KIC partners with Australian, Malaysian sovereign peers

South Korea’s sovereign wealth fund (SWF), the $25 billion Korea Investment Corporation (KIC), has signed cooperation agreements with Queensland Investment Corporation (QIC) and Malaysia’s Khazanah Nasional Berhad to share resources and pursue investments with the government-owned entities.

Don Lee, head of alternatives at KIC, said the Korean government supported the fund’s aim to build direct relationships with peer SWFs in order to access further investment talent and investment opportunities, including co-investments.

The non-binding agreements with the $51 billion QIC and $23 billion Khazanah, signed as memorandums of understanding, stated the intention of each investor to pursue mutually beneficial investments with the KIC across the globe.

“There is potential for co-investment opportunities, not only in our home countries but globally as well,” Lee said. “But at the moment we are just getting to know each other.”

He said that KIC had not committed to any specific investments with QIC or Khazanah.

Sponsored Content

QIC chief executive, Doug McTaggart, signed the agreement in Seoul last week, while Tan Sri Dato’ Azman, managing director of Khazanah, did so on the sidelines of the 2009 World Economic Forum on East Asia, of which he is a co-chair.

In a statement, Azman said the agreement aimed to lay groundwork for a “two-way investment flow” between the Malaysian and South Korean economies, encompassing co-investments and cross-border investments in private companies.

Since its 2005 inception, the KIC has been restricted to investing offshore. But the South Korean government was in the process of rewriting KIC’s investment mandate to permit to invest in the domestic economy, Lee said.

This followed public criticism of the fund at home for its $2 billion investment in Merrill Lynch last year.

Lee was demure on whether the KIC was tactically aligning itself with other sovereign investors to combat the clout of bigger funds, such as regional giants China Investment Corporation and Singapore’s GIC, but said the fund held relationships with other “prominent” SWFs and was discussing cooperation agreements with funds in the Middle East.

“KIC has been pursuing this direction, and we are looking to enhance our relationships with other SWFs.”

Meantime, the KIC had expanded its alternatives program to target private equity, venture capital and real estate, Lee said, and aimed to commit an overall allocation to alternatives of 20 per cent.

The team ran distinct teams to directly manage alternative assets and appoint and develop mandates with external managers.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Why integrated reporting makes sense: Robert Eccles

Robert Eccles has been trying to change the nature of corporate reporting for more than 20 years. He has been an advocate for supplementing financials with information on non-financial factors that are leading indicators of financial results – such as product development, customer satisfaction and the development of intangible assets. The premise is those companies

Opportunities in Europe

Investors and academics agree that political developments in Greece are important because they may shape how financial markets will respond to future political situations in the Eurozone. But according to Olivier Rousseau, the executive director of the FFR, the French pension reserve fund, there is more hype outside of the Eurozone on the implications of

More evidence big is better in pension funds

A pension fund that has 10 times more assets under management has on average 7.67 basis points lower annual investment costs according to a working paper from authors at De Nederlansche Bank, that explores the relationship between pension fund size and investment costs. Written by Dirk Broeders, Arco van Oord and David Rijsbergen the paper

European investment plan requires public private collaboration

The two largest institutional investors in the Netherlands, PGGM and APG, have responded to the European Commission’s investment plan, urging the commission to call on institutional investors to collaborate on the investment proposal. However they also warn that institutional investors are not just a “subsidising entity” and the Juncker Plan is best executed as a

Why Andrew Ang joined Blackrock

Andrew Ang believes factor investing is a more efficient way to organise a portfolio as it allows liquid and illiquid strategies to be managed across the portfolio. It also has the added benefit of honing managers on value creation. He’s been working with a handful of investors while Professor of Finance at Columbia University on

The power of engagement

It is called the “CalPERS’ Effect” but it could easily be called the asset owner effect, or the institutional investor effect, or the power of engagement effect. Wilshire, which is a consultant to the $300 billion Californian fund CalPERS, has provided an update on its study measuring the effect of engagement on a targeted list of companies called the Focus List.

Previous