AIMCo splits top job, beefs up investment team

The C$69 billion ($66 billion) Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo) will split its chief executive and chief investment officer roles, with Leo de Bever retaining the chief executive position, while a search is underway for a new CIO.

The manager, which manages the assets of 27 pension and endowments, is also looking to hire professionals to fill nine new asset management positions including the CIO role.

De Bever has maintained the dual roles since he joined AIMCo in 2008. He was previously chief investment officer of Victorian Funds Management Corporation in Australia, and before that spent 10 years at Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan.

AIMCo splits its asset management division in to public and private investment groups.

At March last year, within public investments, it managed $1.7 billion in hedge funds, C$10 billion in fixed income and $16 billion in equities split into an internal active equities group, an external fund management group and a structured and quantitative investments group.

Sponsored Content

Within its private investments group AIMCo managed $2 billion in mortgages, $1.5 billion in infrastructure, $1.4 billion in equities, $0.2 billion in timberlands and $4.8 billion real estate.

It also has an economics and strategy group, a fund management group which looks at value add at the total fund level, an operations team and a risk management and strategic planning group.

In addition to the chief investment officer position, AIMCo is looking to expand its investment team and has a search under way for for a senior associate private debt, a senior manager and an analyst for the fund management group, an associate for private equity, a senior credit analyst and a portfolio manager and the new position of vice president public equities and absolute return strategies.

It also has a number of of positions open in investment operations and risk management.

Asset Owner:AIMCo

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

No discount for alpha

Just because the BlackRock/Barclays Global Investors merger will create a global funds management behemoth – with $3 trillion under management and 9,000 employees in 24 countries – does not mean alpha will come more cheaply. Amanda White spoke to vice chair of BlackRock, Robert Fairbairn, about what the merger means for products, clients and the

Pension funds need to show leadership on manager fees

It’s time for pension funds to show some leadership on funds management fees, to demonstrate that they are at the top of the food chain – they have the check book. Roger Urwin, global head of investment content for Watson Wyatt Worldwide, believes pension funds have, to a large extent, been captive to the fee

In defence of optimisation

Sebastien Page, senior managing director of the portfolio and risk management group at State Street Associates is excited about his upcoming paper “In Defense of Optimization: The Fallacy of 1/N”, which responds to the increasingly popular notion that equal weighted portfolios outperform. He spoke with Amanda White about the “1/N paper”, and how he advises

Norway SWF posts booming quarter

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the $456.4 billion (NOK 2,549 billion) Government Pension Fund – Global, returned 13.5 per cent for the quarter due to improved liquidity in fixed income instrument and climbing equity markets, as the fund continued diversification within emerging markets. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Asia-Pacific’s first life settlement swap

The $15.2 billion ($11 billion) New Zealand Superannuation Fund has ploughed $80 million into the Asia-Pacific region’s first life settlements swap, in a deal organised by Credit Suisse’s Sydney-based fixed interest investment banking team. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Hedge funds still a manager selection game: Callan’s Jim McKee

Jim McKee, director of hedge fund research at Callan Associates, believes the underperformance of hedge funds due to the one-off loss caused by the short selling ban should not be underestimated. He spoke with Amanda White about what investors should expect from hedge funds, why it’s still a manager selection game, and whether LIBOR is

Previous