Canada Pension Eyes Oil As Prices Drop

oil barrels

The head of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) said Thursday he sees “increasing opportunity” for investment in Canadian energy companies as oil prices continue their recent decline.

From a Bloomberg interview:

“We are seeing a period now where there may be increasing opportunity in the Western Canadian basin and Canadian energy companies as the market sort of reprices,” Mark Wiseman said in a telephone interview today.

Brent crude extended losses below $80 a barrel, dropping to a four-year low on speculation Saudi Arabia will not reduce output amid a glut of supply.

Wiseman said the resulting decline in oil prices will put pressure on some of the less financially sound energy companies, potentially creating some opportunities for acquisitions.

“Our attraction will be to those best-quality assets, best-quality management teams, and best-quality companies,” he said.

Wiseman, chief executive officer of the fund, pointed to Canada Pension’s investment in Seven Generations Energy Ltd. (VII) as an example. The pension fund is the largest shareholder, holding more than 15 percent of its common shares, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Canada Pension, which was an early investor in Seven Generations, didn’t sell shares in the company’s initial public offering last month because it sees long-term opportunities in the company. Seven Generations debuted in Toronto on Oct. 30 at C$18 a share and has since climbed to $22.50 today.

“It’s a great example of the long-term view we take,” Wiseman said. “We made a very conscious decision that we want to watch that value accrete and grow over the long term.”

The CPPIB manages $206 billion in assets for the Canada Pension Plan.

 

Photo by ezioman via Flickr CC License

Canada Pension Plan Returned 3.4 Percent in Second Quarter

Canada blank mapThe Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) has crunched its numbers for the second quarter, which ended Sep. 30.

CPPIB investments returned 3.4 percent over the period; that’s an improvement over the 1.6 percent return experienced by plan investments in the first quarter.

The CPPIB returned 16.5 percent in fiscal year 2013-14.

More on the return figures from the Globe and Mail:

CPPIB said its assets grew by $7.6-billion in the fiscal second quarter ended Sept. 30, with assets increasing to $234.4-billion from $226.8-billion in the previous quarter.

Growth consisted of $7.5-billion in net investment income and $0.1-billion from new contributions.

The modest return is in stark contrast to much higher returns posted last year, as growth in global markets slows.

“During the quarter, our investment portfolio reflected mixed performance from the global public equity markets, balanced by solid returns from our fixed income assets and positive contributions from our private investments,” CPPIB president and chief executive officer Mark Wiseman said.

“We continue to realize the benefits of a globally diversified, resilient portfolio that is designed to deliver superior returns over the long term.”

Canada’s largest pension fund manager said on Thursday that the Chief Actuary of Canada has projected that the fund will attain a 4-per-cent rate of return after inflation on a long-term basis.

CPPIB has a five-year rate of return of 8.2 per cent and a 10-year return rate of 5.6 per cent, above the actuary’s assumptions.

The CPPIB’s allocates 33 percent of its assets to public equities, 32.5 percent to fixed income, 10.8 percent to real estate, 5.4 percent to infrastructure and 18.3 percent to private equity.

Kolivakis On Canada Pension’s Big Brazil Bet

Canada blank map

On Tuesday the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), the entity that manages investments for the Canada Pension Plan, unveiled plans to invest $396 million in commercial real estate in Brazil.

The CPPIB now has nearly $2 billion committed to real estate investments in Brazil.

Leo Kolivakis, who runs the Pension Pulse blog, weighed in on CPPIB’s Brazil bet in a post this week:

Let me share my thoughts on this Brazilian real estate deal. From a timing perspective, this deal couldn’t come at a worse time. Why? Because the Brazilian economy remains in recession and things can get a lot worse for Latin American countries which experienced a boom/ bust from the Fed’s policies and China’s over-investment cycle. This is why some are calling it Latin America’s ‘made in the USA’ 2014 recession, and if you think it’s over, think again. John Maudin’s latest, A Scary Story for Emerging Markets, discusses how the end of QE and the surge in the mighty greenback can lead to a sea change in the global economy and another emerging markets crisis.
Mac Margolis, a Bloomberg View contributor in Rio de Janeiro, also wrote an excellent comment this week on why the oil bust has Brazil in deep water, going over the problems at Petroleo Brasileiro (PBR).

