Paul Angelo

Paul Angelo

Paul Angelo

Senior Vice President, Actuary

Paul is a Senior Vice President and Actuary in Segal’s San Francisco office. He has over 40 years of experience in the design, valuation and administration of large defined benefit plans, including corporate, governmental, Taft-Hartley and other collectively bargained plans.

Paul currently serves as Valuation Actuary for 16 major California county and city retirement systems and associations, as well as the University of California Retirement Systems. His assignments for these systems have included funding policy design and review, analysis of pension reform proposals and consulting to bargaining parties on benefit design.

Paul currently serves as Chair of the California Actuarial Advisory Panel. He is a former member of the GASB Postemployment Benefits Accounting and Financial Reporting Task Force and recently completed service on the Committee on Retirement and Benefits Administration of the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA CORBA).

Paul has a BS in Mathematics from the University of Notre Dame and an MA in Mathematics from Harvard University. He also holds a Master of Actuarial Science degree from the University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Administration. Paul is a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries, a Member of the American Academy of Actuaries, a Fellow of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries and an ERISA Enrolled Actuary.

Paul is active in several national actuarial organizations. He currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries (CCA), as well as Chair of the Public Plans Community of the CCA and as head of the Public Plans Section of the CCA’s Annual Meeting Committee. Paul is active in the American Academy of Actuaries Pension Practice Council and has served as chair of its Public Plans Subcommittee. He is a past Chair of the Pension Section Council of the Society of Actuaries and is a current member of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section Council.

In 2012, Paul was named the Most Valuable Volunteer by the Conference of Consulting Actuaries.

Paul is an active speaker on retirement topics. He has made frequent presentations to both California and national associations of public retirement systems. Recent presentation topics include new developments in funding policy guidance and practice, and the ongoing debate regarding financial economics and public sector plans.  Paul is also a frequent speaker on public pension topics and financial economics at conferences sponsored by the American Academy of Actuaries, the Conference of Consulting Actuaries, the National Conference of Public Employee Retirement Systems and the Society of Actuaries.

In May 2013, Paul wrote and presented a paper, “Understanding the Valuation of Public Pension Liabilities: Expected Cost versus Market Price,” for the American Enterprise Institute. That paper was updated and reprinted in the January 2016 issue of “In the Public Interest,” the newsletter of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section. He has also authored papers on public pension funding in California’s Public Retirement Journal.

Contact Paul

The information you provide will not be shared with anyone outside Segal.

Paul Angelo

Paul Angelo

Paul Angelo

Senior Vice President, Actuary

Paul is a Senior Vice President and Actuary in Segal’s San Francisco office. He has over 40 years of experience in the design, valuation and administration of large defined benefit plans, including corporate, governmental, Taft-Hartley and other collectively bargained plans.

Paul currently serves as Valuation Actuary for 16 major California county and city retirement systems and associations, as well as the University of California Retirement Systems. His assignments for these systems have included funding policy design and review, analysis of pension reform proposals and consulting to bargaining parties on benefit design.

Paul currently serves as Chair of the California Actuarial Advisory Panel. He is a former member of the GASB Postemployment Benefits Accounting and Financial Reporting Task Force and recently completed service on the Committee on Retirement and Benefits Administration of the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA CORBA).

Paul has a BS in Mathematics from the University of Notre Dame and an MA in Mathematics from Harvard University. He also holds a Master of Actuarial Science degree from the University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Administration. Paul is a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries, a Member of the American Academy of Actuaries, a Fellow of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries and an ERISA Enrolled Actuary.

Paul is active in several national actuarial organizations. He currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries (CCA), as well as Chair of the Public Plans Community of the CCA and as head of the Public Plans Section of the CCA’s Annual Meeting Committee. Paul is active in the American Academy of Actuaries Pension Practice Council and has served as chair of its Public Plans Subcommittee. He is a past Chair of the Pension Section Council of the Society of Actuaries and is a current member of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section Council.

In 2012, Paul was named the Most Valuable Volunteer by the Conference of Consulting Actuaries.

