Australia’s Aware Super on VC and the pension investing purpose

The A$175 billion Aware Super’s CIO Damian Graham said its venture capital investment in tech unicorn Canva has been good value for money but “pretty unusual” in the scheme of things. He reflects on the asset class and the broader pension investing purpose.  

Australian pension investors tend to be cautious about venture capital investment for various reasons. One is that with only an estimated A$20 billion AUM as of mid-2023, Australia-focused venture capital, the asset class is too small and can be difficult for large pension funds to make a meaningful allocation.  However, when betting on the right horses, the return can be very attractive.  

The A$175 billion Aware Super is one of the early investors of Australian tech unicorn and graphic design platform, Canva, which is currently valued at $26 billion and touting an NYSE IPO in 2025 or 2026. The exposure was through investment manager Blackbird. 

The pension fund was returned some capital last year as Blackbird sold down its shares. While declining to confirm the specific number, Aware Super’s chief investment officer Damian Graham said the fund still holds most of its investments in Canva.   

“Value for money has been good,” Graham said of the investment at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Sydney earlier this month. Although he conceded that the fund has become too large to consider smaller opportunities. 

“Occasionally, you do get a very small investment idea come to you, and it’s $3 million, $5 million, $10 million or even $20 million, and the governance to own that, in a direct fashion particularly, is just not time well spent,” he said. 

Sponsored Content

Aware Super has a ‘Venture direct’ program where the fund’s internal team identifies early-stage investment opportunities. 

“That hasn’t been a huge amount of money, but we’ve found some good investments,” Graham said. “But it’s hard one because you’ve only got so much bandwidth, and most of our risk is in listed equities.” 

“So when you think about the risk of managing the portfolio, we want to make sure we get those big drivers of returns and risk right. 

“[Canva] went from a very small investment to our biggest investment at a point in time, so that’s been a fantastic outcome, but pretty unusual in the scheme of things.” 

Aware Super last year joined a list of Australian pension funds in opening an overseas office in London. The highly publicised move saw Aware executives meeting King Charles at a Buckingham Palace reception and appear in one conference alongside Chancellor Jeremy Hunt.  

Graham remained in Australia but his deputy CIO Damien Webb has relocated to oversee investment operations in the UK.  

Speaking of ways to attract investment talents in a so-called deep financial market such as the UK where there is relatively little recognition of what Australian superannuation is about, Graham said the process “doesn’t start with rem[umeration], it starts with purpose”. 

“[Managing retirement savings] are important jobs, but we’re not important people,” he said. 

“The key for me is if we have the right people for trustees to have confidence that they’ve got the program of work well set up for long term. And it’s about building a sustainable program of work to so it’s not just great returns for one year… but you’ve got to be able to do it over decades. 

“The really critical issue is… are we delivering great outcomes to members, and I’m sure most people in the super system would say we can continue to do better.” 

Asset Owner:Aware Super

Leave a Comment

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

In an environment where multiple risks are emerging and their effects are compounding on the portfolio, CPP Investments' chief risk officer Priti Singh says the $572 billion fund is rethinking risk management from the ground up, shifting from reaction to preparation and embedding risk thinking earlier in investment decisions. She speaks to Amanda White about the fund's risk approach.

Sort content by

Postcards from the edge: How CPP Investments will grow to be a $1 trillion

The C$C532 billion ($587) billion CPP Investments has identified four clear “sources of edge” that it will build its organisational transformation on as it prepares for life as a C$1 trillion fund.

How Canada’s PSP Investments is getting to grips with climate data

In an interview with Herman Bril, PSP Investments’ new head of responsible investment, Top1000funds.com looks at how the fund is collecting and reporting on sustainability information based on a technology-enabled, data-driven approach that spans a bespoke, green taxonomy for climate investing to ESG scores derived from AI.

Impact of a slowing China, rising rates on portfolios: UniSuper CIO

John Pearce, chief investment officer of the A$115 billion UniSuper discusses his long-term view on China, inflation and the impact on the fund’s portfolio.

CalSTRS’ Ailman on why funds need to go big or go home

The $298 billion California State Teachers’ Retirement System (CalSTRS) has struggled to find meaningful investment opportunities to protect its portfolio against inflation, highlighting one of the key challenges funds potentially face as they grow, according to the fund’s chief investment officer Chris Ailman.

GIC: Building balanced portfolios for the long run

Navigating the two challenges of heightened macro uncertainty and an increased allocation to private assets could require a fundamental evolution of the asset-allocation process, argue Grace Qiu Tiantian and Ding Li from Singapore’s GIC in a paper written with MSCI’s Peter Shepard entitled Building Balanced Portfolios for the Long Run.

CalPERS board reflects on liquidity and leverage; higher delegation limits

The investment team at CalPERS asks the investment committee for an increase in staff delegation limits for private assets to help meet the new SAA to private markets, and the board reflects on the liquidity and leverage program in place.

Previous