franklin Advisory Services LLC (AUM of US$8.4 billion as of 6.30.09). The firms are wholly owned subsidiaries of Franklin Templeton Investments and offer solutions to Canadian (Bissett), high net-worth (Fiduciary), and U.S. value-oriented mutual fund (Franklin Advisory Services) investors. 2. Franklin Global Advisers, a unit of Franklin, combines the expertise of the Franklin Advisers, Inc., and Fiduciary Global Advisors (formerly Fiduciary Trust Company International) equity teams (with origins dating back to 1947 and 1931, respectively). 3. Franklin Templeton Fixed Income, a unit of Franklin, combines the expertise of the Franklin Advisers, Inc., and Fiduciary Trust Company International fixed income teams (originating in 1971 and 1973, respectively). 4. Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors originated in 1984 as the global real estate team of Fiduciary Trust Company International. 2 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Why Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors? Experienced Real Estate Team Multinational investment team averaging 12 years of global real estate experience Investment Capabilities As of June 30, 2009, FTREA has committed $3.8 billion to approximately 80 private real estate funds worldwide on behalf of over 40 major pension fund clients,1 including 36 first-time funds Emerging Manager Capabilities Pipeline of over 70 Emerging Managers;2 similar investment program for a major U.S. institutional investor Investment Selection Process Strong sourcing and selection capabilities of established sponsors, emerging managers and co-investment opportunities Established Track Record 12-year track record Dedication to Emerging Managers Active participation in numerous women and minority organizations; formation of diversity committee with FTREA Guidance Process Typically offer Emerging Managers input on strategy, resources and presentations, along with other feedback Alignment of Interest Our success is directly dependent upon the success of our clients Diligent Risk Management An emphasis on risk management and downside protection in every step of the investment process Efficient Administration Franklin Templeton strives to provide investors with cost-effective administration and reporting for their indirect private real estate investments As of 6.30.09. 1. A detailed client list is available upon request. 2. All references to Emerging Managers are as defined in Illinois Public Act 096-0006, unless otherwise indicated. Please see accompanying GIPS® package in the Appendix for further description of track record calculation methodology. 3 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Portfolio Management Team (Please Refer to Appendix for Complete Biographies) Marc Weidner, Managing Director, Member of the Global Investment Committee of Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors • Over 17 years of investment experience in sourcing, valuing, structuring and transacting global real estate • Member of INREV and PREA • Faculty member in the M.S. in Real Estate Development Program at Columbia University Larissa Herczeg, Vice President • Joined Franklin Templeton in April of 2008, and is responsible for sourcing and conducting due diligence on private real estate fund investments primarily in the Americas • Member of PREA • Co-founder of New York Women in Real Estate • Mentor for the Toigo Foundation • Member of the National Association of Securities Professionals • Member of New York Private Equity Network Real Estate Women’s Steering Committee Danita Johnson, Investment Manager • Joined Franklin Templeton in October of 2007 and is actively involved in sourcing and underwriting global private real estate investment vehicles • Chairperson for the FTREA Diversity Committee • Prior to joining Franklin Templeton, was an investment officer with the New York City Comptroller’s Office where she assisted with the oversight of the New York City Retirement Systems’ private equity real estate investment portfolio • While at the New York City Comptroller’s Office, Ms. Johnson assisted with the implementation of the Real Estate Emerging Manager Program • Member of PREA • Member of the Real Estate Executive Council • Member of the National Association of Securities Professionals 4 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors and Support FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS MANAGEMENT AND INVESTMENT COMMITTEE Jack Foster Raymond Jacobs Glenn Uren Marc Weidner LEGAL PRIVATE INVESTMENTS OPERATIONS/ACCOUNTING Lionel Fantauzzo (Luxembourg) Managing Directors Jack Foster, Head of Real Estate Raymond Jacobs Glenn Uren Marc Weidner Elizabeth De Oliveira (Fort Lauderdale) Vice Presidents Larissa Herczeg Wenning Jung Ilkka Tomperi, Ph.D. Carol O’Neill (San Mateo) Sara MacIntosh (Edinburgh) Dawn Pettersson (New York) Jonathan Dulberg (New York) CLIENT SERVICE Matthew Head (London) Senior Investment Managers Caroline Demol Karim Hassouna Greg Wilkinson (Melbourne) Rob Wilmoth (New York) Reed Hutchens (Fort Lauderdale) Investment Managers Christopher Guerette Danita Johnson Felix Lempert Wonkyo Seo PUBLIC INVESTMENTS BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT John Gall (Melbourne) Joachim Nolte (London) David Levy Donna Ming-Yuan Lee Daniel Pettersson Daniel Scher PRODUCT STRATEGY Ryan Dunham (Fort Lauderdale) Ulri Mammadev (Fort Lauderdale) Megan McGonigle (New York) Michael Stewart (Fort Lauderdale) Laurent Cacciatore (Luxembourg) Aurore Fonfreide (Luxembourg) Francois Pires (Luxembourg) Julie Harnett (Luxembourg) Dina Damayanti (Melbourne) Tim Kelly (Melbourne) Tania Lawson (Melbourne) Claudette Sam (Melbourne) Joanne Tan (Melbourne) SUPPORT STAFF Liliana Wrzalek (New York) Justine Johnson (New York) Alejandro Lendeborg (New York) Dan Fulop Tracey Hanfling Shira Goldman As of 9.30.09. This page includes individuals who are members of Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors (“FTREA”) or provide support to FTREA with respect to its private real estate and global REIT strategies. It is not meant to depict the management or investment team of any account. 5 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS FTREA Implementation Process¹ Form onboarding team • Portfolio Management • Internal Legal • Tax • Fund Accounting • Treasury • Client Onboarding team begins to transition daily responsibilities to operations team beginning on the first close and ending the process on the final close Weekly onboarding update meetings Execution of legal documentation • Outside service provider agreements • Acceptance of client documents and KYC information Draft internal fact sheet and draft documents Annual audit coordination and execution by Fund Accounting with support from Internal Legal and Portfolio Management Fund Accounting reconciles quarterly transactions and valuations Fund Administration receives and processes capital call and distribution notices from underlying funds. Portfolio Management is copied and approves Coordination and execution of ad-hoc requests CLOSE FUND and official hand-off to Client Service team ONBOARDING PROCESS BEGINS Form email and contact distribution lists Engage outside service providers • Custodian • Trustee • Administrator • Outside counsel & Tax • Auditor Legal documentation including investor requests are handled by onboarding team FINAL LIQUIDATION OF FUND Client Service coordinates capital call and distribution notices with investors and Portfolio Management is copied and approves Fund Accounting, Internal Legal and outside counsel assist Portfolio Management with operational due diligence of underlying funds Reporting coordinated by Client Service with information received from Fund Accounting and Portfolio Management Fund Accounting and Franklin Templeton Corporate Accounting calculate bills and process fees and expenses FRANKLIN TEMPLETON PRIMARY CONTACTS: Portfolio Management: Marc Weidner, Larissa Herczeg, Danita Johnson Fund Accounting & Administration: Michael Stewart Client Service: Carter Bailey, Dan Fulop Real Estate Operations: Felix Lempert On-Boarding Coordination: Carol O’Neill As of 9.30.09. 