In 1918,
Andrew Carnegie and his
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, under the leadership of
Henry S. Pritchett, created the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America (TIAA), a fully funded system of pensions for professors. Funding was provided by a combination of grants from the foundation and the
Carnegie Corporation of New York, as well as ongoing contributions from participating institutions and individuals. The policyholders voted in 1921 to implement policyholder representation on the TIAA board so that educators would have a role in running the organization. TIAA's namesake and signature investment/insurance product is the TIAA Traditional, which offers a contractually guaranteed return on principal and, at the discretion of the board of trustees on a periodic basis, additional profit/dividend interest over and above the guaranteed return. From the relatively illiquid and stable, long-term investments of its general account, TIAA has been able to consistently add some dividends to TIAA Traditional contributions since 1948.
Annuities and real estate In 1952, TIAA created the College Retirement Equities Fund (CREF) a
variable annuity, in order to diversify its retirement funds. In 1995, TIAA introduced the TIAA Real Estate account, also a variable annuity, but more stable than equity investments and more flexible than TIAA Traditional.
Environmental Impacts In May 2021, TIAA announced its net zero by 2050 commitment for the General Account. In 2022, TIAA’s annual climate report, “Ensuring Our Future,” stated that TIAA views climate risk as investment risk. A November 2022 report from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) asserts that TIAA’s failure to divest its fossil fuel holdings to clear its portfolio of financial and environmental risk is strategically unsound. On October 19, 2022, nearly 300 TIAA clients filed a complaint with the UN-supported Principles for Responsible Investment initiative (PRI), asking PRI to remove TIAA from its list of sustainable investors. TIAA is one of the world’s largest fossil fuel investors, with at least $78 billion PRI agreed to review the complaint but dismissed it after internal review. In March 2024, a group of TIAA clients and university student activists published their response to TIAA sponsoring the Big 10 while utilizing harmful investing practices. The activists stated that land grabs, the spraying of toxic chemicals, and fossil fuel investments are contributing to the climate crisis.
Investments and diversification •
2012: bought
Festival Place, a shopping center in
Basingstoke,
England for £280 million. •
2013: purchased a 50% stake in the
Grand Canal Shoppes, including the Shoppes at the Palazzo, in
Las Vegas,
Nevada, for net proceeds of US$410 million as part of a new joint venture with
General Growth Properties. GGP will continue to oversee the asset management of the project. •
2014: announced that it would acquire
Nuveen Investments in a deal valued at $6.25 billion. •
2016: announced deal to buy
EverBank Financial Corp. for $2.5 billion in cash; completed June 12, 2017. The combined bank's legal entity name is TIAA, FSB. Nearly a year after the acquisition of EverBank, TIAA began rebranding all of its banking activities under the
TIAA Bank name on June 4, 2018. In November 2022, TIAA announced plans to sell TIAA Bank to private investors. TIAA Bank changed its name back to EverBank when the transaction was completed. == References ==