Sunday, November 14, 2021

Alberta is on the verge of another boom — will it be more sustainable this time around?

Province with deepest economic contraction of 2020 on pace to post biggest expansion of 2021 and carry gains into next year

Author of the article: Geoffrey Morgan
Publishing date:Nov 10, 2021

The Calgary skyline. Alberta is enjoying an economic resurgence after years of contractions and interrupted recoveries since the oil price crash of 2014. 
PHOTO BY AZIN GHAFFARI/POSTMEDIA FILES
Article content

CALGARY — This fall, after the third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, Royal Bank of Canada surveyed the damage to the Canadian economy and downgraded its economic growth outlook for every province in the country but one: Alberta.


“Alberta was the lone exception. We kept our growth forecast in Alberta at 5.9 per cent,” RBC’s senior economist Robert Hogue said in an interview, adding he expects Alberta to be home to the fastest growing provincial economy this year, topping the national GDP estimate of 5.1 per cent. In 2022, RBC Economics projects 4.9 per cent real GDP growth in the province (4.3 per cent for Canada), and is on track to fully recover by that time.

Canada’s biggest oil and gas producing province is enjoying an economic resurgence after years of contractions and interrupted recoveries since the oil price crash of 2014. Economists say the province’s oil and gas industry, buoyed by higher crude oil and natural gas commodity prices, is leading the growth, but the current rebound is not limited to higher oil and gas activity as other sectors including residential real-estate investment, manufacturing and services are also rebounding.



Add it all together and the province that experienced the deepest economic contraction of 2020 is on pace to post the biggest expansion of 2021 and carry those gains into next year.

Hogue said the province’s jobless rate, as of data released Nov. 5, is roughly back to pre-pandemic levels with 7.6 per cent unemployment, compared to 7.5 per cent unemployment in Feb. 2020.

Alberta “is digging itself out of a pretty big hole,” Conference Board of Canada senior economist Aimee McArthur-Gupta said in an interview, noting that part of the rebound in the province is making up for a deep recession in 2020, when real GDP fell by 8.1 per cent. The Conference Board expects 5.7 per cent real GDP growth this year, followed by 6.1 per cent next year.

Alberta’s nascent tech sector is also growing, offering some hope of long-desired economic diversification. Amazon Web Services announced Monday it would spend $4.3 billion on a cloud computing hub in Calgary, bringing in up to 950 new jobs.

The province also posted a record year for venture capital investment in 2020, when 51 deals were struck for $445 million in total investment — a 100 per cent hike in investment over the year before.


Alberta is digging itself out of a pretty big hole
AIMEE MCARTHUR-GUPTA

“There are so many reasons to be optimistic about Alberta’s tech sector,” Doug Schweitzer, Alberta’s Minister of Jobs, Economy and Innovation, said in a release Monday, adding the province is tracking toward “a record year in venture capital and tech investment, creating thousands of jobs and diversifying our economy.”

The province’s efforts to diversify its economy and energy sector has also resulted in new hydrogen project announcements and, most recently, a massive expansion and emissions-cutting retrofit of Dow Chemical Co.’s ethylene plant in the province.
And the province best known for its oil and gas resources is also home to the largest number of renewable energy projects in Canada and to the largest solar project in the country. Greengate Power and Danish investor Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners are spending $700 million to build a massive 465 megawatt solar project near Vulcan. Shell Canada is also planning a 58-megawatt solar farm adjacent to its Scotford refinery near Edmonton.

The investment rebound is trickling into other parts of the economy.

Home sales in Calgary hit a record for the month of October at 2,186 transactions, and the Calgary Real Estate Board says activity is on pace to hit a yearly record as sales are up 61 per cent over the average of the last five years, and 42 per cent over the 10-year average
.
Home sales in Calgary hit a record in October. 
PHOTO BY GAVIN YOUNG/POSTMEDIA FILES

Even as certain sectors rebound, the province faces persistent challenges. In the commercial real estate market, for instance, there are still challenges in Calgary and Edmonton, where vacancy rates increased by 6 per cent during the COVID-19 pandemic, which outpaces vacancy rate builds in Toronto and Vancouver. Avison Young pegs Calgary’s downtown office vacancy rate at 29.9 per cent and overall office vacancy rate at 26.1 per cent.

Still, the province’s economic rebound is led by its biggest industrial sector. Oil and gas revenues and royalties are hitting fresh records and for the first time in years, investment in the sector is expected to tick up.

“Oil prices have strengthened considerably this year on heightened demand and weakness on supply increases from OPEC+ as well as U.S. shale producers, and we do expect oil prices to stay relatively elevated over the next year,” Conference Board’s McArthur-Gupta said, noting she expects additional oil exports from Alberta over the course of next year as Enbridge’s Line 3 replacement pipeline is now in service and the Trans Mountain Expansion nears completion.

Alberta Finance Minister Travis Toews told the Financial Post the province now expects five oilsands projects to repay their capital costs this year, a critical milestone that ushers those projects into a new, higher royalty framework.

“That has a significant impact on government revenues,” he said, adding that in times of high commodity prices, oilsands projects repaying their capital costs can “yield the provinces materially, exponentially higher revenues.