 

The re-election of President Dilma Rousseff didn’t exactly send a vote of confidence to markets as she now faces the challenge of delivering on campaign promises to expand social benefits for the poor while balancing a strained federal budget. President Rousseff says the Brazilian economy will recover and the country will avoid a credit downgrade but that remains to be seen.
Having said all this, CPPIB is looking at Brazil as a very long-term play, so they don’t care if things get worse in the short-run. In fact, the Fund will likely look to expand and buy more private assets in Brazil if things do get worse. And they aren’t the only Canadian pension fund with large investments in Brazil. The Caisse also bought the Brazilian boom and so have others, including Ontario Teachers which bet big on Eike Batista and got out before getting burned.


Are there risks to these private investments in Brazil? You bet. There is illiquidity risk, currency risk, political and regulatory risk but I trust CPPIB’s managers weighed all these risks and still decided to go ahead with big investment because they think over the long-run, they will make significant gains in these investments.


My biggest fear is how will emerging markets act as QE ends (for now) and I openly wonder if big investments in Brazil or other countries bound to oil and commodities are worth the risk now.  Also, the correlation risk to Canadian markets is higher than we think. My only question to CPPIB’s top brass is why not just wait a little longer and pick these Brazilian assets up even cheaper?


But I already know what Mark Wiseman will tell me. CPPIB takes the long, long view and they are not looking at such deals for a quick buck. As far as “egos at CPPIB” that Mr. Doak mentions in the BNN interview, I can’t speak for everyone there, but I can tell you Mark Wiseman doesn’t have a huge ego. If you meet him, you’ll come away thinking he’s a very smart, humble and hard working guy who’s very careful about the deals he enters.

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board manages $226 billion in assets.

Read the entire Pension Pulse post here.

Canada Pension Invests Nearly $400 Million In Brazilian Real Estate

globe

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), the entity that manages investments for the Canada Pension Plan, plans to invest $396 million in commercial real estate in Brazil.

From Reuters:

In a statement released late on Monday, CPPIB said the investments include the purchase of warehouses, land and stakes in development projects in the logistics and retailing industries, adding to the fund’s portfolio of more than 100 properties in Latin America’s largest economy.

The move brings CPPIB’s real estate commitments in Brazil to over $1.8 billion. Since 2009, CPPIB has bought real estate in Brazil to profit from rising demand for corporate and distribution facilities.

[…]

CPPIB will pay 507 million reais for 30 percent in a joint venture with Singapore’s Global Logistic Properties Ltd. , the world’s No. 2 owner of industrial properties, to run 32 logistics properties in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, the statement added.

Another 231 million reais were committed to GLP Brazil Development Partners I, a real estate investment vehicle in which Global Logistic Properties has a 40 percent stake and CPPIB a 39.6 percent stake.

CPPIB also pledged to spend 159 million reais to buy a 25 percent stake in a São Paulo logistics project alongside Cyrela Commercial Properties SA.

The fund also paid 100 million reais for a 33.3 percent stake in the Santana Parque Shopping mall, which is jointly run by partner Aliansce Shopping Centers SA, the statement added. CPPIB has a 27.6 percent in Aliansce, a shopping mall operator.

From a CPPIB statement released Monday:

“Since making our first real estate investment in Brazil in 2009, CPPIB has become one of the largest investors in the sector with ownership interests in logistics, retail, office and residential assets or developments,” said Peter Ballon, Managing Director & Head of Real Estate Investments – Americas. “Over the past 10 months, we deepened relationships with our key partners to commit additional equity in high-quality real estate assets that are important additions to our diversified Brazilian portfolio. Our team of real estate professionals based in our recently opened Sao Paulo office continues to pursue attractive investment opportunities in the region.”

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board manages $226 billion in assets.

CalPERS, Other Major Funds To Bid On Bankrupt Indiana Toll Road

road

CalPERS, the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and other large funds from around the world are lining up to bid on an Indiana toll road that filed for bankruptcy last month.

