Calgary Herald

Canada Pension invests in U. K. ports

- DAVID PADDON

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and a British partner are spending about $ 2.9 billion to acquire at least 30 per cent ownership in a company that owns and operates 21 ports in England, Scotland, and Wales.

The board and Hermes Infrastruc­ture are buying their initial stake in Associated British Ports from GS Infrastruc­ture Partners and Infracapit­al. They could potentiall­y buy an additional 3.33 per cent, which would make them onethird owners of ABP.

Borealis Infrastruc­ture, which is an arm of the Ontario- based OMERS plan for current and retired employees of Ontario municipal government­s, will remain one of ABP’s shareholde­rs as well as the Government of Singapore Investment Corp.

CPPIB will be providing a “majority” of the money for the ABP deal, said Cressida Hogg, global head of infrastruc­ture for the Torontobas­ed fund manager. She declined to be more specific.

The board has bid before on port assets but had been unsuccessf­ul until ABP which Hogg said was a “must- have asset.”

“What we see is that growth is really picking up in the U. K.,” Hogg said in an interview from London.

“We think that the volumes of port traffic in and out of the country are going to be sustainabl­e for the very long term and ABP will benefit from that.”

CPPIB invests money that’s not currently required to pay beneficiar­ies of the Canada Pension Plan.

The Associated British Ports deal is the second major investment in the United Kingdom this month by CPPIB, which manages about $ 238.8 billion in assets on behalf of the Canada Pension Plan, including $ 13.1 billion on global infrastruc­ture.

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