Local Government Investment Pools (LGIPs) are a vital part of the public finance ecosystem. They offer cities, counties, school districts, and other public entities a safe and practical way to invest taxpayer dollars—delivering better returns and more efficient cash management than many could achieve on their own. For those serving this market—particularly fund administrators, asset managers, and investment advisers—understanding the mechanics of LGIPs is key to building credibility and delivering real value.
Linedata provides the technology and expertise that enable LGIP service providers to deliver efficient, transparent, personalized client experiences.
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What Are Local Government Investment Pools (LGIPs)?
Local Government Investment Pools, or LGIPs, are pooled investment vehicles that allow local governments to invest short-term funds with professional oversight. While each state governs its own approach, the typical LGIP invests in conservative, high-quality instruments like U.S. Treasuries and government agency securities. The goal: protect principal, maintain liquidity, and generate income. Think of them as public-sector cousins to money market funds—but with government-specific rules and oversight.
According to Fitch Ratings, total LGIP assets reached $644.2 billion in Q4 2024, a 14% year-over-year increase driven by higher yields and growing deposits from tax revenue collections.
LGIP Structure and Governance
LGIPs vary widely in how they’re set up and who oversees them, but most fall into one of three categories: state-sponsored pools (typically operated by the state treasurer’s office), local or county-run pools (administered by a single jurisdiction but open to others), and joint powers pools (governed by intergovernmental boards under cooperative agreements).
Governance typically rests with a board of trustees made up of public officials or experienced finance professionals. These boards are responsible for setting investment policy, hiring service providers, reviewing performance, and ensuring that the pool complies with all applicable statutes and fiduciary responsibilities.
Who Manages LGIP Operations?
While LGIPs are government-sponsored, day-to-day management is most often handled by specialized third parties. Two roles are especially critical:
Investment advisers—registered professionals—are tasked with managing the portfolio. They follow the pool’s investment policy, keep a close eye on cash flow needs, and make decisions that balance risk, liquidity, and yield. Often, the investment advisor function is part of an asset manager's or fund administrator's
Fund administrators manage the operational backbone: striking NAVs, producing audit-ready financial statements, processing contributions and withdrawals, and generating reports for pool participants, auditors, and boards.
While many LGIPs outsource these functions to third-party service providers, some choose to manage these responsibilities in-house. Regardless of the approach, what remains non-negotiable is the need for timely processing, transparent reporting, and robust risk controls. These expectations—from participants, oversight boards, and auditors—apply across the board and continue to intensify as LGIPs grow in size, complexity, and scrutiny.
What LGIPs Expect from Their Service Providers
The fund administrators, investment advisors, and asset managers that provide services to LGIPs need to offer more than just reliability. LGIPs expect timely communication, high-touch service, and visibility into fund operations that enables them to answer to boards, auditors, and the public.
Technology now does more of the heavy lifting, enabling service providers to automate NAV workflows, streamline reporting, and reduce manual effort. With the right tools, administrators and advisers can deliver accurate, timely insights while scaling operations more efficiently.
Just as importantly, modern platforms empower LGIP participants with highly secure, self-service access. Through a dedicated portal, users can ‘self-administer’ by viewing account balances, tracking transactions, placing orders, and generating reports—without relying on back-office support.
Serving LGIPs Across the Back Office: What Different Roles Prioritize
Within investment advisory and fund administration teams, different stakeholders are focused on different dimensions of LGIP operations. Understanding their perspectives is essential to delivering excellent service:
- Heads of Fund Administration: Need tools that support exception-based processing, NAV accuracy, and the ability to scale services without growing headcount. For them, a modern, intuitive interface and automation are key.
- Chief Operating Officers (COOs): Focused on efficiency and scalability. COOs are concerned with streamlining operational workflows and reducing manual effort across fund onboarding, reporting, and reconciliation.
- Chief Technology Officers (CTOs): Responsible for ensuring that technology platforms are secure, integrated, and adaptable. For LGIP servicing, this means cybersecurity, interoperability, and reducing tech debt.
- Chief Financial Officers (CFOs): Prioritize accurate financial reporting, cost predictability, cash management, and audit readiness. CFOs look for fund servicing partners who can help mitigate financial risk while demonstrating strong controls.
Recognizing and addressing these different priorities can strengthen relationships and enhance service quality across all aspects of LGIP fund operations.
Looking Ahead: Scaling LGIP Services With Modern Technology
In our next post, we'll explore how fund administrators, asset managers, and investment advisors can scale their LGIP services more effectively. We’ll look at how modern technology—especially automation, digital workflows, and secure participant portals—can help teams meet growing demands, reduce risk, and capture institutional knowledge before it walks out the door.
Final Thoughts
Local Government Investment Pools are expanding in both size and complexity. At the same time, expectations from boards, participants, and auditors are rising. For fund administrators, asset managers, and investment advisors, this creates opportunity—but only for those who can deliver transparency, compliance, and operational excellence at scale.
If your team works with LGIPs—or is looking to enter the market—now is the time to evaluate whether your infrastructure can meet the moment. The right platform doesn’t just make operations easier. It helps you stand out in a competitive and growing corner of public finance.
At Linedata, we support fund administrators, asset managers, and investment advisers with flexible technology solutions tailored to the unique demands of LGIP servicing. From streamlined accounting to self-service portals, we help you scale, reduce risk, and exceed client expectations.
Contact us to learn how we can support your strategy.
About the author, Michael Galvin
Michael Galvin is Global Product Manager for Linedata’s fund accounting platforms. With 25 years in the industry, he has led the development of core applications, surround technology, and process management solutions for fund administration and investment management firms. Michael began his career as a fund accountant at JPMorgan Chase.