Altogether, Toews said the province expects oilsands royalties to rise more than 400 per cent from an initial budget estimate of $1.5 billion this fiscal year to over $7 billion. “Stay tuned,” he said, noting the province would unveil new numbers at its next fiscal update at the end of November.


Under the province’s royalty framework, an oilsands project that has yet to repay its capital costs pays a royalty rate of between 1 per cent and 9 per cent on its gross revenues. A project that has repaid its costs pays either 9 per cent of its gross revenues or between 25 per cent and 40 per cent of its net revenues, whichever yields a larger number for the province.

Suncor Energy Inc. announced last week that it had reached “post payout” on its 215,000-barrels-per-day Firebag oilsands project in the third quarter and that all of its assets, with the exception of the Fort Hills oilsands mine, were now in the post-payout period.


t
Workers walk down a corridor at Suncor’s Fort Hills facility. 
PHOTO BY VINCENT MCDERMOTT/FORT MCMURRAY TODAY/POSTMEDIA NETWORK

Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. also confirmed to the Post that it had reached payout at one of its Albian oilsands mines, which it purchased from Shell Canada Ltd. for $12.5 billion in 2017, this year and is on pace to reach payout at its massive 250,000-bpd Horizon oilsands project next year.

The “painful episode of the 2014-2016 oil shock” forced the Canadian energy industry to cut costs to the point companies are profitable at US$50 per barrel to US$60 per barrel oil prices, Desjardins economists Jimmy Jean and Marc-Antoine Dumont wrote in an Oct. 19 report. “The recovery in prices, productivity gains and a better financial situation put the sector in good shape currently,” they wrote.

By some measures, the domestic oil industry has never had it better.

“Oil production in Alberta has never been so valuable,” said Charles St-Arnaud, chief economist at Alberta Central, noting that the total value of the oil produced in Alberta reached $9 billion in the month of October alone, “another all-time high.”

“Nobody last year would have expected that suddenly we would have the record revenues that we’re having now,” St-Arnaud said, noting that in the depths of the pandemic’s first wave in 2020, the value of Alberta’s monthly oil production fell below $1 billion.

“It will have a positive tailwind in the economy. It doesn’t mean that we go back to the boom years of 2013 and 2014 because we’re not in the same conditions,” he said, adding that oil producers are not spending money to expand their production.




ARC Energy Research Institute expects oilsands investment in the province to rise slightly this year after seven straight years of declines. ARC expects oilsands companies to reinvest about $7.6 billion into their projects over the course of 2021, up roughly 18 per cent from 2020 when companies invested $6.5 billion in the oilsands.

In the conventional energy sector, ARC expects companies to reinvest about $23 billion in conventional oil and gas over the course of 2021, up 50 per cent from $15.3 billion reinvested last year.

In the next month, the province’s largest oil and gas companies will begin announcing their capital spending plans for 2022, which will mark an important preview of economic activity in the province for the next year.

Oil and gas companies have vowed to rein in spending but the lure of higher oil and gas commodity prices has already lured several companies, including CNRL, into additional spending.

So far, through 2021, the country’s largest oil and gas company Canadian Natural has drilled 586 gross wells, which is up 18 per cent from 2020 levels. CNRL said it would look at additional spending once it hits an absolute $15-billion debt target, but president Tim McKay wouldn’t tip his hand on whether that additional spending could come next year.

“We haven’t decided on our 2022 budget yet. I think, in general, the industry wants to be very prudent with their spending. We’ve come out of a pretty tough period,” McKay said.

As the province’s economy attempts to recover, and oil companies are reluctant to spend money on major projects, Alberta will need to see more growth from non-energy parts of the economy.

“Oil producers are not in the mood to use that money to expand production and to create new projects and spend into things that would have multipliers on the economy,” St-Arnaud said, adding that “we’re in a very different regime than we were in the past.”

Rising oil and gas prices will provide a boost to the province’s GDP, but “probably less than what we’ve seen in the past” because there is less spillover from spending on major projects or massive drilling programs.

“It’s a different multiplier. The money is getting redistributed into the economy but in a different way,” St-Arnaud said, noting the retail and wholesale trade sector, the real-estate sector and professional and scientific services industries.

CANADA

Organized crime 'knowingly and actively' exploited federal pandemic benefits: intelligence reports

FINTRAC not sure total amount of CERB/CEBA funds may have gone to organized crime

FINTRAC, the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, the country's financial intelligence wing, says organized crime filed multiple applications for pandemic benefits using stolen identities. (CBC)

The federal government spent billions of dollars on income supports to help Canadians weather the pandemic — but it appears these emergency benefits inadvertently went to criminals as well.

According to a recently obtained financial intelligence report, criminals and organized crime appeared to have "knowingly and actively" defrauded the Canada emergency response benefit (CERB) and Canada emergency business account (CEBA) programs.

The Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC), the country's financial intelligence wing, observed that during the first few months of the CERB program, criminal organizations filed multiple applications using stolen identities.

"They tend to hire groups of individuals to cash the benefit cheques at various locations around town," said the 2020 FINTRAC report, released through an access to information request filed by Ottawa researcher Ken Rubin.

"In one instance, the reporting entity indicated that social media was used as the means of recruitment of these people."

Launched in March, the CERB originally paid $2,000 a month to Canadians whose income took a hit due to the pandemic. The program paid out more than $74 billion before the government transitioned to paying Canadians through employment insurance.