1. The above FTREA Implementation Process for a U.S. private real estate fund of fund strategy is for illustrative and discussion purposes only and is subject to change. 6 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS FTREA Commitment to Emerging Manager Activities FTREA Continues to Strengthen Its Commitment to the Emerging Manager Space and Remains Excited about the Prospect of Potentially Partnering with the Consortium FTREA sources new opportunities, networks, obtains research and receives feedback on sponsors through its active participation in organizations focused on real estate and Emerging Managers, including: Emerging ManagerFocused Real EstateFocused Real Estate Executive Council X X NYC Women in Real Estate X X X X A not-for-profit organization co-founded by Herczeg with over 170 members; website launch and incorporation in progress NYPEN Real Estate/Women’s Steering Committee X X X X Herczeg is an active member of the Women’s Steering Committee; FTREA hosted a women’s breakfast for 35 attendees in June 2009 Organization Mentoring Sourcing Research Diligence/ Screening X X X X Limited Partners Investment Council (LPIC) X X Comments Johnson has been accepted as a member and moderated a panel at the September Chairman’s Forum; Herczeg also attended the Forum Weidner, Herczeg and Johnson continue to play an active role in this LP group comprised of major institutional investors NY Governor David Patterson’s MWBE Programs X Robert A. Toigo Foundation X Emerging Manager Conferences X X X Herczeg was a panelist at the IMN Illinois Public Employees Retirement System Conference in June 2009; FTREA actively participates in other Emerging Manager conferences National Association of Securities Professionals X X X FTREA continues to play an active role and Johnson is participating in various committees Weidner, Herczeg and Johnson continue to play an active role in this organization. X X FTREA actively participates in this and related MWBE conferences in New York X Herczeg continues to act as a mentor and attended the annual Toigo gala and related Emerging Manager activities Pension Real Estate Association X X X Institutional Real Estate Investor X X X New America Alliance Graduate Programs in Real Estate, Business and Law X X FTREA is actively involved in this institutional real estate organization Herczeg has attended conferences X X X X Weidner serves as an adjunct professor at Columbia University's Real Estate Program; Herczeg was a guest professor at the University of California-Berkeley As of 9.30.09. The above includes the names and/or description of various organizations and groups of which individual members of the Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors team may be members or participants. Such organizations and groups are not affiliated with Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors or any Franklin Templeton entity. The above is not intended to be an endorsement by or of Franklin Templeton with respect to any organization or group mentioned. 7 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS FTREA Diversity Committee FTREA Is Committed to Expanding Its Focus and Deepening Its Understanding of Emerging Managers Understand the Investment Universe • Collaborate to understand the comparison of Emerging Managers with the wider opportunity set of comparable strategies • Assess the growing importance of Emerging Managers and diversity within mainstream institutional investment • Discuss and define market opportunities and emerging trends Broaden Guidance Process • Establish a framework for providing feedback to Emerging Managers • Determine criteria relevant for selecting Emerging Managers to participate in guidance process • Review materials and offer constructive advice Incorporation within Investment Process • Identify Emerging Manager real estate investments and assess their potential returns and risk factors • Continuous enhancement of proprietary real estate manager database to include Emerging Manager opportunities Educate and Communicate • Integration with firm-wide diversity efforts • Provide networking opportunities and access to mentor firms, organizations and industry groups • Seek to ensure real estate investment teams are well versed in Emerging Manager initiatives • Attend industry conferences dedicated to the topic to provide additional educational opportunities Monitor Developments • Continuously identify Emerging Manager investment opportunities and new Emerging Managers • Examine the inclusion of Emerging Managers within real estate allocations nationwide 8 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS We Believe FTREA’s History of Investing with Small and First-Time Funds Provides Skills and Experience Necessary for Diligencing Emerging Managers1 • FTREA has committed to 24 U.S. funds for total commitments of $725 million since 1996 • Almost 90% of FTREA’s 75 investments have been with first-time or upcoming managers • Forty-nine investments have been with funds of less than $750 million in size Invested Funds by Series Number Invested Funds by Underlying Fund Size 40 25 35 20 21 20 30 25 Number of Underlying Funds Number of Underlying Funds 35 22 20 15 8 10 4 5 17 15 10 9 8 5 3 1 2 0 0 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th Underly ing Fund Series Number As of 9.30.09. 1. Based on 75 underlying funds invested from 1996–2009. Excludes six co-investments. 7th $0–$249 $250–$499 $500–$749 $750–$1,000 ov er $1,000 Size of Underly ing Fund ($ in millions) 9 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Summary of Proposed Key Terms Size of Mandate $190 million Target Number of Investments 8–12 underlying funds Target Investments Emerging Manager private real estate Property Type Focus Office, retail, industrial and residential Investment Period 2 years with a 1-year extension Performance Fee 10% over a 9% hurdle return Management Fee 0.50% Nothing herein should be taken as an offer or solicitation of any type of securities or any investment management or advisory service. Past performance does not guarantee future results and results may differ over future time periods, and there is no assurance that the Fund’s investment objectives will be achieved. Please see page 1 and the Important Information Page for additional important information. 10 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Sample Recommended Portfolio1,2 U.S. Geographic Breakdown Sector Breakdown Northeast 30% West 30% South 25% Midw est 15% Residential/Multifamily 30% Office 25% Retail 15% Debt/Other 15% Hospitality 10% Industrial 5% Investment Strategy Fund Size $500 Million–$1 Billion 40% < $500 Million 50% > $1 Billion 10% Primary Inv estments 75% Co-Inv estments³ 25% 1. The recommended portfolio will seek to maintain adequate geographic, property-type and fund size diversification on these broad allocation guidelines. Due to the nature of the private real estate market, these are guidelines rather than requirements, and may not necessarily be achieved over the life of the portfolio. Specific allocation ranges would be set in the client’s investment management agreement with Franklin Templeton Institutional. Given the nature of value-added and opportunistic underlying real estate funds, the managers of such underlying funds will seek opportunities in regions and property types that they believe offer high riskadjusted return potential at the time of investment. Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors does not typically invest in property type-specific underlying real estate funds. 2. Percentages may not equal 100% due to rounding. 3. Up to 25%. 