The toll road is operated by a private company, ITR Concession Co LLC.

From Reuters:

The interest in the asset shows that infrastructure investors have not been fazed by the failure of one of the largest privatisations of U.S. infrastructure, even though any deal is expected to come at a significant discount to its original value.

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) has teamed up with Ferrovial SA’s toll road operator Cintra and Canadian investment manager Brookfield Asset Management to make an offer, the people said this week.

Australia’s Hastings Funds Management has partnered with the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (Calpers) and Italian toll road operator Autostrade Meridionali SpA , the people said.

Spanish infrastructure operator Abertis Infraestructuras SA has teamed up with Borealis, which is the infrastructure investment arm of the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, the people said. Australian infrastructure fund manager IFM Investors is also leading its own consortium, the people added.

The composition and number of the consortia could still change, the people said. Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo) and Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) have considered joining the race but have yet to make a decision, some of the people said.

Sources told Reuters that the price tag will likely wind up somewhere between $4 billion and $5 billion.

Indiana leased the toll road out to ITR Concession Co for 75 years in 2006. In return, the state received $3.8 billion.

Some Pension Funds Want Longer Private Equity Deals; Funds Bypassing PE Firms To Avoid Fees

flying one hundred dollar billsPrivate equity investments typically operate on a five-year timeline. But some pension funds are talking with private equity firms about longer-term deals. And at least one pension fund is cutting out the middleman and buying companies outright to avoid fees.

Reported by the Wall Street Journal:

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board is “open to conversations” with private-equity firms about partnerships to buy and hold companies for longer than the traditional five-year investment period, said Neal Costello, a London-based manager at the C$227 billion ($203 billion) pension fund.

Blackstone Group LP and Carlyle Group LP are among private-equity firms exploring how they can do longer-term deals with investors such as CPP and sovereign-wealth funds, people familiar with the firms have said.

Such deals could represent a major shift in the private-equity industry. The firms may use their own balance sheets rather than their funds to buy large companies with investors, people have said.

[…]

Large institutional investors are balking at paying expensive private-equity fund fees, and they are seeking to hold investments for longer. CPP is already buying companies outright, in addition to investing in private-equity funds and taking direct stakes alongside those funds. Earlier this year, it bought insurance company Wilton Re for $1.8 billion.

“That’s a very long-term asset,” Mr. Costello said Thursday at a conference in London organized by the British Private Equity and Venture Capital Association. “We can look at a 20-year investment period.”

Universities Superannuation Scheme, a London-based pension manager of £42 billion ($67.6 billion), would also consider longer-term deals in partnership with private-equity firms, according to Mike Powell, head of the private markets group at USS Investment Management.

“If we find good assets, we want to hold on to them as long as we can,” Mr. Powell said in an interview at the conference.

USS has already bypassed private equity and other fund managers entirely: It owns direct stakes in London’s Heathrow Airport and NATS, the U.K.’s air traffic service. Investing directly in infrastructure projects and companies is a way of avoiding paying high fees to fund managers, Mr. Powell said.

One problem that arises with a longer timeline is the issue of fees; most pension funds would balk at the additional expenses that accompany PE partnerships longer than five years. From the WSJ:

An obstacle to doing longer term deals with private-equity firms is figuring out how to pay the deal makers for such transactions, Mr. Powell said. Private-equity firms typically charge an annual fee of between 1% and 2% and keep 20% of profits when they sell a company, a model that won’t work if assets are held for many years.

“How do we remunerate them over the long term?” Mr. Powell said. “That’s up to Carlyle and Blackstone to come up with the answer.”

Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, a Canadian pension manager, has stopped investing in private-equity funds to avoid paying their fees, Mark Redman, the European head of its private-equity group said at the conference. The pension fund is buying companies directly instead.

The switch will benefit the pensions of the Canadian workers such as firefighters and policemen by saving them money, Mr. Redman said.