A similar scheme was used by criminal organizations exploiting the Canada Emergency Business Account: applicants transferred the $40,000 subsidy from their business accounts to personal accounts and withdrew the money in cash.

"Why would you not take that? I mean, it's free money in a manner of speaking," said Sanaa Ahmed, an assistant professor of law at the University of Calgary.

"I think this is one of those crimes of opportunity. Even at the time that the government announced these emergency relief measures, we knew some of that was bound to happen, because Ottawa has said quite explicitly that, you know, they're not really fussed about interrogating, whoever's applying, so it only stood to reason that some of the applicants would be fraudulent ."

CERB mixed in with laundered funds

Sometimes the benefit money appeared to be mixed in with laundered funds.

"Reporting entities indicated that criminal organizations, using stolen IDs and individuals recruited via social media, are operating 'CERB scams' in certain cities; prepaid cards are loaded with CERB benefits and other laundered funds," said the intelligence report.

The phrase "reporting entities" refers to casinos, accountants, agents of the Crown, Canadian banks and foreign banks in Canada, insurance and real estate brokers, sellers of precious stones and metals and others — all of which must report suspicious transactions to FINTRAC if there's reasonable grounds to believe they may be linked to money laundering or terrorist financing.

Jessica Davis, a former senior intelligence analyst with CSIS who now heads the consulting firm Insight Threat Intelligence, said using prepaid cards is a well known money laundering tactic to prevent a paper trail.

"Criminal entities are combining the money obtained through CERB fraud and identity theft with criminal proceeds, potentially from a variety of different schemes maybe other frauds, maybe other criminal activity. So it's all just getting pulled into one pot, transferred to prepaid cards as a form of severing the money trail," she said.

"There was a huge impetus to get the money out the door quickly, which I think for many Canadians will have been a lifesaver ... whether or not there were appropriate safeguards in place, well, I think criminals will often find workarounds for a lot of those anyway," she said.

The employment insurance section of the Government of Canada website. (THE CANADIAN PRESS)

The report also said payments were sent to people who appear to have been engaged in illegal or suspicious financial activity. FINTRAC said some clients received cheques despite not living in Canada and while appearing to live in "a jurisdiction of concern." Those are countries and areas that FINTRAC views as posing a higher money laundering or terrorist financing risk.

FINTRAC said that since the start of 2020, until Oct. 31 of this year, it received 30,095 suspicious transaction reports where COVID-related benefits were referenced, a small percentage of the overall reports. The majority of those 30,000 also dealt with human trafficking and drug offences.

Roughly 1,500 of those dealt with CERB and/or CEBA related fraud.

"Given that there is no monetary threshold associated with the reporting of a suspicious transaction, it is not possible to provide an accurate number in relation to the total amount of CERB/CEBA funds that may have gone to organized crime," said spokesperson Mélanie Goulette Nadon.

Prosecutions unlikely 

While the FINTRAC document details how organized crime used the programs, it's far from the first warning. In July 2020, the Canada Revenue Agency advised the House of Commons finance committee that the program had been targeted by organized crime.

A spokesperson for the Canada Revenue Agency stressed that the government rushed to make sure Canadians could stay afloat at the start of the pandemic.

"Throughout the lifespan of the CERB program, we made adjustments to introduce new measures and controls to address suspicious activity," Etienne Biram said.

"The CRA has zero tolerance for fraud. The vast majority of Canadians are honest, and the CRA has effective systems in place to manage the small percentage of people who submit fraudulent claims."

FINTRAC, which helps police detect money laundering and the financing of terrorist activities, calls money laundering a "multibillion-dollar problem" in Canada. Investigating that problem hasn't necessarily been a priority though.

"Canada doesn't prioritize the investigation and prosecution of financial crime," said Davis.

"Canada is a pretty significant economy, there's significant criminal activity and there's significant financial criminal activity happening in this country and I would say that broadly speaking, law enforcement isn't good at detecting and disrupting that activity."

Ahmed agreed, noting in the past decade Canada has secured less than 50 laundering convictions, calling prosecutions in these cases "unlikely, highly unlikely."

CPPIB posts record 10-year annualized return in latest quarter
INSTITUTIONAL INVESTMENT REPORTER
PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 12, 2021




John Graham, the CEO of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, in Toronto, on March 22.
FRED LUM/THE GLOBE AND MAIL
Canada Pension Plan Investment Board has reported a 3.8-per-cent return for the quarter ended Sept. 30, helping it post the best long-term return in its history.

CPPIB’s annualized return for the past 10 years, net of its investment costs, was 11.6 per cent, the national pension fund manager said Friday. At no other time has the 10-year performance figure been higher, it said.

The latest quarterly return outpaced the S&P Global LargeMidCap Index’s Canadian-dollar return of 0.9 per cent in the quarter. When CPPIB releases annual results, it uses that stock index for 85 per cent of its “reference portfolio,” a comparison to passive investing that demonstrates how much value it has added through its investing efforts. (Canadian bonds, as measured by the FTSE Canada All Government Bond Index, make up the rest.)

CPPIB’s reference portfolio had a return of roughly 0.6 per cent in the quarter, The Globe and Mail calculates.

