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.

Houston Firefighters Fund CIO Resigns

Houston Fire Truck

Christopher Gonzales, the Chief Investment Officer of the Houston Firefighters Relief and Retirement Fund (HFRRF), resigned from his position today. As Pensions & Investments reports:

Mr. Gonzales said he has taken a position with a corporate retirement plan. He declined to provide further information. He has been CIO at the pension fund for 13 years. His last day is Sept. 12.

The board will discuss how to handle the upcoming vacancy at a special board meeting on Thursday, said Chairman Todd E. Clark.

Notably, Gonzales is a staunch supporter of private equity investments. The most recent data reveals the HFRRF allocated just over 10 percent of its assets towards private equity in 2013, but that number was once as high as 18 percent.

In an op-ed written for Pensions & Investments in January 2014, Gonzales lauded the performance of his fund’s private equity investments:

For the second year in a row, the Houston Firefighters’ Relief & Retirement Fund was among the top ranked in the Private Equity Growth Capital Council’s top 10 pension funds by private equity returns.

HFRRF earned a fourth-place spot in the private equity return ranking with a 13.6% annualized return, net of fees, over the 10 years and 9.3% over the five years, ended June 30, 2012.

Returns have shown consistency. In the 10 years ended June 20, 2011, the PEGCC study ranked HFRRF seventh best in private equity portfolio performance.

The PEGCC’s report showed that private equity returns to large public funds outperformed all other asset classes with median annualized 10-year returns of 10% for the subset of 146 large public pension funds that published 10-year returns ended June 30, 2012.

The HFRRF returned 11.24 percent, net of fees, in 2013 after returning 1.89 percent in 2012 and 20.29 percent in 2011.

 

Photo by Daniel Fleming via Flickr CC License


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