“The amount of fees that we were paying out for a fund, 2 and 20 [percentage points] and everything that goes with that, was a huge amount of value that we were losing to the fund,” Mr. Redman said. “If we could deliver top quartile returns and we weren’t hemorrhaging quite so much in terms of fees and carry that would mean that we would be able to meet the pension promise.”

Pension funds might have some leverage here — Pension360 has previously covered how PE firms want more opacity in their dealings with pension funds. The firms have been upset about the amount of private equity information disclosed by pension funds as part of public records requests.

 

Photo by 401kcalculator.org

Canada Pension Plan Invests $325 Million in U.S. Cancer Treatment Provider

doctor instruments

The Canada Pension Plan has invested $325 in 21st Century Oncology Holdings Inc., a cancer care service provider. The details, from Reuters:

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), the investment arm of Canada’s national pension plan, said on Friday it has invested $325 million in privately held radiation oncology services provider 21st Century Oncology Holdings Inc through purchases of convertible preferred shares.

Fort Myers, Florida-based 21st Century operates the world’s largest integrated network of cancer treatment centers and affiliated physician practices. It has 179 treatment centers in the United States and in six Latin America countries.

The investment will give CPPIB the right to nominate two directors to 21st Century’s board.

An active global dealmaker, CPPIB manages net assets of C$226.8 billion on behalf of the Canada Pension Plan.

More details on 21st Century Oncology,  from BusinessWeek:

21st Century Oncology Holdings, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, operates as a physician-led provider of integrated cancer care services.

As of February 19, 2014, 21st Century Oncology Holdings, Inc. operated 179 treatment centers primarily under the 21st Century Oncology brand, including 145 centers located in 16 states of the United States; and 34 centers located in 6 countries in Latin America. It was formerly known as Radiation Therapy Services Holdings, Inc. and changed its name to 21st Century Oncology Holdings, Inc. in December 2013. The company was founded in 1983 and is based in Fort Myers, Florida.

 

Photo by hobvias sudoneighm via Flickr CC License

Canada Pension Fund Gets In On Alibaba IPO, To The Tune of $160 Million

Canada blank map

There’s been a huge demand from large investors to get in on the initial public offering of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., the Chinese e-commerce giant that conducts nearly 80 percent of China’s online commerce.

But the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) – the entity that invests assets for the Canada Pension Plan – isn’t one of them. That’s because the CPPIB revealed today that it invested in Alibaba years ago.

Reported by Bloomberg:

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board said it has invested $160 million in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (BABA), the Chinese e-commerce company that plans to go public tomorrow.

The country’s largest pension fund manager made two direct investments in Alibaba in 2011 and 2012 for a total of $136 million, Linda Sims, a Canada Pension spokeswoman, said in an e-mail.

The pension plan has another $24 million indirect investment through a private-equity fund managed by Silver Lake Management LLC, she said.

What’s the investment worth now? The CPPIB declined to disclose the figures, saying that they won’t release that information until they sell their stake.

But according to some back-of-the-envelope calculations, the initial investment could have ballooned by up to 500 percent. From Bloomberg:

At the time of the initial investment in 2011, the Hangzhou-based Alibaba was valued at about $32 billion, people with knowledge of the matter said at the time. In May 2012, when Yahoo! Inc. sold part of its stake in Alibaba the transaction valued the company at about $35 billion.

Alibaba is expected to price its IPO at between $66 and $68 a share when it debuts on the New York Stock Exchange Friday, valuing the company at about $168 billion.

The estimated five-fold increase in Alibaba’s share price would make Canada Pension’s direct investment worth about $680 million based on the time the investments were made.

The fund manager’s indirect investment in the company is harder to calculate because the fund, Silver Lake Partners III LP, is invested in more than just Alibaba.

Alibaba’s IPO may be the world’s largest ever. The company conducts more transactions than Amazon and EBay – combined.

Canada Pension Board to Open India Office

India gate

Pension360 covered last week the reported interest in Indian investments expressed by the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB). Today, that interest became much clearer, as the CPPIB announced plans to open an India office in Mumbai.