11 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Emerging Manager Market FTREA Remains Committed to Sourcing and Seeking to Invest with the Best Emerging Managers • Since January 1, 2009, FTREA has met with approximately 19 new Emerging Manager funds • The Emerging Manager market has continued to grow – FTREA currently has 74 Emerging Managers in its pipeline • Largely due to continued market dislocation, FTREA has not invested in any U.S. funds, including Emerging Manager funds since October 2007 FTREA Believes the Emerging Managers Opportunities in the U.S. Have Significantly Expanded and Are Increasingly Attractive • FTREA expects that many existing real estate funds may dissolve or experience significant turnover, creating both challenges and opportunities – Existing managers who are “out of the money” may have difficulty retaining top talent, including women and minorities – May provide opportunities for new management teams to emerge and raise funds free of legacy issues • Corporate and government initiatives that focus on women and minority funds have become more widespread and may offer additional competitive advantages for Emerging Managers • Because Emerging Managers have historically had difficulty obtaining leverage, they may be well positioned to weather the current economic environment and add value through asset management and cost savings • FTREA expects that co-investment opportunities may be particularly attractive as Emerging Managers look to bridge investments prior to, or during, their fundraising processes As of 9.30.09. 12 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Due Diligence and Guidance Process: A Focus on Downside Protection at Every Step¹ Potential Emerging Manager investments may undergo three parallel tracks of analysis by the Americas team: (1) FTREA’s standard due diligence process, (2) additional Emerging Manager-focused scrutiny and (3) FTREA’s guidance process Step 1 (2–4 weeks) Initial Review and Meeting Guidance Process Step 3 (1–2 months) Interim Discussions Step 4 (1–2 months) Comprehensive Due Diligence • Management • Investment strategy/ competitive advantages • Team/size/deal flow • Comparable funds analysis • Discussed at Americas pipeline meeting • Structure • Fees/expenses • Assess alignment of interest • Present to Investment Committee • Sponsor credentials/ reference calling • Completion of due diligence questionnaire required • Analysis of team dynamic and history • Examine budget and proposed resources • Determine qualification as Emerging Manager • Compare track record against both established and Emerging Managers • Discuss proposed budget and allocation of resources • Feedback on legal/tax structure • Feedback on GP commitment and initial terms • Review of corporate governance documents • Background checks • Additional reference calling • Feedback provided on presentation and materials • Feedback on presentation of track record • Discuss deal attribution • Input on market/comparable strategies • Continue or terminate guidance process • Arrange introductions • Assess fundraising strategies and relevant organizations • Feedback on governance/risk issues Standard Due Diligence Process Additional Emerging ManagerFocused Scrutiny Step 2 (1–2 months) Preliminary Due Diligence • Input on strategy and resources • Continued input on terms 1. The above chart is for illustrative and discussion purposes only and is subject to change. The way we implement our investment strategy and process may change due to factors such as market and economic conditions. As part of the investment process, certain legal and tax review is typically conducted by outside counsel, the aspects of which will be discussed with the Consortium during the implementation of the mandate. 13 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Due Diligence and Guidance Process¹ (continued) Step 5 (1–2 months) Onsite Due Diligence Meeting Standard Due Diligence Process Additional Emerging ManagerFocused Scrutiny Guidance Process Step 6 (1 month) Approval Step 7 (ongoing) Ongoing Monitoring and Risk Management • Meet with team, in a group and individually • Examine deal flow/ investment memos and process • Check risk management systems • Final meeting • Investment Committee vote to approve or decline • Analyze capital calls and distributions • Request quarterly questionnaire and update call • Attention to back-office infrastructure, risk monitoring, compliance • Examine accounting systems and prior/sample reports • Assess institutional quality of systems • Seek advisory board seat • Condition approval on sufficient size • Additional, regular contact with Emerging Manager to troubleshoot issues • Feedback on systems and infrastructure • Advice on potential sale of sponsor • Feedback on modeling and sophistication of reporting • If decline, provide concrete feedback • Remain involved in Emerging Manager’s efforts • Provide continued feedback on strategy, reporting, other issues 1. The above chart is for illustrative and discussion purposes only and is subject to change. The way we implement our investment strategy and process may change due to factors such as market and economic conditions. As part of the investment process, certain legal and tax review is typically conducted by outside counsel, the aspects of which will be discussed with the Consortium during the implementation of the mandate. 14 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors: Established Track Record Investment Performance—Highlights (USD) Global Private Equity Value-Added Real Estate (1997) Composite1,2,3 Committed Capital: $1.33 billion Underlying Funds: 504 Investment Period: June 16, 1997–December 31, 2008 Since Inception Annualized IRR:5 13.54% Gross of Fees 13.08% Net of Fees 1. Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors (“FTREA”) claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®). 2. Past performance does not guarantee future results and results may differ over future time periods. 3. Effective January 1, 2007, the global REIT and private equity real estate assets of the firm known previously as Fiduciary Global Advisors (and, prior to January 1, 2006, as Fiduciary Trust Company International) were redefined to comprise their own firm, Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors (“FTREA”). The real estate investment team formerly associated with Fiduciary Global Advisors remains in place. Please see accompanying full performance presentation prepared in accordance with the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®) and the Important Information page in the Appendix. 4. Total assets for the Vintage Year 1997 Composite exclude three fund investments made by the client whose account is in the composite prior to FTREA’s engagement as advisor. Those investments are not included as those investments were not selected by FTREA. 5. Gross of fees performance has been presented as gross of investment advisory fees paid to FTREA but is net of transaction expenses, administrative, legal and accounting expenses, and all fees and expenses related to the constituent funds in the portfolio, including carried interest paid to the general partners of those funds. Net of fees performance reflects these same expenses and in addition reflects investment advisory fees, including performance fees or carried interest, paid to FTREA. With respect to performance fees or carried interest which may be earned over and above the base investment advisory fee, FTREA collects such fees only when distributions are made to investors and only if such distributions result in a rate of return that exceeds the contracted hurdle rate. The net of fees performance presented only includes carried interest that has actually been paid and does not include carried interest that may be applicable if the account in the composite were liquidated as of the end of the period presented. 