Canada to allow retail contribution to new SWF

Mark Carney

Canada has established its first national-level sovereign wealth fund with a seed of C$25 billion ($18.3 billion) to underwrite “nation-building” projects like ports, mines and energy infrastructure.

In an announcement on Monday, Prime Minister Mark Carney says the SWF, dubbed the Canada Strong Fund, will invest alongside domestic and international private investors to drive “economic transformation”. The announcement comes amidst a global push for sovereign wealth funds to involve themselves more deeply with nation-building activities, with Australia’s Future Fund recently having its mandate amended to require it to consider “national priorities” when making or managing investments.

The Canada Strong Fund will operate at arm’s length from the government as a Crown corporation – sharing the same status with CPP Investments – and be led by a chief executive and a “qualified independent” board of directors. The organisation will be overseen by the Minister of Finance and National Revenue.

The initial seed will be released by the government over the next three years, with the expectation that returns on investments will give the fund a boost in AUM over time. But there will also be a retail investment product which will allow “individual Canadian investors to participate in Canada’s growth and benefit from its financial returns”.

The latter is an unusual funding mechanism as sovereign wealth funds typically manage pools of state capital, derived from natural resources or foreign exchange reserves. Some SWFs also issue bonds to diversify their funding sources, such as Abu Dhabi’s ADQ and Malaysia’s Khazanah Nasional Berhad.

The government also flagged the possibility it would explore more diversified funding sources in the future. Canadian advocacy and research group Common Wealth suggested this could be from common assets such as natural resources rent, use-fees on public property and public-private partnership equity; value created in the economic system such as budget surpluses; or “market concentration fees” such as levies on anti-competitive practices.

Sponsored Content

A “Canada Strong Fund transition office” will also be established to engage with other market participants and regulators.

“Through the Canada Strong Fund, all Canadians will have the opportunity to share directly in these benefits. This is our country, this is your future, and we are building it together,” Carney said.

 Details are scant on how the pool of capital will be invested, and it is still unclear as to whether the fund will house an internal investment team or leverage external managers, what type of assets it will invest in and what its return targets will be. Details around mandate, governance and implementation plans will be bedded down in the coming months.

Canada is the latest in a slew of countries that have established SWFs or kicked off the process to do so in recent years. US President Donald Trump signed an executive order to establish a US SWF last February, though its specific shape remains unclear as the 90-day deadline to release a plan for the SWF came and went without further news.

President Donald Trump has loosely described the objective of the US SWF in the executive order as being for the “sole benefit of American citizens”. Stanford expert Ashby Monk believes that to mean it is likely to be a sovereign development fund – a type of SWF “that strategically pursues both commercial returns and specific domestic policy goals”, the research paper says.

Indonesia established its second SWF Danantara last February “to manage and optimise government investments and assets from state-owned enterprises”.

The Canada Strong Fund joins other state investment vehicles including Canada Infrastructure Bank, Export Development Canada and the Canada Growth Fund to underpin investments in essential projects. “Comprehensive mandate reviews” will be conducted to ensure clarity of roles in the federal financing system.

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

India’s NIIF gathers steam

India’s new sovereign development fund has raised a further £1.3 billion, on top of the government's $3 billion, to finance domestic infrastructure and growth. Key to its success is the unique investor-owned structure, similar to Australia's IFM Investors, and generous co-investment terms.

The future is quant

The pace of technological change and advances in machine learning and quantitative methods will result in a “shake out” in investment management according to Campbell Harvey, Professor of Finance at Duke University.

Brunel’s plan for a new financial system

The UK’s £30 billion Brunel Pension Partnership is taking investing in a carbon zero future to a whole new level. It has just published a far-reaching Climate Change Policy filled with actions and deadlines linked to the goals of the Paris Agreement.

Behind BlackRock’s climate pledge

Last week BlackRock’s Larry Fink announced the company would put climate change centre-stage across its $7 trillion portfolio after what critics have called years of prevarication. Sarah Rundell looks behind what the statement could mean in practice.

Australia’s climate emergency

In the midst of the worst bushfires in Australia's history, CEO of the PRI, Fiona Reynolds, an Australian living in London is calling on investors to play a leading role in encouraging governments to be ambitious in their climate policy.

APG China strategy: In-house with E Fund

APG's capacity to carry out its own research has meant it is ahead of the curve in allocation millions to its first local currency China fixed income strategy. APG is also setting itself up to be a catalyst for change and aims to set new standards on ESG in China.

Previous