End of an era as APG appoints new CIO

A focus on governance and sustainability has been recognised by APG Asset Management, in appointing former global chief executive of ING Investment Management, Europe, Angelien Kemna, as successor to chief investment officer Roderick Munsters, the man who has sat at the helm of two of the Netherlands’ biggest pension funds.

Kemna joins All Pensions Group (APG), the fund manager responsible for managing the 205 billion portfolio of Dutch civil servants pension fund ABP, at the beginning of November.

She takes over from Munsters, who was CIO of Dutch healthcare employees’ pension fund PGGM for eight years before becoming chairman of the world’s second largest pension fund, ABP, in 2005. Munsters is leaving on September 1 to join Dutch asset manager Robeco as chief executive.

 

Munsters has been a member of the executive board and CIO of APG since March 2005. He was a member of the board and CIO of PGGM from 1997 to 2005 and prior to that, held a number of portfolio management positions at Interpolis, the last of which was vice president of capital market investments.

Sponsored Content

Interestingly, Kemna’s roots in the finance industry trace back to the company her predecessor is leaving to join. She began her career as head of research at Iris, the research branch of Rabobank and Robeco.

At Robeco Kemna held several management level positions in investment, culminating in the position of director of investments and account management. In 2001 she moved to ING Investment Management to become the company’s global chief investment officer, and shortly after, she was made CEO of ING Investment Management Europe.

Since 2007, she has been an endowed professor at the Erasmus University Rotterdam. She will retain her chair at the Erasmus School of Economics.

APG chief executive officer, Dick Sluimers, said Kemna had an excellent track record in the financial world.

“Besides, her personal ambitions to serve society are a perfect match with APG’s,” he said. “She shares our views on the place of sustainability and governance in the investment policy of institutional investors, as well as on the collective pension system”s great benefit to society. As APG’s CIO, she aims to be a strong defender of both.”

Meanwhile, APG has reportedly made a strategic investment in alternative energy, allocating about €150 million to companies with green and alternative energy businesses as part of its 3.5 billion Global Top-down Strategies Fund.

The manager has bought a basket of 40 companies worth about 4 per cent of the total fund, and representing a significant exposure to the alternative energy theme, according to Frank Smudde, fund manager at APG.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Upgrade in sophistication for LDI strategies as demand rises

While liability-driven investing (LDI) has been gaining in popularity for several years among mainly defined benefit pension plans, the strategy and products are about to get an upgrade in sophistication, according to Russell Investments. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

OECD calls for reform of pension policy

OECD has called for policy changes after pension funds around the world lost one fifth of their assets, equivalent to $US 3.3 trillion - in 2008.

No luck for Irish pensions

Irish pension funds haemorrhaged an estimated euro 27 billion (US$36.5 billion) in 2008, as the global economy moved towards recession and equity markets across the world went into freefall. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Pension funds fooled by Madoff

Pension fund exposure to Bernard Madoff's alleged Ponzi scheme has raised questions about the governance of so-called professional investors.

Don’t fret the normal discipline with rebalancing – Callan

As the end of the year approaches, the issue of rebalancing for pension funds – a vexed one in the market volatility of the past year – is becoming more acute. US-based adviser Callan Associates is advising clients to depart from the normal disciplines around rebalancing in these extreme conditions. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2

The return of income – a season of plenty

Next year will herald a “new paradigm” for investors where income once again becomes a focus of thought, according to the global head of institutional investments at Fidelity International, Michael Gordon. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3