15 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Case Study: Sample Emerging Manager Fund As of September 30, 2009 Profile Rationale Strategy Acquisition, Redevelopment or Development Asset Focus Diversified Geographic Focus United States Target Size $250 million Fund Review Process • Conducted several due diligence meetings and met entire investment team • Performed an onsite visit and review of administrative and support functions • Reviewed the prior fund’s investment summaries and business plans • Reviewed the prior fund’s most recent quarterly and annual reports • Met with additional team members as they were brought on • Evaluated Fund I’s performance against other funds of its vintage • Assessed most recent asset valuations, valuation memos and portfolio roll-up for the prior fund • Held discussions with manager regarding leverage, debt maturities for the prior fund and the status of upcoming maturities • Focused, opportunistic, value-creation investment thesis • The Fund uses a research-driven approach to identify trends and target investment opportunities • Risk-mitigating strategy through low-cost bases, optionality and multiple liquidity points • Targets markets are high barrier-to-entry markets throughout the United States • The Fund benefits from significant experience, relationships and investment opportunities brought by the principals • The team has developed strategic relationships with a diverse group of operating partners experienced in value-added and opportunistic real estate strategies • The Fund has a strong pipeline and deal-sourcing capabilities • Alignment—the principals will make a significant commitment to the Fund. • The manager’s first fund is performing well relative to other funds of its vintage • The Fund was conservative in its use of leverage in the prior fund and, to date, has had favorable refinancing negotiations with its lenders Fund Guidance Process • • • • Introduced the manager to potential investors Provided feedback on the team and targeted fund size Provided background on public pension fund investment process Provided feedback on quarterly and annual reporting The information mentioned above is for illustration only. It is not intended to represent an actual or future portfolio holding. Instead it is intended to illustrate an example of the types of portfolio investments we have looked to for our Private Real Estate strategy. Please see page 1 and the Important Information Page for additional important information. 16 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Sample Emerging Manager Pipeline¹ As of September 30, 2009 Fund Anticipated Fund Size Investment Focus Manager 1—Fund II $250 million Diversified The Fund utilizes several strategies designed to create value and mitigate risk by identifying high-margin real estate opportunities, working with expert, local operating partners to execute in high barrier-to-entry markets, and mitigating risk through an intensive management process. Manager 2—Fund II $200 million Diversified The Fund has a value-added strategy to acquire a diversified portfolio of properties with long-term consistent cash flow. United States locations focus on six key markets and consider the top-30 major U.S. real estate markets. Manager 3—Fund II $200 million Mixed Use, Office, Residential, Retail; Southeastern U.S. The Fund, leveraging its experience in the real estate advisory, development, construction and property management businesses, invests in value-added and distressed assets primarily in the southeastern region of the United States. Manager 4—Fund II $700 million Diversified Plans to acquire or make investments in well-located, supply-constrained urban markets where demand-supply imbalances exist. The Fund has identified 15 major metropolitan markets within the U.S. that it believes possess more than $400 billion in aggregate projected urban capital investment potential. Manager 5—Fund II $300 million Diversified in Medical Environments The firm's unique strategy is to buy, assemble and reposition real estate around dynamic and growing medical environments. Target locations identified are in both high-density urban and suburban community growth areas with the presence of dynamic and growing medical demand driver(s). The Fund focuses on unimproved properties with redevelopment potential. Manager 6—Fund I $100 million Affordable Housing The Fund will focus on the acquisition of portfolios of general partnership interests in existing Low Income Housing Tax Credit partnerships and also direct investments of multifamily properties with affordable features, including workforce housing and projects utilizing tax-exempt bond financing. Manager 7—Fund I $150 million Hospitality A real estate private equity group with a focus on the acquisition, development and operations of hotel assets. Manager 8—Fund I $150 million Distressed Multifamily The sponsor will selectively acquire underperforming and distressed multifamily assets. Acquisition targets are properties that are underperforming or distressed due to poor management, high debt service or upcoming loan maturities. Manager 9—Fund I $400 million Distressed Residential—Sunbelt The manager has extensive experience in repositioning and home building, and intends to work in partnership with select home builders to acquire and reposition Region distressed properties in supply-constrained metropolitan areas to create quality housing for working households. Manager 10—Fund I $150 million Green Office The Fund will make value-added debt and equity-like investments in tax-exempt real estate held by nonprofit institutions. The strategy will be to acquire and retrofit commercial real estate for nonprofit organizations who are committed to owning green real estate as an owner-occupant or nonprofit landlord in gateway cities. Manager 11—Fund I $200 million Office—Western U.S. The Fund focuses on investments in western U.S. markets with strong projected job creation and significant barriers to entry. The Fund will pursue a flexible investment strategy including discounted note purchases, recapitalization of distressed assets and the acquisition of value-added properties. Manager 12—Fund I $100 million Multifamily—Western U.S. The sponsor, a multifamily real estate investor and operator, will acquire multifamily housing complexes located in metropolitan areas and in proximity to employment centers and public transportation routes, primarily in the western United States. Manager 13—Fund I $150 million Diversified—Brownfields Redevelopment This Fund has been identified as a potential co-investment opportunity. The Fund will use environmentally and socially responsible technology and construction practices to acquire, remediate and redevelop properties into community-supported highest- and best-use projects. Investment Strategy 1. The above information is for illustrative and discussion purposes only and reflects our initial analysis and opinions as of 9.30.09. It is not intended to represent any actual or past portfolio holdings. Franklin Templeton Institutional (“FTI”) is not the placement agent for any of the above investments. There is no assurance that FTI will have access to these investment opportunities or that FTI will be able to implement its investment strategy to achieve its investment objectives. Various factors including market conditions, fund size and closing dates may also impact any proposed investment. These opinions may not be relied upon as investment advice or an offer for a particular security. Statements of fact are from sources considered to be reliable, but no representation or warranty is made as to their completeness or accuracy. Past performance does not guarantee future results and results may differ over future time periods. This information is being provided to the Illinois Consortium upon request for due diligence purposes. 17 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program Exhibit 10 FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Important Information Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®). Please see accompanying full performance presentation prepared in accordance with the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®). Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors (“FTREA” or the “firm”) encompasses the global REIT and private equity real estate institutional accounts (“real estate assets”) managed by the Real Estate Group of Franklin Templeton Institutional, LLC or its affiliates (together, “FTI”). Prior to January 1, 2007, these assets were part of the firm Fiduciary Global Advisors, which also included the institutional equity assets managed by FTI transferred on that date to the Franklin Global Advisers unit of Franklin. Prior to January 1, 2006, the real estate assets under FTREA were managed by Fiduciary Trust Company International – Institutional Division, which included both the equity assets that are now part of the Franklin Global Advisers unit of Franklin effective January 1, 2007 and the fixed income assets that were transferred to the Franklin Templeton Fixed Income unit of Franklin effective January 1, 2006. The primary reason for establishing FTREA as a separate firm was to create greater focus for the real estate effort. Additional information regarding the firm’s policies and procedures for calculating and reporting performance results is available upon request. As a firm that offers mutual funds with unique investment objectives that are subject to varying regulatory requirements based on domicile of jurisdiction, FTREA may consider some of its mutual funds to be single account composites, for which the objective is as stated in each respective fund’s prospectus. To receive a complete list and description of FTREA composites (including any single account mutual fund composite) and/or a presentation that adheres to the GIPS® standards for any composite, contact your Franklin Templeton institutional representative at 1.800.321.8563. This publication is intended only as a general overview of the Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors private equity real estate management team and philosophy and is for informational purposes only. It has been prepared solely for the use of the person to whom it has been delivered and may not be reproduced or used for any other purpose. It is not meant for the general public. The risks associated with a private equity real estate strategy includes, but is not limited to various risks inherent in the ownership of real estate property, such as fluctuations in lease occupancy rates and operating expenses, variations in rental schedules, which in turn may be adversely affected by general and local economic conditions, the supply and demand for real properties, zoning laws, rent control laws, real property tax rates, the availability and costs of financing, environmental laws, and uninsured losses (generally from catastrophic events such as earthquakes, floods, and wars). The global real estate market has historically been significantly and adversely impacted by economic recession. The effects of ongoing credit market challenges, combined with the ongoing correction in real estate market prices and reduced levels of real estate sales, could result in further price reductions in real estate values, potentially adversely affecting the value of an account’s investments in underlying funds. The success of private real estate funds in general is subject to risks related to (i) the quality of the management of the private real estate funds and of the projects in which the private real estate funds invest, (ii) the ability of the management of the private real estate funds to successfully select investment opportunities, (iii) general market and economic conditions and (iv) the ability of the real estate funds to profitably make and liquidate their investments. Acquisitions of real estate investments by underlying private real estate funds entail the risk that such investments will fail to perform in accordance with expectations, including operating and leasing expectations. Redevelopment and new project developments are subject to numerous risks, including construction delays, cost overruns or force majeure events that may increase project costs, new project commencement risks, such as receipt of zoning, occupancy and other required approvals and permits and development costs associated with projects which are not pursued to completion. An investment in an underlying private real estate fund will generally be illiquid and long term in nature and a client’s obligations (including capital contributions) to an underlying fund will not terminate upon the termination of an investment management agreement with Franklin Templeton. Performance will also be dependent on the ability of an underlying private real estate fund to access both debt and equity capital at rates and on terms that are acceptable. In addition, even if the underlying private real estate funds are able to access debt capital initially, increased volatility in asset pricing increases the risk of margin calls, where applicable, or that the underlying private real estate funds will be unable to maintain compliance with their various debt covenants, increasing the risk of default or the need to keep high reserve capacity, when available, which can adversely impact returns. The information contained in this piece is not a complete analysis of every material fact regarding the market and any industry sector, a security, or a portfolio. Statements of fact cited by the manager have been obtained from sources considered reliable but no representation is made as to the completeness or accuracy. Because market and economic conditions are subject to rapid change, opinions provided are valid only as of the date of the material. Portfolio holdings and the manager’s analysis of these issuers, market sectors, and of the economic environment may have changed since the date of the material. The manager’s opinions are intended solely to provide insight into how the manager analyzes securities and are not a recommendation or individual investment advice for any particular security, strategy, or investment product. This presentation contains certain performance and statistical information. There is no assurance that investment objectives or intended results will be achieved. Past performance does not guarantee future results and results may differ over future time periods. Indices are unmanaged and one cannot invest directly in an index. The performance of an individual portfolio may differ from that of a benchmark, representative account or composite included herein for various reasons, including but not limited to, the objectives, limitations or investment strategies of a particular portfolio. Management fees will reduce the rate of return on any particular account or portfolios. All investments are subject to certain risks. Generally, investments offering the potential for higher returns are accompanied by a higher degree of risk. Bond prices are affected by interest rate changes. High-yield, lower-rated (junk) bonds generally have greater price swings and higher default risks. Foreign investing, especially in developing countries, has additional risks such as currency and market volatility and political or social instability. This piece is intended for institutional investment management consultants or investors interested in institutional products and services available through Franklin Templeton Institutional and its affiliates. Various account minimums or other eligibility qualifications apply depending on the investment strategy or vehicle. 18 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Investment Performance (USD) Global Private Equity Value-Added Real Estate (1997) Composite1 Committed Capital (USD Millions) $30.0 $58.7 $155.7 $209.4 $227.9 $257.9 $323.8 $577.1 $1,006.8 $1,034.3 $1,240.7 $1,333.0 Year 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Year 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Paid-In Capital (USD Millions) $190.5 $228.3 $303.6 $555.8 $702.7 $975.7 $1,168.2 Invested Capital (USD Millions)4 $429.7 $561.0 $707.6 Annualized Since-Incept IRR (Gross of Fees)2 -3.79% -9.29% 1.87% -3.54% 13.48% 12.60% 10.55% 11.67% 14.31% 21.86% 22.47% 13.54% Cumulative Distributions (USD Millions) $65.2 $105.8 $189.3 $302.1 $482.3 $845.3 $901.9 Annualized Since-Incept IRR (Net of Fees)2 -3.79% -10.49% 1.03% -4.95% 12.20% 11.71% 9.80% 11.04% 13.77% 21.40% 21.90% 13.08% Residual Value or Terminal Value (USD Millions)5 $178.0 $183.8 $227.5 $419.8 $670.6 $710.2 $594.3 Composite Assets (USD Millions) $3.0 $16.0 $54.7 $100.2 $158.8 $178.0 $183.8 $227.5 $419.8 $670.6 $710.2 $594.3 Total Value = Residual Value plus Investment Multiple = Cumulative Total Value/Paid-In Distributions Capital (TVPI) (USD Millions) $243.2 1.28 $289.6 1.27 $416.8 1.37 $721.9 1.30 $1,152.9 1.64 $1,555.6 1.59 $1,496.2 1.28 Total Firm Assets (USD Millions)3 $189.1 $138.9 $165.6 $264.8 $411.5 $496.2 $557.0 $622.4 $1,461.5 $2,136.5 $4,677.6 $4,250.4 Realisation Multiple = Cumulative Distributions/Paid-In Capital (DPI) 0.34 0.46 0.62 0.54 0.97 0.87 0.77 Paid-In Capital/ Committed Capital (PIC Multiple) 73.87% 70.51% 52.61% 55.20% 67.94% 78.64% 87.39% Residual Value/Paid-In Capital (RVPI) 93.43% 80.52% 74.93% 75.53% 95.43% 72.79% 50.87% 1. Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors (“FTREA”) has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®). 2. Gross of fees performance has been presented as gross of investment advisory fees paid to Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors (“FTREA”) but is net of transaction expenses, administrative, legal and accounting expenses, and all fees and expenses related to the constituent funds in the portfolio, including carried interest paid to the general partners of those funds. Net of fees performance reflects these same expenses and in addition reflects investment advisory fees, including performance fees or carried interest, paid to FTREA. With respect to performance fees or carried interest which may be earned over and above the base investment advisory fee, FTREA collects such fees only when distributions are made to investors and only if such distributions result in a rate of return that exceeds the contracted hurdle rate. The net of fees performance presented only includes carried interest that has actually been paid and does not include carried interest that may be applicable if the account in the composite were liquidated as of the end of the period presented. 3. Firm assets are presented based on the current definition of Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors, formerly the Real Estate Group of Fiduciary Global Advisors and, before that, of Fiduciary Trust Company International. Please see footnote 1 in the attached disclosure for further information on changes to the firm definition that have occurred historically. Assets transferred from Franklin Advisers, Inc., an affiliated but separate firm, are included only from the date of any such transfer. 4. Figures for invested capital are not available prior to January 2006, as the underlying investments in the fund of funds structure did not provide this information prior to that date. 5. Unrealized appreciation/depreciation, defined to be Residual Value less Invested Capital, was ($113.3) million as of the end of December 2008. Past performance does not guarantee future results and results may differ over future time periods. See the accompanying Definitions page for an explanation of the ratios presented. 19 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Supplemental Information (All Figures in USD): IRR Performance by Vintage Year Global Private Equity Value-Added Real Estate (1997) Composite1 Year 1997 Annualized Committed Period IRR2 Capital (Gross of Fees)3 (USD Millions) 5.55% $30.0 Paid-In Capital (USD Millions) $30.1 Invested Cumulative Capital Distributions (USD Millions)4 (USD Millions) $2.2 $35.1 Residual Value or Terminal Value (USD Millions) $4.7 Total Value = Residual Value plus Cumulative Distributions (USD Millions) $39.8 Investment Multiple = Total Value/Paid-In Capital (TVPI) 1.32 Realization Multiple = Cumulative Distributions/Paid-In Capital (DPI) 1.17 Paid-In Capital/ Committed Capital (PIC Multiple) 100.22% Residual Value/Paid-In Capital (RVPI) 15.59% 14.30% 1998 13.73% $34.3 $30.5 $3.5 $46.3 $4.4 $50.7 1.66 1.52 89.05% 1999 14.43% $100.0 $83.7 $3.8 $130.5 $7.8 $138.3 1.65 1.56 83.67% 9.30% 2000 16.47% $61.4 $51.8 $8.5 $77.4 $15.5 $92.9 1.79 1.49 84.34% 29.89% 2001 21.89% $20.0 $20.0 $4.9 $28.0 $4.9 $32.8 1.64 1.40 99.94% 24.45% 2002 27.15% $26.9 $26.9 $1.3 $43.7 $9.3 $53.1 1.97 1.62 100.15% 34.65% 2003 24.37% $65.1 $54.3 $24.5 $67.3 $22.1 $89.4 1.65 1.24 83.39% 40.75% 2004 20.12% $214.6 $209.5 $110.6 $193.1 $96.4 $289.5 1.38 0.92 97.63% 46.03% 2005 11.40% $472.9 $486.4 $410.1 $268.0 $303.8 $571.8 1.18 0.55 102.84% 62.47% 2006 -27.49% $35.0 $14.9 $6.1 $5.2 $5.4 $10.6 0.72 0.35 42.49% 36.48% 2007 -33.64% $145.9 $98.1 $80.4 $7.2 $60.6 $67.8 0.69 0.07 67.22% 61.79% 20085 -5.54% $126.9 $62.0 $51.8 – $59.3 $59.3 0.96 – 48.87% 95.65% 1. Internal Rates of Return (IRRs) by year of initial capital drawdown (“Vintage Year”) for the constituent investments in the composite are provided as supplemental information to the performance presentation for the Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors Global Private Equity Value-Added Real Estate (1997) Composite that has been prepared in accordance with the GIPS® standards. 2. The annualized period IRRs indicated on this page are calculated in a different manner on this page vs. the since-inception IRRs in the performance presentation presented in accordance with GIPS®. On this page, the IRRs for each period shown are calculated using just the cash flows related to the investments initially funded in each “vintage” year up through to the present, including the residual or terminal value for just those investments funded in a given year. The annualized period IRR for the year 1997, for example, includes only the cash flows through December 31, 2008 (contributions and disbursements) plus the terminal value as of December 31, 2008 for just the investments initially funded in 1997. Similarly, the annualized period IRR for the year 1998 includes only the cash flows through December 31, 2008 plus the terminal value as of December 31, 2008 for just the investments funded in 1998. If no investments were funded in a given period (e.g., the first six months of 2008), then no figures are shown for that period. 3. Gross of fees performance has been presented as gross of investment advisory fees paid to Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors (FTREA) but is net of transaction expenses, administrative, legal and accounting expenses, and all fees and expenses related to the constituent funds in the portfolio, including carried interest paid to the general partners of those funds. Net of fees performance is not available by vintage year carve-out. Actual net of fees performance will be impacted by investment management fees, including performance-based fees, the effect of which will be to reduce performance. This data is presented as supplemental information to the performance presentation prepared in accordance with the GIPS® standards. 4. Figures for invested capital are as of December 2008 for the constituent investments in the composite according to the year in which the initial capital drawdown occurred. 5. The IRR presented for the 2008 vintage year carve-out represents an investment period less than one full year. Therefore, the IRR for the 2008 vintage year carve-out is not annualized. Past performance does not guarantee future results and results may differ over future time periods. See the accompanying Definitions page for an explanation of the ratios presented. 20 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Investment Performance (USD)—Definitions Global Private Equity Value-Added Real Estate (1997) Composite Definitions: Committed Capital: Since-Incept IRR: Annualized Period IRR:1 Paid-In Capital: Invested Capital: Cumulative Distributions: Residual Value: Total Value: Pledges of capital to a private equity fund. This figure is typically drawn down over a period of years, starting when the private equity fund was first formed. The since-inception internal rate of return (SI-IRR) represents the annualized implied discount rate that equates the present value of all the cash inflows (drawdowns of capital) associated with the investments in the portfolio with the sum of the present value of all the cash outflows (such as distributions or return of capital) accruing from those investments and the present value of the unrealized residual value (unliquidated positions) as of the end of the period. Cash flows are day weighted according to the actual date of each cash flow. SI-IRRs for the different time periods are calculated from all such cash flows starting from inception (6/16/97)) through to the end of each calendar year or time period presented. The SI-IRR for 2005, for example, is calculated from just the cash flows from inception (6/16/97) through to the end of calendar year 2005, excluding cash flows from following years. The vintage year annualized period IRRs for each period shown are calculated using just the cash flows related to the investments initially funded in each “vintage” year up through to the present, including the residual or terminal