Montreal Gazette

Trade war creating opportunit­y in China: CPPIB CEO

- BARBARA SHECTER

Mounting pressures on China, including the latest trade tensions with the United States, are creating potential investment opportunit­ies for the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, says Mark Machin, chief executive of the pension-management organizati­on.

“Our teams are busy,” Machin said Friday in a phone interview during his latest trip to China.

“I think, given the softening markets in China and related markets, (we) will probably see some interestin­g investment opportunit­ies emerge.”

He said the trade tensions over tariffs arrived when China was already “wrestling” with a number of domestic issues, including de-leveraging its economy, reducing the shadow banking sector, and unwinding some of the stimulus that helped the country weather the financial crisis of 2008.

“The combinatio­n of all these pressures has put quite a lot of pressure on the private sector in particular in China, which will throw up interestin­g opportunit­ies for us over time,” he said. “They’ll need capital.”

CPPIB, which has invested $28 billion in mainland China since establishi­ng a local Hong Kong office in 2008, plans to boost the proportion of its portfolio invested in China from less than 8 per cent to up to 20 per cent by 2025.

In August, the pension-management organizati­on committed US$1.4 billion to the Goodman China Logistics Partnershi­p, which was establishe­d by CPPIB and Goodman Group in 2009 to invest in logistics properties in prime locations across mainland China. Goodman and CPPIB have committed a total of US$5 billion to the partnershi­p.

Machin said the trade issues and fiscal tightening are developmen­ts that could nonetheles­s have an effect on economies around the world.

“It’s a concern that we have this really high trade tension between the U.S. and China … I think it’s unlikely it goes away quickly, unfortunat­ely,” he said.

Still, prices remain buoyant in the United States, where future earnings expectatio­ns are much higher than elsewhere in the world, possibly unrealisti­cally so, Machin suggested.

“We’re quite late cycle in the U.S. Markets are pricing in quite an optimistic outlook for corporate performanc­e,” he said.

“When we’re looking at investment­s we have to be very careful the companies we’re investing in are actually priced appropriat­ely for the risk that they’re not going to be able to meet those lofty expectatio­ns in the future.”

 ?? JUSTIN CHIN/BLOOMBERG ?? Mark Machin, president and chief executive of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, says softening markets in China may open new investment opportunit­ies for Canadians.
JUSTIN CHIN/BLOOMBERG Mark Machin, president and chief executive of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, says softening markets in China may open new investment opportunit­ies for Canadians.

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