National Post (National Edition)

Ontario Teachers head predicts more volatility on horizon in 2018

- Financial Post gzochodne@nationalpo­st.com

Teachers’ said the investment return on its equity portfolio was 17.6 per cent last year, which also saw the fund agree to sell its stake in Britain’s High Speed 1 rail line.

The deals have kept coming this year, with the announceme­nt in March that Teachers’ had committed to paying about $400 million for a 3.4-per-cent stake in French video game giant Ubisoft Entertainm­ent SA.

But markets have recently been roiled by uncertaint­y around trade, including the recent tariff battle between China and the United States. There have been pressures changing and competitiv­e business environmen­t,” the annual report said.

Mock said that “we may see some near-term headlines” that have an impact, but that he was “not very negative” on how it could affect Teachers’ portfolio and its longer-term focus.

If tariff-related spats start to weigh on growth, Mock said he expects central banks would step in with a response.

“I firmly believe that, at some point, as taxes rise in the form of tariffs across many countries and between countries, that at some point cooler heads ultimately will prevail,” Mock told reporters.

Teachers, meanwhile, intends to focus on areas such as managing talent and the risks of disruptive technology. The plan is undergoing some change at the top, as chief investment officer Bjarne Graven Larsen resigned effective Monday. He plans to move back to Denmark with his family.

Mock will fill in as the interim CIO, and told media that he was not expecting any significan­t change in direction to the investing strategy the plan launched back in 2015, which had been “in flight” under Graven Larsen .

That strategy saw Teachers reduce its overall exposure to equities, where it had been more overweight, and position the portfolio in a more “risk-balanced” way, Mock added. The plan has historical­ly made adjustment­s where it thinks there are “outrageous valuations” attached to certain asset classes, he noted.

“At the margin there may be the odd little opportunit­y that we might step into, but we tend to make asset mix shifts at extreme levels,” Mock said. “We’re not at extreme levels in here.”

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