OMERS a step closer to bringing it all in-house

OMERS continues its drive to bring more of its investment management in-house, recently announcing a major expansion of its investment operations with the launch of a New York investment office.

The $53 billion fund has previously stated it wants to manage all if its money itself. It will have 30 investment staff in the New York operations.

The Canadian fund has more than $10 billion invested in the US in both private and public markets.

It has an ambitious plan to move to a strategic mix of 53 per cent public equities and 47 per cent private investment.

Its major investments in the US include significant private investments in Oncor (electricity transmission), US Infrastructure Corp, and a joint venture with Related Properties in the 1.15 million square-metre Hudson Yards redevelopment project in New York.

The New York investment team will specialise in real estate, infrastructure, private equity and capital markets.

Sponsored Content

“This office will advance our strategic growth plans across all asset classes,” said Michael Nobrega (pictured), OMERS President and chief executive officer.

“The opening of this office underscores our commitment to expand in those regions where we invest and where we have developed strategic relationships.”

This latest expansion is in line with the fund’s 2015 strategic plan, which has the ambitious target of doubling the size of each of the fund’s business units in the next couple of years.

The fund’s fast-growing in-house expertise is part of an overall strategy to attract third-party investors to the organization.

Chief investment officer Michael Latimer has previously stated that the fund is interested in making larger-scale investments, which would need more capital.

The fund also has ambitious plans to establish itself as a third-party provider of investments services to other pension funds.

This includes raising capital from fellow Canadian pension funds as well through OMERS Strategic Investments, an alliance of co-investors who commit up to $20 billion to be invested over five years in large-scale assets.

The fund has extended its private markets allocation through its investment entities OMERS Private Equity, Oxford Properties Group and Borealis Infrastructure.

OMERS has over the past two years preferred to make direct investments in private equity, where it takes significant stakes in what it regards as quality companies rather than looking for turn-around or distressed opportunities.

In other news, the fund’s Oxford Properties Group has secured a major anchor tenant for its Hudson Yards development, which is the single largest piece of undeveloped property in Manhattan.

Luxury brand Coach Inc will take up the lower one-third of the available commercial space in the initial 51-storey tower located at the Eastern Rail Yards site on Manhattan’s far West Side.

Blake Hutcheson, president and chief executive officer, Oxford Properties Group says Coach’s decision to locate their new world headquarters shows confidence in plans for the site, which are being backed by $3 billion in public infrastructure.

The master plan for the rail yards includes approximately 5000 residences in nine residential buildings; 557,418 square metres of commercial office space; 92, 903 square metres of retail space; and a new 750-pupil public school. The site will be serviced by an extension of the No.7 subway line, scheduled to be opened in December 2013.

OMERS’ real estate arm has more than 1,300 employees and approximately $19 billion of real assets.

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Big investors keep faith with hedge funds

Large investors with more than $1 billion allocated to hedge funds plan to maintain or increase their exposure in 2012, a Preqin study has found.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Divergent strategies have pride of place

About 20 per cent of an institutional investors’ hedge fund exposure should be allocated to “divergent” strategies, according to Rob Covino, senior vice president of SSARIS, which has been managing absolute return strategies for 30 years.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalSTRS boosts infrastructure exposure

The unique pension fund-owned structure of Industry Funds Management contributed to it winning a large infrastructure mandate from the $144.8 billion CalSTRS, whose risk-based view of the world has it looking for inflation-hedging diversification.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Climate risk disclosure project goes global

An original Australian pilot project to benchmark asset owners on their management of climate change risk will be expanded globally later in the year.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Should US investors have rights offshore?

US institutional investors are discouraged to diversify into offshore shares due to the outcome of a court case which restricts anti-fraud protection. The US case involving the purchase of shares in an Australian bank by Australian investors on an Australian stock exchange has important implications for US institutional investors and their drive to diversify investments

Alternatives the winner of long-term allocation shifts

Allocations to alternative investments of the largest seven pension markets globally (P7) have increased by 15 per cent over the past 16 years, according to Towers Watson. Carl Hess, Towers Watson’s global head of investment, says the study reflects two investment themes in the past few years: globalisation and diversification. While alternatives have increased as

Previous