OMERS uses patient capital for life cycle venture investing

OMERS has will capitalise on its ability to invest for the long-term and use the newly-launched venture capital arm to invest directly in the entire life cycle of a project.

OMERS Ventures, which will be the avenue for the fund to invest directly in venture rather than through funds, is predicated on funding through the entire life cycle, from the angel round to ultimate liquidity.

In a speech to the Toronto Board of Trade, chief executive of OMERS Ventures, John Ruffolo, says venture capital investors in Canada should make more long-term commitments to avoid start-ups heading to the US for funding.

He says that will be the core of OMERS’ strategy, with investments ranging from $500,000 to $30 million, and remaining invested for at least 15 years before seeking an exit.

OMERS Ventures forms part of OMERS Strategic Investments, which has a mission to drive “corporate initiatives that will position OMERS as a global player, incubate investment platforms that do not logically fit under the mandates of OMERS existing investment entities and further differentiate OMERS from conventional pension funds by burnishing its reputation as a pension-based investment enterprise unlike any other in the world”.

Overall, the $53 billion fund has a strategic plan to have about 47 per cent of assets invested in private markets. The figure is currently about 40 per cent.

Sponsored Content

OMERS Ventures will focus on investments in technology, media, telecommunications, clean technology and life sciences in Canada and the US, and has made its first investment in a company called WaveAccounting.

Ruffolo says WaveAccounting is an example of the type of further investments the fund would like to make. In nine months it has seen rapid growth, taking advantage of social media trends, and it is now used in 190 countries.

The Canadian venture industry has slowed in the past couple of years, and in his speech to the Toronto Board of Trade, Ruffolo presented a plan to get the “money flowing again”, which included abandoning the notion of a quick exit.

Leave a Comment

Ohio STRS warns of higher US recession risk; prioritises liquidity

Ohio STRS warns of higher US recession risk; prioritises liquidity

The State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio has warned of a “material” increase in US recession risk compared to last year as the fund braces for a wider, “negatively skewed” distribution of outcomes in the next 12 months. It came as the mature plan, which is 81 per cent funded, is tilting to fixed income and new asset classes like liquid alternatives over equities.

Sort content by

Europe rearms, defence returns surge, asset owners rethink exposure

Years of hard-line exclusions of the defence industry kept many asset owners out of one of the strongest-performing sectors. Now, as Europe rearms, investors are reworking defence policies – cautiously and under intense scrutiny.

TRS strikes gold: Tiny allocation crushes its benchmark

This year, TRS doubled its tiny allocation to gold via a special fund that buys gold ETFs and mining companies. The strategy returned nearly 60 per cent, thanks to market conditions including inflation, geopolitics, government debt levels and de-dollarisation pushing gold higher.

Limited alternatives keep global capital anchored to the US

Singapore’s Temasek said while US exceptionalism may be “fraying”, there aren’t many alternative markets that can handle the same volume of global capital. Meanwhile, fellow sovereign fund GIC believes the greenback’s reserve currency status remains solid even though currency swings could spell trouble for foreign investors.

LP demands for bespoke solutions define new era for private managers

Private asset managers can expect to work harder for LP capital as allocators increasingly look for more bespoke, flexible structures that meet their changing needs around liquidity, fee and types of exposures. Investors at FIS Oxford unpack how they approach manager relationships in the new era of private investments. 

Fordham University dials up growth equity, cools on private credit

Fordham University CIO Geeta Kapadia is cutting back on private credit, calling it an asset class “less able to financially engineer returns” in a higher-rate world. She’s instead redirecting the $1.1 billion endowment to venture and growth equity and entrusting larger mandates to a smaller roster of high-conviction managers.

South Carolina lifts private equity and credit as cashflow turns positive

The South Carolina Retirement System Investment Commission's improved liquidity position has allowed the plan to tilt its portfolio towards unlisted asset classes, including private equity and private credit. The fund grew fast thanks to funding reform, improved salaries, and positive investment returns and is now looking to boost long-term performance.