Swedish fund looks to joint venture investments

Swedish fund AP2 is directing its alternative asset investments into innovative joint venture company structures, in an effort to maintain a greater degree of control over real asset investments.

The second so-called Swedish buffer fund recently used the investment vehicle in March to invest first in European real estate and most recently to buy agricultural farming land in Australia, Brazil and America.

Instead of investing through a real estate fund or other vehicle, AP2 and its fellow Swedish fund AP1 each took a 50 per cent stake in the newly formed real estate investment company.

The two funds invested a combined $734 million to target prime office premises in major European cities. The investments would be managed by European finance group Catella.

Last month the fund announced it would partner with US firm TIAA-CREF to invest $250 million in farmland through a similar joint venture arrangement.

“It (the joint ventures) gets us closer to the investment, and it is a more efficient process where we can use our own resources in a better way,” AP2 chief executive officer Eva Halvarsson said.

Sponsored Content

“We hope that it might become more cost-efficient directing directly this way. Since we are getting closer to the investment process –we would be on the board ourselves — we have more say on the investments.”

Halvarsson said a key reason for investing with TIAA-CREF was that the funds shared similar views on sustainability issues, with both being signatories to the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment.

TIAA-CREF already had agriculture investments across 400 properties worth more than $2 billion.

The pension fund – which Halvarsson said could look at up to 40-year time horizons when deciding its investment policies – also saw the joint venture arrangements as a way of building long-term management practices into how investments were handled.

“It was important to invest with someone who has the same long-term values as we had, we are not interested in buying and selling but more the holding of good agriculture properties,” Halvarsson said.

The fund had previously the used the joint venture structure in managing local real estate investments in Sweden but this was the first time it had applied this method of investing when looking to diversify its real asset holdings abroad.

AP2 had looked to diversify its risk exposure by increasing allocations to alternative assets, and particularly real assets.

Halvarsson said agriculture was an attractive asset class because it was uncorrelated to financial markets but would also fit into long-term thematic views around global population growth and increasingly scarce resources.

Asset Owner:AP Fonden 2 (AP2)

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Swiss referendum: funds’ headache or investor utopia?

The idea of referendums setting the agenda for institutional investors may be a frightening pipe dream in much of the world, but Switzerland’s unique brand of direct democracy is set to revolutionise its funds’ priorities. Swiss funds are due to be anointed as no less than the country’s official guardians against “rip-off” executive salaries. That

Siguler: buy good quality companies

As the world and companies globalise, George Siguler, managing director and founding partner of private equity firm, Siguler Guff, has a simple recommendation for investors. “My recommendation for stock investors is to look at great global companies,” he says. “Look at companies like Johnson and Johnson, Unilever or Boeing. They all have great balance sheets

A series of shorts
don’t make a long

It is easy for long-term investors to avoid short termism, and the solution lies in avoiding momentum and conducting risk analysis using cash flows – not market pricing. “Diversification is a joke. Diversification and risk analysis relies on pricing, but pricing is distorted because it’s driven by momentum,” says Paul Woolley, chairman of the Paul

ShareAction mainstreams responsible investment

“ShareAction has become the premier organisation to give voice to those who wish to invest their values as well as their assets,” enthused former vice president of the United States Al Gore, speaking to a packed audience at ShareAction’s annual lecture in London’s Guildhall last week. ShareAction is only a tiny pressure group but Gore’s

Cass creates principles
for DC model

As almost every market in the world looks to move from defined benefit to some sort of defined contribution model, academics at the Pensions Institute of the Cass Business School, City University London have developed a set of 15 principles for designing a defined contribution model. The principles, consistent with the recently published OECD guidelines, are based

Pension funds reject EU financial transaction tax

When the European Commission announced plans on February 14 to introduce a Financial Transaction Tax (FTT) by the start of 2014, it planted a bomb under Europe’s pension funds. That is not, of course, the view of Algirdas Šemeta (pictured below right), the EU’s commissioner for taxation. He says the proposed tax is “unquestionably fair

Previous