CPPIB closed the quarter with assets of $541.5-billion, compared with $519.6-billion at the end of the previous quarter. The $21.9-billion increase consisted of $19.8-billion in net income after costs and $2.1-billion in net new Canada Pension Plan contributions.

The Canada Pension Plan, founded in 1966, is the primary national retirement program for working Canadians. The government created CPPIB in 1999 to professionally manage the plan’s money. Over time, CPPIB has embraced active management and its blend of stocks, bonds, real estate, infrastructure, private equity and other specialized investments has outperformed public markets and its reference portfolio.

In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, when global markets tumbled, the CPPIB asset mix blunted the pain, and the pension fund manager lost much less money than an ordinary investor in the stock market. However, CPPIB often trails when public stock markets rise rapidly, as they did in several recent quarters when investors shook off their pandemic fears.

While CPPIB reports quarterly, it points to its multigenerational mandate and likes to emphasize the long-term returns, which made Friday’s announcement particularly satisfying. CPPIB previously posted 10-year returns of 11.1 per cent in the quarters ended March 31, 2019 and the quarter ended in June of this year.

CPPIB does not release quarterly investment returns for each investment department, but offered general comments, saying there was an increase in the value of all private-equity programs, real assets and credit investments. Its stock market portfolios were “flat,” it said.

A rebound in the U.S. dollar against the Canadian dollar boosted returns. While CPPIB reports its results in Canadian dollars, it holds just 16 per cent of its assets in Canada as of Sept. 30. (When the loonie rises, the Canadian-dollar return of foreign investments is smaller.) CPPIB has 35.2 per cent of its assets in the United States and 24.1 per cent of its assets in Asia, with the rest elsewhere in the world.

Just over half the CPPIB portfolio as of Sept. 30 was in equities, both public and private, with the balance in bonds, debt and real assets such as infrastructure and real estate.

During the quarter, CPPIB appointed Deborah Orida as its first chief sustainability officer, responsible for its approach to environmental, social and governance (ESG) initiatives, with a focus on climate change. She will maintain her role as global head of real assets.

New investments in the latest quarter included:
Committing to provide up to US$500-million to Prodigy Finance, a provider of postgraduate student loans for international students attending top schools.
Putting US$600-million into the Baring Asia Private Equity Fund VIII, LP, which will focus on control buyouts and minority growth investments.
Joining a consortium to buy CeramTec, a maker of high-performance ceramic components. CPPIB’s contribution is about €800-million ($1.15-billion) for a 50-per-cent stake in the company.


 CPPIB's total assets rise by $21.9 billion in three months


While assets rose, growth was the lowest in four quarters

Author of the article:
Reuters
Maiya Keidan
Publishing date:Nov 12, 2021 

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board benefited from foreign exchange gains amid the rebound in the U.S. dollar against the Canadian dollar while public equity investments were flat. 
PHOTO BY GETTY IMAGES FILES
Article content

TORONTO — The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s (CPPIB) total assets rose by $21.9 billion in the three months to Sept. 30, helped by positive investment gains of 3.8 per cent, the country’s biggest pension fund manager said on Friday.

While assets rose 4.2 per cent, growth was slightly lower than the 4.5 per cent increase in the preceding three months and the lowest in four quarters, according to an analysis by Reuters.

Net assets increased to a record $541.5 billion at the end of CPPIB’s second fiscal quarter, from the previous quarter, primarily driven by gains in its private equity investments, real assets and credit businesses, CPPIB said in a statement.

CPPIB, which is the only one of Canada’s top pensions to provide quarterly performance data, also benefited from foreign exchange gains amid the rebound in the U.S. dollar against the Canadian dollar while public equity investments were flat.

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As of Sept. 30, CPPIB allocated 27.7 per cent to public equity, 26.1 per cent to private equity, 15 per cent to credit, 8.5 per cent to real estate, 8.2 per cent to infrastructure, 3.8 per cent to sustainable energy and 10.7 per cent to government bonds, cash and absolute return strategies.

The diversified portfolio helped CPPIB to achieve a record 11.6 per cent, annualized 10-year net return at the end of the last quarter, CPPIB President and CEO John Graham said.

Significant transactions in the past quarter included a new joint venture with Round Hill Capital for investment in purpose-built student accommodation across continental Europe, allocating 475 million euros initially.

CPPIB also committed 200 million euros in financing to U.S. and German real estate owner RFR and 50 million euros to Nordic-based private equity manager Summa Equity.


© Thomson Reuters 2021

CPP Investments Net Assets Total $541.5 Billion at Second Quarter Fiscal 2022 

Français


NEWS PROVIDED BY Canada Pension Plan Investment Board

Nov 12, 2021, 08:09 ET

All figures in Canadian dollars unless otherwise noted.

Second-Quarter Highlights:
$19.8 billion in net income generated for the Fund
Record 10-year annualized net return of 11.6%
Strong gains from private equity programs

TORONTO, Nov. 12, 2021 /CNW/ - Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPP Investments) ended its second quarter of fiscal 2022 on September 30, 2021, with net assets of $541.5 billion, compared to $519.6 billion at the end of the previous quarter.

The $21.9 billion increase in net assets for the quarter consisted of $19.8 billion in net income after all CPP Investments costs and $2.1 billion in net Canada Pension Plan (CPP) contributions.

