National Post (National Edition)

AS B.C. FIGHTS PIPELINE, ITS CIVIL SERVANTS INVEST IN IT.

- Geoffrey MorGan

C A L G A R Y • While the British Columbia government wages war against the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, its own employees are invested in the U.S. company behind the $7.4-billion project.

The British Columbia Investment Management Corp. (BCI), which manages the pension funds for B.C.’s public sector workers, owns stakes in the Canadian oil and gas industry as well as pipeline companies Kinder Morgan Inc., Enbridge Inc. and Pembina Pipeline Corp. Houston-based Kinder Morgan’s Canadian subsidiary, Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd., is developing the Trans Mountain Expansion. Kinder Morgan owns about 70 per cent of the voting interests of the Canadian unit. BCI does not hold shares in Kinder Morgan Canada.

Recent disclosure­s filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission show BCI has increased its exposure to Kinder Morgan in recent months even as the province has escalated its efforts to block the project, according to data gleaned by the Financial Post. The most recent SEC filings show BCI purchased an additional 21,214 shares during the fourth quarter of 2017 in Kinder Morgan, which recently suspended work on the pipeline.

The purchases bring BCI’s total stake in Kinder Morgan to 1,122,716 shares, a position worth more than US$18 million at current prices.

B.C. Premier John Horgan declined to comment on what affect his government’s opposition to the pipeline expansion might have on BCI pension investment­s, which also include major oilsands producers Suncor Energy Inc. and Cenovus Energy Inc., both of which have signed up to ship oil through the expanded pipeline between Alberta and B.C.

B.C. organizati­ons that support the pipeline described the government’s stance, given BCI’s investment­s in the sector, as “rank hypocrisy.”

“Even if you bike to work every day, your food and supplies are delivered to you via trucks using oil and gas and in many cases your retirement funds are directly tied to this vital industry,” Kris Sims, B.C. director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, said in an email. “The B.C. government needs to wake up to this reality and fast before they do further damage to Canadians.”

BCI manages the pensions for the province’s teachers, provincial government and municipal government employees and also manages assets for several B.C. government agencies and bodies. All told, BCI manages pension investment­s for 569,000 British Columbians as well as the insurance benefit funds for 2.3 million workers in the province through WorkSafe BC. Janice Toker, spokespers­on for the Victoria-based Crown corporatio­n, said in an email “we do not publicly discuss our investment strategy.”

A spokespers­on for the provincial finance ministry said BCI “fulfils its investment role on behalf of pension boards without any direction or influence from the B.C. government or MLAs.” She confirmed BCI oversees investment­s for MLA’s pensions, which would include that of Horgan.

BCI’s largest energy holding is Irving, Texas-based Exxon Mobil Corp. The fund recently purchased 90,368 shares in the super major, bringing its stake to 2,035,641 shares, worth more than US$157 million.

A breakdown from Bloomberg shows 5.8 per cent of BCI’s public investment­s is in the energy sector.

In recent months, BCI has spent millions of dollars buying up U.S. oil and gas equities, including oilfield services companies like Halliburto­n Co., Helmerich & Payne Inc. , and Schlumberg­er Ltd., as well as shale producers Midland, Texasbased Concho Resources Inc., Oklahoma City-based Continenta­l Resources Inc. and Houston’s Occidental Petroleum Corp.

“They’re playing the biggest service companies and the biggest production growth basin,” said Rafi Tahmazian, senior portfolio manager and director at Torontobas­ed Canoe Financial, of BCI’s recent purchase.

Many of the U.S. oil companies BCI has recently purchased have assets in the Permian basin in Texas, which is expected to lead global oil supply growth next year.

Tahmazian, who’s focus is on the oil and gas sector, also said that based on the compositio­n of BCI’s biggest energy holdings, the fund seems to be taking a generalist or “index hugging” approach to the oil sector. BCI also recently increased its exposure to major U.S. producers such as Chevron Corp., ConocoPhil­lips, Phillips 66,

 ?? BEN NELMS / BLOOMBERG ?? A protest sign outside of the Kinder Morgan Inc. facility in Burnaby, B.C. The British Columbia Investment Management Corp. (BCI), which manages the pension funds for B.C.’s public sector workers, owns US$18 million worth of shares in Kinder Morgan.
BEN NELMS / BLOOMBERG A protest sign outside of the Kinder Morgan Inc. facility in Burnaby, B.C. The British Columbia Investment Management Corp. (BCI), which manages the pension funds for B.C.’s public sector workers, owns US$18 million worth of shares in Kinder Morgan.

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