Paul is an active speaker on retirement topics. He has made frequent presentations to both California and national associations of public retirement systems. Recent presentation topics include new developments in funding policy guidance and practice, and the ongoing debate regarding financial economics and public sector plans.  Paul is also a frequent speaker on public pension topics and financial economics at conferences sponsored by the American Academy of Actuaries, the Conference of Consulting Actuaries, the National Conference of Public Employee Retirement Systems and the Society of Actuaries.

In May 2013, Paul wrote and presented a paper, “Understanding the Valuation of Public Pension Liabilities: Expected Cost versus Market Price,” for the American Enterprise Institute. That paper was updated and reprinted in the January 2016 issue of “In the Public Interest,” the newsletter of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section. He has also authored papers on public pension funding in California’s Public Retirement Journal.

Contact Paul

The information you provide will not be shared with anyone outside Segal.

Paul Angelo

Senior Vice President, Actuary

Paul Angelo

Contact Paul

The information you provide will not be shared with anyone outside Segal.

Paul is a Senior Vice President and Actuary in Segal’s San Francisco office. He has over 40 years of experience in the design, valuation and administration of large defined benefit plans, including corporate, governmental, Taft-Hartley and other collectively bargained plans.

Paul currently serves as Valuation Actuary for 16 major California county and city retirement systems and associations, as well as the University of California Retirement Systems. His assignments for these systems have included funding policy design and review, analysis of pension reform proposals and consulting to bargaining parties on benefit design.

Paul currently serves as Chair of the California Actuarial Advisory Panel. He is a former member of the GASB Postemployment Benefits Accounting and Financial Reporting Task Force and recently completed service on the Committee on Retirement and Benefits Administration of the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA CORBA).

Paul has a BS in Mathematics from the University of Notre Dame and an MA in Mathematics from Harvard University. He also holds a Master of Actuarial Science degree from the University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Administration. Paul is a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries, a Member of the American Academy of Actuaries, a Fellow of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries and an ERISA Enrolled Actuary.

Paul is active in several national actuarial organizations. He currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries (CCA), as well as Chair of the Public Plans Community of the CCA and as head of the Public Plans Section of the CCA’s Annual Meeting Committee. Paul is active in the American Academy of Actuaries Pension Practice Council and has served as chair of its Public Plans Subcommittee. He is a past Chair of the Pension Section Council of the Society of Actuaries and is a current member of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section Council.

In 2012, Paul was named the Most Valuable Volunteer by the Conference of Consulting Actuaries.

Paul is an active speaker on retirement topics. He has made frequent presentations to both California and national associations of public retirement systems. Recent presentation topics include new developments in funding policy guidance and practice, and the ongoing debate regarding financial economics and public sector plans.  Paul is also a frequent speaker on public pension topics and financial economics at conferences sponsored by the American Academy of Actuaries, the Conference of Consulting Actuaries, the National Conference of Public Employee Retirement Systems and the Society of Actuaries.

In May 2013, Paul wrote and presented a paper, “Understanding the Valuation of Public Pension Liabilities: Expected Cost versus Market Price,” for the American Enterprise Institute. That paper was updated and reprinted in the January 2016 issue of “In the Public Interest,” the newsletter of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section. He has also authored papers on public pension funding in California’s Public Retirement Journal.

Paul Angelo

Senior Vice President, Actuary

Paul Angelo

Contact Paul

The information you provide will not be shared with anyone outside Segal.

Paul is a Senior Vice President and Actuary in Segal’s San Francisco office. He has over 40 years of experience in the design, valuation and administration of large defined benefit plans, including corporate, governmental, Taft-Hartley and other collectively bargained plans.

Paul currently serves as Valuation Actuary for 16 major California county and city retirement systems and associations, as well as the University of California Retirement Systems. His assignments for these systems have included funding policy design and review, analysis of pension reform proposals and consulting to bargaining parties on benefit design.

Paul currently serves as Chair of the California Actuarial Advisory Panel. He is a former member of the GASB Postemployment Benefits Accounting and Financial Reporting Task Force and recently completed service on the Committee on Retirement and Benefits Administration of the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA CORBA).