The Fund, which includes the combination of the base CPP and additional CPP accounts, achieved 10-year and five-year annualized net nominal returns of 11.6% and 11.3%, respectively. For the quarter, the Fund returned 3.8%, net of all CPP Investments costs.

For the six-month fiscal year-to-date period, the Fund increased by $44.3 billion consisting of $37.5 billion in net income after all CPP Investments costs, plus $6.8 billion in net CPP contributions. For the period, the Fund returned 7.5%, net of all CPP Investments costs.

"CPP Investments delivered strong results this quarter to achieve a record 10-year annualized net return of 11.6%, reflecting the benefits of diversification and investment selection," said John Graham, President & Chief Executive Officer. "As we emerge from the impact of the global pandemic, our teams continue to execute across the organization to deliver sustainable long-term growth for the Fund."

The Fund's quarterly results were driven by an increase in the value of all private equity programs, contributions from real assets and credit investments and gains from foreign exchange as the Fund benefitted from a rebound in the U.S. dollar against the Canadian dollar. Public equity active programs were flat.

CPP Investments continues to build a portfolio designed to achieve a maximum rate of return without undue risk of loss, taking into account the factors that may affect the funding of the CPP and the CPP's ability to meet its financial obligations. The CPP is designed to serve today's contributors and beneficiaries while looking ahead to future decades and across multiple generations. Accordingly, long-term results are a more appropriate measure of CPP Investments' performance compared to quarterly or annual cycles.

Fund 10- and Five-Year Returns1, 2, 3
(For the period ending September 30, 2021)





Investment Rate of Return
(Nominal)

Net Income4


10-Year Annualized

11.6%

$341.5 billion


Five-Year Annualized

11.3%

$218.0 billion


Fiscal 2022 YTD

7.5%

$37.5 billion


Performance of the Base and Additional CPP Accounts

The base CPP account ended its second quarter of fiscal 2022 on September 30, 2021, with net assets of $531.9 billion, compared to $511.5 billion at the end of the previous quarter. The $20.4 billion increase in assets consisted of $19.6 billion in net income after all costs and $0.8 billion in net base CPP contributions. The base CPP account achieved a 3.8% net return for the quarter.

The additional CPP account ended its second quarter of fiscal 2022 on September 30, 2021, with net assets of $9.6 billion, compared to $8.1 billion at the end of the previous quarter. The $1.5 billion increase in assets consisted of $193 million in net income after all costs and $1.3 billion in net additional CPP contributions. The additional CPP account achieved a 2.3% net return for the quarter.

The additional CPP, which began in 2019, differs in contributions, investment profile and risk targets from the base CPP because of the way each part is designed and funded. As such, we expect the investment performance of each part to be different.

Long-Term Sustainability

Every three years, the Office of the Chief Actuary of Canada conducts an independent review of the sustainability of the CPP over the next 75 years. In the most recent triennial review published in December 2019, the Chief Actuary reaffirmed that, as at December 31, 2018, both the base and additional CPP continue to be sustainable over the 75-year projection period at the legislated contribution rates.

The Chief Actuary's projections are based on the assumption that, over the 75 years following 2018, the base CPP account will earn an average annual rate of return of 3.95% above the rate of Canadian consumer price inflation, after all costs. The corresponding assumption is that the additional CPP account will earn an average annual real rate of return of 3.38%.

The Fund, combining both the base CPP and additional CPP accounts, achieved 10-year and five-year annualized net real returns of 9.7% and 9.0%, respectively

1
The negative balance of $9.0 billion in Cash & Absolute Return Strategies represents the net amount of financing through
derivatives and repurchase agreements, and the current net position from Absolute Return Strategies.


2

Includes assets such as premises and equipment and non-investment liabilities.


3

Includes $531.9 billion of base CPP and $9.6 billion of additional CPP.


Operational Highlights:

Executive announcement

Alain Carrier, Senior Managing Director and Head of International, left the organization to become CEO of a global private equity firm. Geoffrey Rubin, Senior Managing Director and Chief Investment Strategist, has assumed oversight for international operations on an interim basis.

Corporate development

Appointed Deborah Orida as our first Chief Sustainability Officer (CSO), responsible for our enterprise-wide approach to ESG initiatives, with a focus on climate change. As CSO, Ms. Orida will lead the execution of a roadmap for the organization to prudently navigate the Fund's sustainability efforts as the world economy transitions to address climate change. Ms. Orida will maintain her role as Senior Managing Director and Global Head of Real Assets.

Second-Quarter Investment Highlights:

Active Equities
Invested US$300 million in Sinch to support the company's US$1.9 billion acquisition of Pathwire, a leading cloud-based email delivery platform, bringing our ownership in Sinch to 2%.
Committed US$50 million in Planet Labs, an earth observation and data insights company, through participation in the expanded private investment in public equity (PIPE) transaction in dMY Technology Group, Inc. IV.
Made a follow-on investment of US$50 million in the $1.6 billion Series H funding of Databricks, a data, analytics and AI company based in San Francisco. We previously invested US$65 million in the company's $1 billion Series G funding in February 2021.
Invested US$350 million in Advanced Drainage Systems, a leading provider of water management solutions for use in the construction and agriculture marketplace, increasing our ownership stake in the company to 4.6%.
Invested C$198 million in Jazz Pharmaceuticals, a biopharmaceutical company that develops, in-licenses and commercializes drugs for the treatment of neurological disorders and oncology.

