CPPIB privately eyes its 75-year horizon

The $140 billion Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board participated in the largest private equity transaction globally in 2010 with its acquisition of Tomkins plc alongside Onex Corporation. Amanda White looks at the fund’s private investments.

In July 2010 the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board announced through Pinafore Acquisitions, a company it jointly owns with Onex Corporation, the cash acquisition of global engineering and manufacturing group, Tomkins, for ÂŁ2.89 billion ($4.6 billion).

The deal was the largest private equity transaction globally in calendar 2010, according to CPPIB chief executive, David Denison – the second year in a row the fund has participated in the premier global private equity transaction (the investment in IMS Health alongside TPG Capital was the largest in 2009).

Private equity plays a big role at CPPIB, with 15.1 per cent of total assets allocated (or $21.2 billion).

Testament to its importance and the overall prominence of private investments generally is that the current executive vice-president, investments, Mark Wiseman, was formerly head of private investments.

Sponsored Content

From a total portfolio view, the fund manages its assets under three broad categories of investments: equities, fixed income and inflation-sensitive assets.

Equities are split into private and public markets, with the private investments’ department then split into four groups: funds and secondaries; principal investing (which includes co-investments); infrastructure; and private debt.

The private market group, headed by Andre Bourbonnais, is tasked with finding opportunities that will outperform the comparable passive public alternatives.

While historically, this group was focused on making private equity investments through external managers – a multi-year transformation that began in 2006 – it has now expanded its capabilities to also investing as a principal investor.

CPPIB now employs almost 100 investment professionals in its private market group which is located in offices in Canada, London and Hong Kong.

Private equity funds still represent the core of the CPP Investment Board’s private equity portfolio.

About $34 billion has been committed to more than 145 private equity funds since it entered the market in 2001. But it is also a reasonable player in the secondaries market, with more than $4 billion invested in the past 10 years.

And since it introduced the principal investing group, which works alongside its fund partners to invest in a broad range of private equity transactions around the world, the fund has made direct investments in 37 companies.

At the heart of this commitment to private markets is the fund’s unique positioning as a long-term investor. Even compared with many assumed long-term horizons, such as those of US public pension plans, its time horizon is notoriously long: investment returns are amortised over 75 years.

The last report by the Chief Actuary of Canada, in October 2009, found that CPP contributions are expected to exceed annual benefits paid until 2021, providing a 10-year period before a portion of the CPP fund’s investment income would be needed to help pay CPP benefits.

This means a higher proportion of the portfolio can be invested in assets that require patient capital, such as real estate and infrastructure, and areas that require several years to generate returns, such as private equity and venture capital. The inflows also mean that cash, rather than divestments, can be used to fund new initiatives.

All this means private investments are ideal for the fund, which is not affected by liquidity constraints in the same way as other investors.

In a speech at the Conference Board of Canada and Towers Watson 2010 Summit on the Future of Pensions, Denison said “a useful descriptor of the long-term investor is someone who is never obliged to sell assets because of prevailing market conditions”.

He says because the triennial valuations are done over a 75-year time horizon on a steady state versus full funding basis, and the fund is not required to meet any solvency tests. From an investment perspective, “we have much greater flexibility to deal with the volatility of market returns than almost any other pension fund or pool of capital”.

He also says the total portfolio approach to portfolio construction, where asset labels are essentially ignored, means there is flexibility in constructing and managing portfolios.

To this end he points to some of the pre-conditions of acting as a long-term investor as an appropriate business model, governance structure, and an investment process that incorporates long-term valuation factors.

CPPIB has announced a number of sizeable and complex investments in private equity, real estate and infrastructure through the first nine months of its current fiscal year, in addition to the Tomkins deal, they include:

• completion of the $3.4 billion acquisition of Intoll which includes a 30 per cent stake in 407 ETR and a 25 per cent interest in Australia’s Westlink M7;
• purchase of a 10 per cent stake in 407 ETR from Cintra Infraestructuras S.A. for $894 million;

• equity investment of $487 million for the acquisition of a 25 per cent interest in Westfield Stratford City, a major retail and entertainment development adjacent to the 2012 London Olympics site

• commitment of $607 million as part of a consortium bid to acquire the ING Industrial Fund, a portfolio of prime industrial properties primarily in Australia;

• joint venture with US REIT Vornado Realty Trust to invest in two prime office buildings in Washington, DC, for $93 million; and

• acquisition alongside LaSalle Investment Management of Hürth Park Shopping Centre, CPPIB’s first direct real estate investment in Germany, representing an equity investment of $69 million.

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

Behind ABP’s strategic investment plan

APG, which manages investments for Dutch pension funds including the giant ABP, has finalised its strategic investment plan for 2010-2012. Amanda White spoke to managing director of strategic portfolio management, Ronald Wuijster, about why there is a continued trend to diversification away from developed market equities and how the portfolio construction methodology has altered. mrec4inarticleinline

Mercer’s new approach to asset allocation for multi-manager funds

Mercer has revamped the asset allocation of its largest group of funds and in the process refined the way it classifies types of investments into ‘growth’ and ‘defensive’. The multi-manager has also signaled an evolution towards a ‘risk premia-based’ approach to asset allocation in the future. Greg Bright reports. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

New Jersey leads flight from equities

The New Jersey Division of Investment, which manages the $67.3 billion in state pension funds and was the best-performing US fund last year, has made some dramatic changes to its asset allocation in line with its objective of relying less on public equities for returns.

Sweden’s AP2 backs own dynamic bets

A committed ‘return seeker’, Sweden’s Andra AP Fonden (AP2) exploited the repricing of risk during the financial crisis by investing decisively in convertible bonds and credit, says Tomas Franzen, chief investment strategist at the SEK204.3 billion ($28.5 billion) fund. Now it is looking at real assets and emerging Asia to further diversify its sources of

Aussie fund makes big recovery

Jim Christensen, the investments boss of one of Australia’s biggest corporate superannuation funds, Telstra Super, is close to fully rebuilding his team after a chain of key departures in the past eight months, and has viewed the task as an opportunity to reshape the fund’s alternatives program and consider the potential for further internal management.

…as management costs creep up on OMERS

The $48.4 billion OMERS, which plans to have 90 per cent of assets directly managed by 2012, increased its investment management expenses in 2009 by 8 per cent, a figure it claims is offset by lower investment operating and third-party manager expenses. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous