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Saginaw Plumbers & Pipefitters U.A. Local #85
Saginaw Plumbers & Pipefitters U.A. Local #85 is the defined-benefit pension vehicle for union plumbers and pipefitters in Michigan's Saginaw Valley.
Saginaw Plumbers & Pipefitters U.A. Local #85
Saginaw Plumbers & Pipefitters U.A. Local #85 is the defined-benefit pension vehicle for union plumbers and pipefitters in Michigan's Saginaw Valley. The fund covers retirement benefits for members of United Association Local 85, a craft union whose roots trace back generations in the region's manufacturing and industrial construction base. Contributions flow from multiple signatory contractors under collective bargaining agreements, creating a pooled asset base managed by a board of trustees evenly split between union and employer representatives. The plan's private-markets strategy centers almost entirely on secondary transactions. Rather than committing to blind-pool primary funds with decade-long J-curves, the fund acquires seasoned partnership interests from sellers seeking liquidity. This approach shortens duration, accelerates distributions, and provides pricing transparency that primary commitments lack. The fund has historically targeted small to mid-sized buyout, growth equity, and infrastructure secondary stakes, typically sourced through specialized secondary intermediaries and advisors. Given the plan's Michigan roots, some geographic tilt toward Midwest-centric general partners and industrial adjacencies is plausible, though specific portfolio-level disclosures are unavailable. As a Taft-Hartley plan, governance rests with a joint labor-management board. The fund's size is undisclosed, and headcount is minimal — like most local union pension plans, investment management is outsourced to an external consultant or discretionary advisor, while custody and actuarial functions are handled by third-party providers. The plan may participate in secondary club deals or purchase LP interests through direct negotiation with sellers, but any syndicate relationships remain private. The fund's differentiating structural feature is its exclusive secondary-market mandate — an outlier among Taft-Hartley plans, which typically allocate to primary private equity fund-of-funds or direct real estate. This posture reflects a deliberate trade-off: sacrificing top-quartile primary fund access for liquidity and vintage diversification via secondary purchases. As the secondary market matures and union pension solvency remains under regulatory scrutiny, this liquidity-aware design may prove more consequential than headline allocation size.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Saginaw
Corporate office
Saginaw, MI, United States
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at Saginaw Plumbers & Pipefitters U.A. Local #85?
Investment oversight is the responsibility of a joint board of trustees, with equal representation from union leadership and contributing contractors, as is standard for Taft-Hartley multi-employer plans. Day-to-day investment management is typically delegated to an external investment consultant or outsourced chief investment officer, though the specific advisor is not publicly documented.
Why does the fund focus exclusively on secondary transactions?
The secondary strategy is designed to reduce the J-curve drag, duration risk, and blind-pool uncertainty associated with primary private equity fund commitments. For a union pension plan with monthly benefit obligations and regulatory funding ratio requirements, secondary purchases can provide faster distributions and mark-to-market transparency that primary commitments cannot.
Does the fund make any direct investments or primary fund commitments?
Based on available strategy descriptions, the fund's private-markets exposure is channeled almost entirely through secondary transactions — acquiring existing LP interests, not making new primary commitments to blind-pool funds. Any direct co-investment activity is not disclosed publicly.
What types of secondary interests does the plan typically acquire?
The fund targets small to mid-sized partnership stakes across buyout, growth equity, and infrastructure funds, with a likely preference for seasoned vintages and partially funded positions. The secondary sourcing process is conducted through specialized intermediaries, but specific transactions are not publicly detailed.
How is the plan funded and what are its primary obligations?
Contributions come from signatory plumbing and pipefitting contractors in Michigan's Saginaw Valley under collective bargaining agreements with Local 85. The plan pays monthly retirement benefits to eligible union members, making near-term liquidity a higher governance priority than for endowment-style perpetual capital pools.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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