Credit Investments
Committed to provide up to US$500 million in financing to Prodigy Finance, a provider of postgraduate student loans for international students attending top schools.
Committed US$300 million to Blackstone Life Sciences Yield, which will invest in royalty streams on FDA-approved products and structured credit opportunities with biotechnology, pharmaceutical and MedTech partners.
Committed C$115 million to the financing of a portfolio of late-stage construction toll-roads owned by Dilip Buildcon Limited, a publicly traded developer and operator of infrastructure assets in India.
Completed a US$100 million investment in the debt financing for OTG Management, an airport concessions operator with locations across 10 airports in North America.
Committed HK$700 million (C$112 million) to an investment in the first lien term loan of Brooklyn, a Hong Kong-based streetwear apparel company that designs, sources and retails the BAPE and AAPE brands.
Committed US$325 million to Angelo Gordon's Essential Housing Fund II, a fund designed to provide off-balance sheet financing for homebuilders to enable them to assemble development-ready land. Angelo Gordon is a U.S. credit and real estate investor.

Private Equity
Committed US$200 million to Clearlake Capital Partners VII. Clearlake is an investment firm operating integrated businesses across private equity, credit and other related strategies.
Committed US$325 million to Anchor Equity Partners Fund IV, a Korean mid-market PE firm focused on control-oriented consolidation investments and significant minority growth stage opportunities.
Committed US$600 million to the Baring Asia Private Equity Fund VIII, L.P. Baring Private Equity Asia is a pan-Asian private equity investment firm focusing on control buyouts and minority growth investments.
Committed US$350 million to Carlyle Partners Fund VIII. Carlyle Partners is a U.S.-based private equity manager focused on buyout and growth equity opportunities.
Committed US$100 million to Kainos Capital Partners Fund III, L.P. Kainos is a lower middle-market manager focused on investing in the food and consumer staples industries.
Invested US$120 million into Eruditus, an Indian Ed-Tech company that partners with top-tier universities worldwide to deliver online short courses and other programs to a global learner base, resulting in a 3.8% stake in the company.
Invested US$35 million in Laronde's $440 million Series B financing to advance the development of its eRNA platform and a broad range of programs across a number of therapeutic categories.
Agreed to jointly acquire CeramTec, a leading global MedTech business specializing in critical high-performance ceramic components, alongside BC Partners. Our capital contribution in CeramTec will be approximately €800 million for a 50% stake in the company.
Invested US$15 million in QCraft's US$100+ million Series A+ funding round. QCraft is an autonomous vehicle company.
Invested INR 5,950 million (C$98 million) for a 24% stake in the carve-out Zenex Animal Health India Private Limited, the animal health division of Cadila Healthcare that manufactures and sells animal health products for livestock and poultry.

Real Assets
Entered into a joint venture with CSI Properties in Hong Kong to redevelop a mixed-use real estate project comprising residential and commercial spaces in Kowloon, Hong Kong with an equity commitment of C$169 million.

Asset Dispositions:
Sold our 2.3% stake in SBI Life Insurance Company in India. Net proceeds from the sale were approximately C$463 million. We initially invested in the company in 2017.
Sold our stake in Velvet Energy, a privately held light-oil Montney producer with operations in north-west Alberta. Net proceeds from the sale were C$183 million. We initially invested in Velvet Energy in 2017.

Transaction Highlights Following the Quarter:
Committed €50 million to Summa Equity III. Summa Equity is a Nordic-based private equity manager with a mandate to invest in companies that address global challenges.
Entered a new joint venture with Round Hill Capital for investment in the purpose-built student accommodation sector across continental Europe. Our initial equity allocation will be €475 million.
Committed JPY 110 billion (C$1.3 billion) to the newly established GLP Japan Development Partners IV, our fourth modern logistics partnership in Japan with GLP.
Announced a BRL 1.5 billion (C$340 million) investment to support the asset consolidation and public listing of several Brazilian energy assets through two independent transactions to create one of Brazil's largest energy producers and traders, in partnership with Votorantim S.A.
Provided over €200 million in financing to RFR, an experienced real estate owner and operator working across the United States and Germany.

About CPP Investments
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'Under attack': Canadian health-care workers call for more protection from harassment and threats

Governments, regulators and social media platforms need

 to do more, advocates say

A health-care professional watches as demonstrators gather outside Toronto General Hospital on Sept. 13 to protest COVID-19 vaccines, vaccine passports and other restrictions. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

This is an excerpt from Second Opinion, a weekly roundup of health and medical science news emailed to subscribers every Saturday morning. If you haven't subscribed yet, you can do that by clicking here.


Antisemitism, racism, misogyny, unfounded character assassinations and disturbing threats of physical violence and even death.

Those are just some of the daily hate-filled messages sent to Canadian front-line health-care workers, public health advocates, academics and experts speaking out on the benefit of COVID-19 vaccines and against misinformation.

One health-care worker told CBC News under condition of anonymity that they received a suspicious package at their place of work that led to an evacuation.