Paul has a BS in Mathematics from the University of Notre Dame and an MA in Mathematics from Harvard University. He also holds a Master of Actuarial Science degree from the University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Administration. Paul is a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries, a Member of the American Academy of Actuaries, a Fellow of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries and an ERISA Enrolled Actuary.

Paul is active in several national actuarial organizations. He currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries (CCA), as well as Chair of the Public Plans Community of the CCA and as head of the Public Plans Section of the CCA’s Annual Meeting Committee. Paul is active in the American Academy of Actuaries Pension Practice Council and has served as chair of its Public Plans Subcommittee. He is a past Chair of the Pension Section Council of the Society of Actuaries and is a current member of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section Council.

In 2012, Paul was named the Most Valuable Volunteer by the Conference of Consulting Actuaries.

Paul is an active speaker on retirement topics. He has made frequent presentations to both California and national associations of public retirement systems. Recent presentation topics include new developments in funding policy guidance and practice, and the ongoing debate regarding financial economics and public sector plans.  Paul is also a frequent speaker on public pension topics and financial economics at conferences sponsored by the American Academy of Actuaries, the Conference of Consulting Actuaries, the National Conference of Public Employee Retirement Systems and the Society of Actuaries.

In May 2013, Paul wrote and presented a paper, “Understanding the Valuation of Public Pension Liabilities: Expected Cost versus Market Price,” for the American Enterprise Institute. That paper was updated and reprinted in the January 2016 issue of “In the Public Interest,” the newsletter of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section. He has also authored papers on public pension funding in California’s Public Retirement Journal.

Paul Angelo

Paul Angelo

Senior Vice President, Actuary

Contact Paul

The information you provide will not be shared with anyone outside Segal.

Paul is a Senior Vice President and Actuary in Segal’s San Francisco office. He has over 40 years of experience in the design, valuation and administration of large defined benefit plans, including corporate, governmental, Taft-Hartley and other collectively bargained plans.

Paul currently serves as Valuation Actuary for 16 major California county and city retirement systems and associations, as well as the University of California Retirement Systems. His assignments for these systems have included funding policy design and review, analysis of pension reform proposals and consulting to bargaining parties on benefit design.

Paul currently serves as Chair of the California Actuarial Advisory Panel. He is a former member of the GASB Postemployment Benefits Accounting and Financial Reporting Task Force and recently completed service on the Committee on Retirement and Benefits Administration of the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA CORBA).

Paul has a BS in Mathematics from the University of Notre Dame and an MA in Mathematics from Harvard University. He also holds a Master of Actuarial Science degree from the University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Administration. Paul is a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries, a Member of the American Academy of Actuaries, a Fellow of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries and an ERISA Enrolled Actuary.

Paul is active in several national actuarial organizations. He currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries (CCA), as well as Chair of the Public Plans Community of the CCA and as head of the Public Plans Section of the CCA’s Annual Meeting Committee. Paul is active in the American Academy of Actuaries Pension Practice Council and has served as chair of its Public Plans Subcommittee. He is a past Chair of the Pension Section Council of the Society of Actuaries and is a current member of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section Council.

In 2012, Paul was named the Most Valuable Volunteer by the Conference of Consulting Actuaries.

Paul is an active speaker on retirement topics. He has made frequent presentations to both California and national associations of public retirement systems. Recent presentation topics include new developments in funding policy guidance and practice, and the ongoing debate regarding financial economics and public sector plans.  Paul is also a frequent speaker on public pension topics and financial economics at conferences sponsored by the American Academy of Actuaries, the Conference of Consulting Actuaries, the National Conference of Public Employee Retirement Systems and the Society of Actuaries.

In May 2013, Paul wrote and presented a paper, “Understanding the Valuation of Public Pension Liabilities: Expected Cost versus Market Price,” for the American Enterprise Institute. That paper was updated and reprinted in the January 2016 issue of “In the Public Interest,” the newsletter of the Society’s Social Insurance & Public Finance Section. He has also authored papers on public pension funding in California’s Public Retirement Journal.