Ontario pension fund preaches patience in private equity's long winter
Bloomberg News
,Private equity firms have been slow to cash out of holdings and hand money back to their investors. Executives at Investment Management Corp. of Ontario say they’re ready if that trend continues.
“Most of our partners will probably say that the worst is over. We are just patient,” said Rossitsa Stoyanova, chief investment officer of the $77.4 billion (US$57 billion) Canadian pension manager. “We are prepared that we are not going to have exits for a while.”
Private equity firms have seen a dramatic change in the investment climate since interest rates began their rapid climb in 2022. The high cost of borrowing has made it harder for them to finance new acquisitions, or find buyers for the assets they already hold at valuations they’ll find attractive.
Still, there have been signs of a thaw in deal activity so far in 2024 now that it appears the Federal Reserve and other central banks are poised to start lowering interest rates.
Overall, IMCO posted a 5.6 per cent return last year, underperforming the benchmark of 6.6 per cent, according to a statement Friday. The fund had positive returns in every major asset class except real estate, where it lost 13 per cent. It outperformed the benchmark in public stocks and fixed income, but undershot on private equity.
“It’s not that we saw something happening in 2023, or we were contrarians, Chief Executive Officer Bert Clark said in an interview. “We held to our long-term strategies and it worked.”
IMCO is a relative young organization, launched less than a decade ago to consolidate the management of a number of retirement funds for government workers in Ontario, Canada’s most populous province. As such, it’s still building up some of its investing programs, including private equity and private credit.
Last year, the Toronto-based manager allocated $509 million to three new private equity partners, including European buyout funds managed by Cinven Capital and IK Investment Partners, and did nearly $1 billion in direct and co-investment PE deals.
The fund has also been growing its credit business, investing in everything from investment grade credit to structured private credit through external fund managers and co-investments — including allocations to funds run by Ares Management, Carlyle Group and Blackstone.
IMCO boosted its activity in private credit last year, raising it to nearly 50 per cent of the global credit portfolio as of December. Management plans to increase that to 70 per cent, according to the fund’s annual report.
IMCO is also look for exposure exposure to the infrastructure that supports the energy transition and artificial intelligence, according to Stoyanova. Last year, the fund committed $400 million in Northvolt AB, a Swedish sustainable battery company, via convertible notes. And it invested $150 million in CoreWeave, a cloud-computing firm.
Imco sold some of its stakes in infrastructure funds in the secondary market and may do the same in private equity funds in the future “to make room for direct investments or to commit to the fund manager’s next vintage,” Stoyanova said.
Office buildings and retail assets were 53 per cent of Imco’s property holdings as of Dec. 31, with a heavy tilt toward Canada.
IMCO, which inherited a big chunk of its property portfolio from the pension funds it assumed control of years ago, has been diversifying into European and U.S. real estate, according to Stoyanova. Last year, the pension fund disposed of around $1 billion in Canadian real estate assets. “Obviously in order to transform it, we need to dispose assets to get dry powder to buy new ones,” she said.
Szu Ping Chan
Sun, 7 April 2024
The Chancellor has previously said he wants to boost returns for savers while directing more cash to higher-returning assets - Paul Grover for The Telegraph
Britain’s biggest long-term savings and retirement business is drawing up plans to launch a new superfund to back fast-growing companies in a boost for Jeremy Hunt.
Phoenix, which owns insurer Standard Life, is in the early stages of creating a multibillion-pound investment vehicle that insiders say will help turbocharge investment in high-growth sectors and lift pension returns.
This includes pooling cash to invest in life sciences and fintech businesses, as well as injecting long-term venture capital into unlisted companies in the UK and overseas.
The fund, which is expected to launch this year, will also help the FTSE 100 company to meet a goal of investing at least 5pc of its defined contribution (DC) workplace pension assets in unlisted companies by 2030.
It is understood that Phoenix, which has over £280bn of total assets under management and 12 million customers, currently has less than 1pc of the relevant cash invested in these assets.
This means it needs to plough billions of pounds more into investments such as science and technology over the next five years, which stems from the Chancellor’s Mansion House reforms unveiled last summer.
The fund will also enable thousands of smaller pension funds to gain access to venture capital and high-growth companies by contributing to the investment vehicle.
Smaller funds traditionally do not have the financial firepower to tap into these investments because of the higher costs charged by venture capital firms.
However, by handing over cash to the Phoenix fund, it is possible that even the smallest of Britain’s 27,000 workplace pension schemes will have access to these investments.
This idea has been partly inspired by similar investment funds in Australia, such as IFM which specialises in infrastructure investments.
Mr Hunt has announced he wants to boost returns for savers while directing more cash towards productive, higher-returning assets under plans first announced in last year’s Mansion House speech.
He claimed the reforms could boost individual pension pots by up to £1,000.
However, some pension funds openly warned the Chancellor against mandating UK-based investment, which they say could reduce investor returns.
Phoenix is said to be aiming for around 40pc of UK-focused investment as part of its Mansion House commitment, but sources suggested this was not a target and the focus would be on returns over location.
Britain’s largest local government pension scheme is also understood to be plotting a new UK-focused fund as part of a new £2bn investment drive into private markets.
Border to Coast, which manages the pension pots of local government workers from Bedfordshire to Teesside, will invest hundreds of millions of pounds of this pot into UK infrastructure, private equity and private credit over the next year. This will be achieved through a new “UK Opportunities” fund focusing on British assets.
Border to Coast is the largest local government pension scheme in the UK with just under £60bn in assets. Its new UK Opportunities fund will target projects including housing, transport and renewable energy, all of which money managers said would benefit UK communities.
The Chancellor also used his March Budget to force asset funds to disclose how much of savers’ money is invested in Britain, as he seeks to drive more domestic investment.
Poorly performing funds will also be blocked from taking on new business from workplace pension schemes under the plans.
Andy Briggs, the boss of Phoenix, has previously warned that British pensioners are not saving enough for retirement.
It is understood that the Government wants to increase the level of compulsory savings poured into pensions via workplace schemes to 12pc, but is yet to consult on the proposal.
Mr Briggs previously told The Telegraph: “The state pension just can’t cope in the way that it was originally designed to do.
“Effectively, state pensions are going to have to be paid later and at a lower level, and people are going to have to make greater personal provision.”
A Phoenix spokesman declined to comment.
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