Another discussed the debilitating mental health issues they developed as a direct result of the volume and intensity of personal attacks and the dozens of baseless professional complaints made against them.

When protesters stormed Canadian hospitals this summer to berate health-care workers and oppose vaccine mandates and other public health restrictions, widespread condemnation from politicians and the public was swift.

But a disturbing rise in aggressive online harassment of health-care workers across Canada has been largely met with inaction, prompting calls for governments, regulators and social media companies to do more to protect those on the front lines.

"We often like to think that we're not like our neighbours to the south," said Dr. Naheed Dosani, a physician and health-justice advocate in Toronto. "But this pandemic has shown that there's a lot of hate in this country."

People march during a protest against COVID-19 vaccine passports and mandatory vaccinations for health-care workers on Sept. 1 in Vancouver. The protest began outside Vancouver General Hospital, and police estimated as many as 5,000 people were in the crowd. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Online attacks 'take their toll' 

Those who choose to speak up in the media, online or in public forums say they are being specifically targeted by anti-vaxxers and other online attackers in order to threaten, intimidate and ultimately silence them.

Dr. Nili Kaplan-Myrth, a family physician in Ottawa, wrote in the Globe and Mail this week about how she received an antisemitic death threat through a formal complaint to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario — showing the brazenness of the attackers.

"It's a death threat — and if we don't talk about it, then it becomes this hidden thing that I have to deal with myself," she said. "I am not the problem because I'm speaking out. The problem is that somebody out there thinks that it is something that they can get away with."

Dr. Nili Kaplan-Myrth says she and her colleagues in Ottawa feel 'under attack' and unprotected, even though they've worked hard to protect the community by promoting public health guidance and administering COVID-19 vaccines. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Kaplan-Myrth says she and her colleagues feel "under attack" and unprotected, even though they've worked hard to protect those in the community they serve by promoting public health guidance and administering COVID-19 vaccines.

"I work a 12-hour day, and then at the end of the day I have to wait for my husband to come pick me up," she said. "Because it's no longer safe for me to walk home on my own."

Dr. Michael Warner, medical director of critical care at Michael Garron Hospital in Toronto, says he's faced credible death threats investigated by the police, constant antisemitism and orchestrated attacks on social media and online.

"Those things take their toll and can make it harder to provide care the way that we want to because our minds are under so much tension and pressure," he said.

"We are the people who provide care for people when they're at their sickest, when they're at their most vulnerable, and we need to have something in the tank to be able to provide that care in a safe and effective way.... You have to care for the caregiver."

Warner says that outside of the hospital, outspoken health-care workers and experts who vocally advocate for public health and vaccinations in the media and online face "constant" attacks about the way they look, their ethnic background and their religion.

Toronto physician Dr. Michael Warner says he's faced credible death threats investigated by the police, constant antisemitism and orchestrated attacks on social media and online. (Kas Roussy/CBC)

"Imagine having an emboldened mob of people yelling and screaming at you every day, constantly, when from your perspective you're really just trying to do good. You're actually trying to provide the advice that is going to protect people from dying," he said.

"It does weigh heavily on me, I look over my shoulder all the time. I'm pretty nervous to take my mask off in public when I'm outside on the street for fear that someone might recognize me who wants to do me harm."

'Someone's going to get hurt'

Those directly affected by the online abuse feel more must be done by different levels of government, law enforcement agencies, regulatory bodies or directly from social media companies to put a stop to the relentless attacks they face online before they get worse.

"The attacks are widespread and they're escalating," said Dr. Mary Fernando, a family physician in Ottawa.

"We know that threats can turn into violence, and there has to be a way to stop them from feeling they can do it with impunity — someone's going to get hurt."

Dr. David Naylor, who led the federal inquiry into Canada's national response to the 2003 SARS epidemic and now co-chairs the federal government's COVID-19 immunity task force, says the attacks go far beyond heated exchanges or criticism of expert policy advice.

"What's happening instead is that a health professional or advocate takes a public position supporting vaccines or other public health measures and ends up subjected to crass personal attacks and abuse by the lunatic fringe," he said.

"It's targeted, vicious and sometimes laced with bigotry. The social media platforms need to police this phenomenon more aggressively, and any explicit threats should be traced to their sources and the perpetrators prosecuted." 

WATCH | Canadian doctors speak out about online abuse and racism: 

Canadian doctors open up about online trolls and racism

4 months ago
3:20
Why 2 BIPOC physicians share their experience with hate and racism on social media during the pandemic 3:20

Toronto physician Dosani says policy decisions by provincial governments — such as lifting mask mandates, not mandating vaccines for health-care workers and setting a date on the end of vaccine passports — have fuelled online hate.

"When our governments make policy choices that don't stand with the science and health workers, they leave us vulnerable with no cover, with targets on our backs," he said.

"It's like the Wild, Wild West out here — we are on our own. And it's an honour to serve and to advocate for the health of Canadians, but it should not come at the cost of our mental health and our safety."

Dr. Naheed Dosani, a physician and health-justice advocate in Toronto, says policy decisions by provincial governments — such as lifting mask mandates, not mandating vaccines for health-care workers and setting a date on the end of vaccine passports — have fuelled online hate. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

National network proposed to track online hate

Ottawa physician Kaplan-Myrth says online threats need to be taken much more seriously by law enforcement, and the federal government should create new legislation, given that the threats fall under the Criminal Code.

But she says provinces also need to step up to ensure additional layers of protection — like they did with protesters outside hospitals.

"I'm asking for the help of anybody who can ensure that the people who are threatening us are charged and that we are kept safe, and that the public message is: Stay away from our doctors and nurses who are doing the work that we asked them to do," she said.

"Protect us, step up and say that our well-being matters, because even in the face of all of this, even while the death threats are coming in, I'm still going to keep immunizing patients."

Fernando says concrete solutions need to come from a national legal perspective, because the physician and surgeon colleges and other regulatory bodies can only do so much.

"What can the college do? The college is largely there to ensure that the public is protected. That is their job," she said. "I do believe I'm coming to the point of believing that we need laws. We need something that protects us."

WATCH | Medical groups condemn harassment of health-care workers: 

Medical community condemns harassment of health-care workers at protests

2 months ago
2:04
The medical community is condemning the recent harassment of health-care workers during protests across the country. Medical groups say there's been an increase in 'bullying, attacks and violence' directed at health-care workers as hospitals are targeted by demonstrators protesting mandatory vaccines and vaccine passport programs. 2:04

The Canadian Medical Association and the Ontario Medical Association released a joint statement in the summer saying the harassment of health-care workers who have "worked tirelessly for months on end" is "wrong and unacceptable." A spokesperson for the CMA said the group will have more to say on the issue in the coming weeks.

Dr. Lynora Saxinger, an infectious diseases physician and associate professor at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, says the creation of a national network to report and track online hate could also go a long way in deterring bad actors.

"I really think that that could make a difference for some of these people," she said. "Because just knowing that they're being watched would take away that sense of invulnerability that keyboard warriors apparently have."

Sabina Vohra-Miller, a pharmacologist and science communicator, says she has received increasingly 'violent' messages because of her volunteer public health advocacy. (Submitted by Sabina Vohra-Miller )

Sabina Vohra-Miller, a pharmacologist and science communicator who co-founded Unambiguous Science and the South Asian Health Network, says she has received increasingly "violent" messages because of her volunteer public health advocacy.

"We need to be talking about this so that something can be done," she said, adding that friends and family encouraged her to speak out about a death threat she recently received.

"Because it's really escalating, and many of us are concerned about the information that is in the public about us — in terms of where we live, where we work, what we do, information on our families, our children — and so it ends up being quite worrisome."

Vohra-Miller says the biggest fear she has is that someone will actually act on the threats against her, which have at times made her wonder whether the advocacy work she's doing is worth continuing, given that it comes at such a "high personal cost."

"All of the work that we do is basically unpaid volunteer work, and so is it still worth it if you're putting your life at risk? Or you're putting your family's lives at risk?" she said.

"It makes you stop and wonder whether any of this is worth it." 

Protesters gather at Air Canada headquarters, demand CEO’s removal over French language skills

Protesters from the separatist Jean-Baptiste Society of Montreal descended on Air Canada's headquarters demanding the removal of its CEO Michael Rousseau for his lack of French ability. (Angela Mackenzie/CTV News)

Daniel J. Rowe
CTVNewsMontreal.ca Digital Reporter
Saturday, November 13, 2021 

MONTREAL -- Protesters descended on Air Canada's Montreal headquarters Saturday, angered at CEO Michael Rousseau's inability to converse in French.

"The Society Saint-Jean-Baptiste (SSJB) of Montreal is demanding more than an apology from the president and CEO of Air Canada, Mr. Michael Rousseau," protest organizers say, adding that they are demanding Rousseau be removed from the company.



The SSJB points out that Air Canada's Language Action Plan says the airline is proud to provide services in both official languages and is a leader among Canadian companies in promoting bilingualism.

"Showing no real leadership on bilingualism, Mr. Rousseau is going against his own language policy," the SSJB says. "As a unilingual Anglophone, he can no longer assume the position of president and CEO."

About 100 protesters gathered on a rainy Saturday afternoon in support of the SSJB's position.

"The fact that it is possible for a unilingual English person to reach the highest management position of a Canadian company whose head office is in Quebec is beyond comprehension," said SSJB president Marie-Anne Alepin.

Rousseau gave a 26-minute speech almost exclusively in English at Montreal's Chamber of Commerce last week.

Rousseau, who has lived in Montreal for the last 14 years, said he was "able to live in Montreal without speaking French and I think that’s a testament to the City of Montreal."

He also stated that he simply did not have time to learn the language.

Rousseau apologized one day later, expressing his desire to improve his French-language skills.

"In no way did I mean to show disrespect for Quebecers and francophones across the country. I apologize to those who were offended by my remarks," he said.

In a letter written in French to Air Canada employees, Rousseau said he "regrets" the comments he made about his inability to speak or understand one of Canada's official language, despite living in Quebec for 14 years.

"People who know me well know that these words do not reflect my values and beliefs," he said. "I take and accept personal criticism. However, criticism of our employees and our practices hurts me deeply when you work so hard to serve our customers."

Rousseau went on to confirm he has hired a private tutor and his "French learning" has already begun.

In addition, he says the company's official languages practices will be reviewed and strengthened.

"I will personally oversee this process to ensure that any required actions are implemented," Rousseau said.

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