value for just those investments funded in a given year. The annualized period IRR for the year 1997, for example, includes only the cash flows through December 31, 2008 (contributions and disbursements) plus the terminal value as of December 31, 2008 for just the investments initially funded in 1997. Similarly, the annualized period IRR for the year 1998 includes only the cash flows through December 31, 2008 plus the terminal value as of December 31, 2008 for just the investments funded in 1998. If no investments were funded in a given period (e.g., the first six months of 2008), then no figures are shown for that period. The annualized period IRRs shown for each vintage year are gross of all investment management fees, including any performance-based fees. The amount of committed capital an investor has actually transferred to a private equity fund. Also known as cumulative drawdown amount. The amount of paid-in capital that has been invested in portfolio investments. Cash or the value of stock disbursed (cumulatively) to the investors of the private equity fund. The remaining equity that an investor has in the fund, i.e., the value of the investments within the fund as of a certain date. Also referred to as the ending market value. Residual value of the portfolio plus cumulative distributed capital. 1. Provided as Supplemental Information to show IRR performance by vintage year. 21 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Notes to Performance Presentation for Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors Global Private Equity Value-Added Real Estate (1997) Composite 1. Firm Definition—Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors (“FTREA” or the “firm”) encompasses the global REIT and private equity real estate institutional accounts (“real estate assets”) managed by the Real Estate Group of Franklin Templeton Institutional, LLC or its affiliates (together, “FTI”). Prior to January 1, 2007, these assets were part of the firm Fiduciary Global Advisors, which also included the institutional equity assets managed by FTI transferred on that date to the Franklin Global Advisers unit of Franklin. Prior to January 1, 2006, the real estate assets under FTREA were managed by Fiduciary Trust Company International—Institutional Division, which included both the equity assets that are now part of the Franklin Global Advisers unit of Franklin effective January 1, 2007 and the fixed income assets that were transferred to the Franklin Templeton Fixed Income unit of Franklin effective January 1, 2006. The primary reason for establishing FTREA as a separate firm was to create greater focus for the real estate effort. 2. Figures presented for total firm assets include only the global REIT and private equity real estate assets transferred from Fiduciary Global Advisors effective January 1, 2007 to Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors, which became its own firm on that date. Substantially all the investment decision makers employed previously by Fiduciary Global Advisors (formerly part of Fiduciary Trust Company International— Institutional Division) joined FTREA. In addition, the staff and decision-making process remained intact and independent, and the records that document and support performance of the accounts at the predecessor firms are available for all accounts. As such, the performance portability provisions of the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®) apply, and the performance track record of the firm’s composites goes back to the inception of the respective accounts. Assets transferred from Franklin Advisers, Inc., to FTREA are added to firm’s assets under management from the date of any such transfer and the performance portability provisions of the GIPS® standards apply in any such case as well. Both Fiduciary Global Advisors and Franklin as defined claimed compliance with the GIPS® standards effective January 1, 2000 prior to each transfer. The assets under management figure is based on fair market value for internally administered accounts and on assets upon which investment management fees are collected for externally administered funds. 3. Composite Description—The FTREA Global Private Equity Value-Added Real Estate (1997) Composite consists of all portfolios managed with an investment objective that seeks to provide above-average returns by investing in closed-end tax-efficient private equity real estate funds where the first year of capital takedown to invest in such funds was 1997 (known as the “vintage year”). The strategy pursues this objective by seeking to source, select and monitor the best real estate managers capable of exploiting local inefficiencies in real estate markets, applying a value-added approach that seeks to identify undervalued investments with capital appreciation potential. The value-added strategy encompasses redevelopment, releasing and/or repositioning of properties, and is applied to existing multifamily, commercial, retail, industrial and hotel/leisure properties in primary and secondary markets. The composite consists of one fee-paying account, which is legally advisory due to the nature of private equity separate accounts (where clients need to sign off on capital drawdowns) but is deemed discretionary for composite purposes. The account invests in closed-end private equity funds and seeks to maintain an invested capital based of approximately 500 million AUD (or 350 million USD at prevailing foreign exchange rates). There are other accounts managed by FTREA that pursue the same strategy, but their initial takedown of capital occurred in later years, so they are not included in this composite for vintage year 1997. The inception date of the composite is June 16, 1997. The composite creation date is April 30, 2006. The composite performance is in compliance with GIPS® from January 1, 2000 to the present. The closed-end private equity real estate funds that the strategy invests in employ leverage, averaging approximately 50–70% of assets of the underlying funds. 4. Basis of Presentation and Calculation Methodology—The composite performance results are presented in U.S. dollars (USD) and have been expressed as cumulative since inception internal rates of return (SI-IRR) based on the aggregation of all the cash flows related to the constituent funds in the portfolio, as if from one investment. The SI-IRR represents the annualized implied discount rate that equates the present value of all the cash inflows (drawdowns of capital) associated with the investments in the portfolio with the sum of the present value of all the cash outflows (such as distributions or return of capital) accruing from those investments and the present value of the unrealized residual value (unliquidated positions) as of the end of the period. Cash flows are day weighted according to the actual date of each cash flow. SI-IRRs for the different time periods are calculated from all such cash flows starting from inception through to the end of each calendar year or time period presented. The SI-IRR for 2005, for example, is calculated from just the cash flows from inception through to the end of calendar year 2005, excluding cash flows from following years. Gross of fees performance has been presented as gross of investment advisory fees paid to Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors (FTREA) but is net of transaction expenses, administrative, legal and accounting expenses, and all fees and expenses related to the constituent funds in the portfolio, including carried interest paid to the general partners of those funds. Net of fees performance reflects these same expenses and in addition reflects investment advisory fees, including performance fees or carried interest, paid to FTREA. With respect to performance fees or carried interest which may be earned over and above the base investment advisory fee, FTREA collects such fees only when distributions are made to investors and only if such distributions result in a rate of return that exceeds the contracted hurdle rate. The net of fees performance presented only includes carried interest that has actually been paid and does not include carried interest that