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UFCW No. California Food Employers Joint Individual Account Plan
The UFCW No. California Food Employers Joint Individual Account Plan launched in 1987 as a collectively bargained retirement vehicle covering workers at...
UFCW No. California Food Employers Joint Individual Account Plan
The UFCW No. California Food Employers Joint Individual Account Plan launched in 1987 as a collectively bargained retirement vehicle covering workers at unionized grocery chains and food-processing employers across Northern California. Employer contributions — negotiated between the United Food and Commercial Workers union and companies like Safeway, Raley’s, and others — flow into participant-directed accounts, creating a pooled capital base that the plan’s trustees invest. Unlike a traditional defined-benefit pension, participant balances are individually allocated, which shapes the plan’s liquidity tolerance and long-duration posture. The investment strategy reaches across venture capital, buyout, growth equity, distressed debt, and natural resources, executed primarily through fund commitments alongside a meaningful co-investment sleeve. This hybrid approach lets the fund negotiate lower management fees on direct deals while still accessing specialized managers for the bulk of allocations. The plan also participates in secondary transactions, buying LP interests from other institutions — a tool that can accelerate vintage-year diversification for a sub-$200 million pool. Confirmed geographic focus is domestic, consistent with the local employer base and the trustees' tendency to back managers they can physically diligence from Concord. With an estimated $164 million in assets, the fund operates well below the scale where most pension plans build internal investment teams — the board of trustees, typically composed of union officers and employer representatives, delegates manager selection to an investment consultant or OCIO. The defined-contribution structure relieves the plan of a pension-liability discounting problem, freeing the committee to pursue higher-return, higher-volatility strategies that a defined-benefit plan with legacy obligations could not stomach. The plan’s structural differentiator is its position at the intersection of labor-union governance and an aggressive alternatives program rarely seen in sub-$200 million benefit funds. Most plans this size default to 60/40 stock-bond portfolios; the Northern California Food Employers plan instead uses its defined-contribution liability profile as permission to run a genuine endowment-style book, with pacing that forces trustees to remain in the market across cycles rather than timing entries.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
1987
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Concord
Corporate office
Concord, CA, United States
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who oversees investment decisions for the plan?
A joint board of trustees — composed of representatives from UFCW union locals and the contributing food employers — governs the plan. Day-to-day manager selection and portfolio construction is typically delegated to an external investment consultant or an outsourced chief investment officer, though the specific provider is not publicly disclosed. The board retains final approval authority over allocation policy and manager hires.
How does the defined-contribution structure influence the plan's risk appetite?
Because participant account balances fluctuate with market values rather than a promised benefit formula, the plan faces no actuarial funding gap. That allows the trustees to run significantly higher allocations to illiquid alternatives — venture capital, buyout, and distressed debt — than a comparable defined-benefit plan carrying legacy liability calculations. The trade-off is that participants bear the market risk directly through their account balances.
Does the fund invest directly or primarily through fund commitments?
The plan operates a fund-of-funds structure for its core alternative-asset exposure, committing to outside managers across venture, buyout, and credit strategies. Over time it has layered in direct co-investments alongside its fund managers — deals where the plan puts capital directly into portfolio companies without the extra layer of management fees. It also transacts in the secondary market, purchasing LP interests from other institutions.
Which employers contribute to this plan?
Contributing employers include unionized grocery chains, food-processing companies, and related food-industry businesses operating in Northern California under collective-bargaining agreements with UFCW locals. While individual employer names are not itemized publicly, Safeway and Raley's are among the largest unionized grocery operators in the region covered by the UFCW Northern California master agreements (public record).
What distinguishes this plan from the larger UFCW National Pension Fund?
The UFCW National Pension Fund is a multi-employer defined-benefit plan covering workers across the country, while the Northern California Food Employers Joint Individual Account Plan is a defined-contribution vehicle specific to a regional employer group. The individual-account structure means participants direct their own allocations among fund menus and bear investment risk, whereas the national fund pools risk among all participating employers and pays a formulaic retirement benefit.
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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