Asset Owners

AP Pension

Established in 1919, AP Pension is an independent pension company which provides pension schemes to the Danish Market. AP Pension specializes in occupational pensions and the pension plan’s customer portfolio comprises some of Denmark’s large and even medium-sized companies. In September 2012, due to competition, regulation, and capital requirements, AP Pension and FSP Pension merged.

University of Notre Dame Investment Office

University of Notre Dame (ND) manages an endowment fund based in South Bend, Indiana. The earnings from endowment investments support substantial annual funding for scholarship and fellowship recipients, endowed faculty positions, academic programs, library collections, and the general operating budget.

North Dakota State Investment Board – Retirement and Investment Office

RIO is an agency of the state of North Dakota. The agency was created by the 1989 Legislative Assembly to capture administrative and investment cost savings in the management of two important long-standing state programs: the retirement program of the Teachers’ Fund for Retirement (TFFR) and the investment program of the State Investment Board (SIB).

Oklahoma Teachers Retirement System

The Teachers’ Retirement System of Oklahoma was created by an act of the Oklahoma Legislature in 1943 after citizens amended the state constitution allowing the creation of a public retirement program for educators. TRS began operations on July 1, 1943, and began paying retirement checks to the first retirees on January 1, 1947. Membership in

Caisse de prevoyance de l’Etat de Geneve (CPEG)

The CPEG (Geneva State Provident Fund) was created on 1 January 2014 from the merger of the CIA (Provident Fund for Public Education Teaching Staff and Civil Servants of the Administration of the Canton of Geneva) and the CEH (Provident Fund for Staff of Public Medical Establishments in the Canton of Geneva).

Kenfo (German Nuclear Waste Management Fund)

On 16 June 2017, the Entsorgungsfondsgesetz (German Act on the Nuclear Waste Management Fund) came into force, establishing the Nuclear Waste Management Fund. On 3 July 2017, the operators of the 25 German nuclear power plants met their legal obligation to pay a total of EUR 24.1 billion into the foundation’s accounts. This is intended