Edmonton Journal

Professors pull assets out of AIMCO.

- LISA JOHNSON lijohnson@postmedia.com twitter.com/reportrix

A pension fund for academics and profession­al staff at universiti­es has dumped Alberta's government-owned investment manager from control of $2.7 billion of its assets.

The board of the Universiti­es Academics Pension Plan (UAPP) agreed in December to move its public equities portfolio, and has since withdrawn those assets from the Alberta Investment Management Corporatio­n (AIMCO) while it searches for a new manager.

The move comes after AIMCO reported a $2.1-billion loss last April due to a volatile investment strategy that has since been scrapped, and as other Alberta teachers are set to see their public pensions move under AIMCO management.

UAPP board chair Geoffrey Hale said Monday some of the board's concerns with AIMCO'S management have been addressed, but the board was not entirely satisfied with responses to what they see as problemati­c issues.

“While no one likes to see an investment manager blow 10 years of value-added as a result of poor oversight over a strategy, it went beyond that,” said Hale.

The total value of UAPP'S public equities fund was $2.7 billion — or about 46 per cent of a total $5.8 billion in assets — as of the end of last year, according to its annual 2020 report.

AIMCO chief executive Kevin Uebelein told a legislatur­e committee meeting Friday that withdrawin­g assets from AIMCO is well within UAPP'S purview, but he disagreed with the strategy.

“The last time they did that, it did not serve them well ... while I truly wish UAPP all the best in the decisions that they 're making, it is a well founded principle that chasing performanc­e by moving from asset manager to asset manager rarely works,” said Uebelein.

Hale called that statement presumptuo­us and the board has done its due diligence.

“We have seen an adaptation on our fixed-income managers that has served us well,” said Hale.

Last year, the vast majority — or 77.5 per cent — of UAPP'S investment­s were managed by AIMCO, which includes separate portfolios that continue to be managed by AIMCO, including alternativ­e investment­s.

Legislatio­n passed in late 2019 made changes to the oversight of public sector pension funds, and required that teachers' pension assets be moved under AIMCO management from the Alberta Teachers Retirement Fund by December 2021.

After the government imposed an investment management agreement in January, the Alberta Teachers' Associatio­n filed a legal challenge.

However, the UAPP is governed under different legislatio­n than most other public sector plans, and has been jointly governed since 2001.

Kassandra Kitz, press secretary to Finance Minister Travis Toews, said in a statement Monday the government has no plans to change the legislatio­n and regulation­s in place surroundin­g UAPP'S agreement.

NDP Opposition labour critic Christina Gray said the UAPP'S ability to move its pensions to another manager put the hypocrisy of Bill 22 on full display.

In April, AIMCO announced a new CEO, Evan Siddall, will replace Uebelein in July.

With assets under management reaching $118.6 billion, AIMCO noted a 2.5 per cent overall return in 2020 — 5.4 per cent below its performanc­e benchmark — and a 7.7 per cent annualized return over the last 10 years.

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