may be applicable if the account in the composite were liquidated as of the end of the period presented. This report is intended for one-on-one presentations. The terminal value for the funds in the portfolio are valued at fair market value, using either valuations supplied by the fund management companies or, where available, independent appraisals performed by external auditors as published in the financial statements of the funds. Such independent appraisals are available at least annually and, in some cases, semiannually, but on varying dates depending on the fiscal years of the underlying funds. Valuation review procedures include sending a questionnaire to each fund management company and cross-checking the valuations and cash flows supplied by each fund management company against the books and records maintained by FTREA for the one account in the composite. Additional information on valuation review procedures is available upon request. The base currency of the account in the composite is Australian dollars (AUD), although most of the funds in the portfolio are USD based. Terminal values not in AUD are valued by the custodian using its foreign exchange rates. Cash flows from each of the underlying funds in the portfolio were obtained directly from the fund management companies in the base currency of each fund. The resulting cash flows, including the terminal values, have been, for purposes of this presentation, converted to U.S. dollars as needed using foreign exchange rates supplied by FactSet. Past performance does not guarantee future results and results may differ over future time periods. 5. Description of Index—The composite is not compared to an index since no appropriate index exists that encompasses private equity real estate investments on a global basis. 6. Minimum Account Size—The minimum account size required to be included in this composite is currently $50 million (or its equivalent in Australian dollars) based on committed capital. Prior to January 1, 1998, the minimum account required to be included in this composite was $30 million, based on committed capital. 22 Exhibit 10 R13689 Illinois Consortium Emerging Manager Program FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Notes to Performance Presentation for Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors Global Private Equity Value-Added Real Estate (1997) Composite (continued) 7. Investment Advisory Fees—The current investment management fee schedule for separate accounts within this mandate is as follows: 0.50% on committed capital during the commitment period, 0.50% on the invested capital thereafter, plus a 20% performance fee over a 10% hurdle rate. The current investment management fee schedule for separate accounts is not used in calculating the net of fees performance for this composite. Please refer to Footnote 4 that discusses the Basis of Presentation and Calculation Methodology for composite performance net and gross of fees. The actual management fees paid in the composite is different than the current investment management fee schedule for separate accounts. 8. Measure of Dispersion—Dispersion represents the consistency of FTREA’s results with respect to individual portfolio internal rates of return within the composite. Since the composite consists of only one account, there is no dispersion to measure. 9. Additional Information—Additional information regarding the firm’s policies and procedures for calculating and reporting performance results is available upon request. As a firm that offers mutual funds with unique investment objectives that are subject to varying regulatory requirements based on domicile of jurisdiction, FTREA may consider some of its mutual funds to be single account composites, for which the objective is as stated in each respective fund’s prospectus. To receive a complete list and description of FTREA composites (including any single account mutual fund composite) and/or a presentation that adheres to the GIPS® standards for any composite, contact your Franklin Templeton institutional representative at 1.800.321.8563. 23 Exhibit 10 FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors MARC WEIDNER Managing Director Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors New York, New York, United States Marc Weidner has over 17 years of investment experience in sourcing, valuing, structuring and transacting global real estate. Mr. Weidner joined Franklin Templeton in early 2002 and is a member of the Global Investment Committee of Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors. In addition, he is a member of its Management Committee and in this capacity serves as Head of Investments. Prior to joining Franklin Templeton, he worked in the investment banking group of DLJ/Credit Suisse First Boston in London and New York where he originated, structured and underwrote real estate private equity funds in Europe and the United States. Prior to joining DLJ/CSFB, he was with Security Capital Group in London where he worked on origination and business development for the private equity fund of Security Capital. Mr. Weidner holds an M.B.A. from Cornell University where he was a Fulbright scholar. He holds a Master’s degree in Political Science and International Relations, magna cum laude, and a B.A. in Business Management, magna cum laude, from Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium. Mr. Weidner is a member of INREV and PREA, and is a faculty member in the M.S. in Real Estate Development program at Columbia University. 24 Exhibit 10 FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors LARISSA HERCZEG Vice President Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors New York, New York, United States Larissa Herczeg joined Franklin Templeton in April of 2008, and is responsible for sourcing and conducting due diligence on private real estate fund investments primarily in the Americas. Prior to joining Franklin Templeton, Ms. Herczeg was employed with the Credit Suisse Customized Fund Investment Group (CFIG). While at CFIG, Ms. Herczeg was responsible for sourcing, conducting due diligence on, and monitoring the real estate portfolio of direct and indirect real estate investments, and was also involved in relationship management and business and product development for private equity and real estate clients. Prior to joining Credit Suisse, Ms. Herczeg was an associate in the corporate finance group of the global law firm Clifford Chance US LLP from 2000 to 2005. Ms. Herczeg received a B.A. with honors in Government and Economics from the University of Notre Dame, a Master’s degree with honors in International Affairs from Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs and a Juris Doctor degree with honors from Columbia University Law School. Ms. Herczeg is a member of PREA, a co-founder of New York Women in Real Estate, a mentor for the Toigo Foundation and a member of the National Association of Securities Professionals. 25 Exhibit 10 FRANKLIN TEMPLETON REAL ESTATE Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors DANITA JOHNSON Investment Manager Franklin Templeton Real Estate Advisors New York, New York, United States Danita Johnson joined Franklin Templeton in October of 2007 and is actively involved in sourcing and underwriting global private real estate investment vehicles. Prior to joining Franklin Templeton Investments, Ms. Johnson worked as an investment officer for the New York City Comptroller’s Office where she assisted with the oversight of the New York City Retirement Systems’ private equity real estate investment portfolio. She previously worked with Prudential Financial in the Equity Research Group where she was involved with the research and analysis of publicly traded corporations in the Healthcare sector and with Credit Suisse First Boston in the Credit Risk Management Division where she facilitated the development and implementation of a global credit exposure and risk monitoring business application system. Ms. Johnson holds a B.A. in Economics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is a member of the Real Estate Executive Council and the National Association of Securities Professionals. 26