The Standard (St. Catharines)

CPP invests $850M into hard assets

Fund teams up with Greystar to pursue U.S. real estate developmen­t

- PAULA SAMBO

Canada’s largest pension plan is expanding its holdings of hard assets, plowing around $850 million (U.S.) into property, wind farms and logistics facilities to kick off the year.

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board has formed a joint venture with Greystar Real Estate Partners to pursue multifamil­y real estate developmen­t opportunit­ies in target markets in the U.S., it said in a statement Thursday.

The pension fund is investing $350 million to the joint venture for a 90 per cent stake, and Greystar is adding $39 million for the remaining 10 per cent. Greystar will manage and operate the portfolio on behalf of the joint venture.

Separately, the pension giant is committing as much as 245 million euros ($381 million Canadian) to its U.k.-based affiliate, Renewable Power Capital Limited, to support its first investment in a portfolio of three wind farms in Europe.

On Jan. 4, CPPIB said it would set up a new Indonesia venture with LOGOS Property Group to develop logistics facilities in Greater Jakarta.

The Canadian fund will invest $200 million (U.S.) into the venture to build facilities for logistics, data-center and industrial tenants.

To Mark Machin, the chief executive officer of the $457 billion (Canadian) fund, the exuberance in public markets is a signal to extend his fund’s already-huge bet on private assets, he said in a recent interview.

Machin says he sees a wave of cash chasing infrastruc­ture and hard assets in 2021 and beyond, amid stretched valuations for stocks and bonds.

During his tenure, the firm’s “real assets” portfolio, which is mostly private infrastruc­ture and real estate, has grown about 70 per cent to $98 billion, and it’s expanding in private credit as well.

 ??  ?? Canada Pension Plan Investment Board CEO Mark Machin sees a wave of cash chasing hard assets and infrastruc­ture in 2021.
Canada Pension Plan Investment Board CEO Mark Machin sees a wave of cash chasing hard assets and infrastruc­ture in 2021.

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