More details from the Economic Times:

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), the giant pension fund that makes private-equity investments, plans to open an India office and has hired Kotak Realty Fund executive V Hari Krishna as a key member of its local team.

Krishna would join CPPIB in the coming month from the Kotak fund where he was a director for more than nine years, said two people having direct knowledge of the matter. He has also worked at real estate consultancy firms in the pat.

The proposed India office will be the second for CPPIB in an emerging market, indicating the fund’s growing focus on India where the economy is expected to turn around after two years of sub-5 per cent growth. “The India office will be set up in Mumbai in the next two-three quarters and CPPIB intends to do direct transaction over the next 12-18 months,” said one of the two people. “The fund has been looking to hire heads for real-estate, infrastructure and equities for India to drive investment.”

The pension fund refused to comment on office opening or recruitment in India, including of Krishna. “As a growing global investment organisation, we do look at expansion to more locations,” said Mark Machin, senior managing director and president of Asia at CPPIB. Krishna didn’t reply to a text message seeking comment.

The CPPIB appears to be primarily interested in Indian infrastructure and real estate investments. From the Economic Times:

In June this year, it offered to invest around $322 million in India’s infrastructure sector through L&T Infrastructure Development Projects, a unit of Larsen & Toubro.

It offered another $250 million in a strategic alliance with Piramal Enterprises to provide structured debt financing to residential projects across major urban centers this February, and a $200 million strategic alliance with the Shapoorji Pallonji group to acquire stabilised office buildings that are foreign-direct-investment compliant in late 2013.

“India is a key long-term growth market for CPPIB. The fund has committed approximately US $1.4 billion in India since 2010 and will continue to look to India for investments that fit with our long-term investment mandate,” CPPIB’s Machin said in an email response.

The CPPIB would not confirm or deny the plans for an India office.

Group Calls For Transparency In Canadian Pensions As Investment Expenses Rise

Canada map

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) has been an active investor in private equity, real estate and infrastructure around the world. Pension360 has covered Board’s endeavors into infrastructure and real estate in India and warehouses in California.

But those kinds of investments carry fees and expenses, and one Canadian think tank is calling on the CPPIB to make those expenses clearer. From CBC News:

The report, by former Statistics Canada chief economic analyst Philip Cross and Fraser Institute fellow Joel Emes, says the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board should more clearly explain the added costs of its new approach to investing.

Beginning in 2006, the CPPIB broadened its holdings beyond traditional stocks and bonds to invest in areas such as international real estate and infrastructure projects.

That new approach resulted in an additional $782 million for external management fees and $177 million on transaction fees, the authors say.

The CPPIB, which manages the funds not needed in the near term to pay Canada Pension Plan benefits, has moved away from traditional holdings because of low interest rates that keep bond returns low, according to CEO Mark Wiseman. In the past year, it has also invested selectively in stocks because of their high valuations.

Wiseman says the “active investment” approach is needed to create value “over an exceedingly long investment horizon” and to diversify the CPPIB portfolio.

The CPPIB has invested in infrastructure projects in countries such as Brazil and India and real estate portfolios in the U.S. and Australia.

The strategy led to returns of around 16 percent in 2013. But investment expenses have spiked as a result of the active management. From CBC:

The Fraser Institute argues the CPP has faced a big hike in the cost of its investments as a result of its new strategy — from $600 million or 0.54% of assets in 2006 to $2 billion or 1.15 per cent of its assets in 2013.

That figure includes the cost of collecting the CPP from Canadian paycheques and sending benefits to pensioners.

It is being less than transparent in failing to report its external management fees and transaction costs as part of CPPIB accounts, the report says. Instead those costs appear in federal government public accounts and overall accounts for CPP.

“The CPPIB needs to be more transparent about the expense of designing and implementing its investment strategy; every dollar spent on behalf of the CPP is one less dollar available to beneficiaries,” the Fraser Institute says.

External management fees might include investment banking fees, consulting fees, legal and tax advice and taxes on transfer of real estate, which would apply to the new style of investing, but might not be as high in stock and bond investing.

The Fraser Institute, the think tank that produced the report, advocates for smaller government and greater personal responsibility.


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