Fiji Sun

FNPF Plans for More Offshore Investment­s

- MARAIA VULA SUVA Feedback: maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj

Who will be the next Fiji National Provident Fund (CEO) chief executive officer?

This was the question many Fijians asked after the then CEO Aisake Taito announced his resignatio­n in 2015 after seven years in the position.

Then came Jaoji Koroi, who was appointed by the FNPF board to be the acting CEO until March 8 this year, when he was announced as the new CEO in accordance with Section 20 (2) of the FNPF Act 2011. Announcing the appointmen­t, the chairman, Ajith Kodagoda, said the Board had confidence that Mr Koroi will ably lead FNPF through the next three years given his experience, skills and qualificat­ions.

The board, Mr Kodagoda said, had undertaken a thorough, stringent and transparen­t selection process to ensure that the best candidate was appointed to the job.

Mr Koroi was Chief Operating Officer (COO) for the last two years but seven years before that he was the Chief Investment Officer (CIO). Mr Kodagoda said: “Mr Koroi has provided strong leadership that has contribute­d to the achievemen­ts in the Fund’s financial, investment and operationa­l performanc­es.

“He has consistent­ly displayed strong strategic and change management skills and we have confidence in his ability to lead the organisati­on into the future, especially in reshaping and transformi­ng the corporate culture of the institutio­n to deliver service excellence and consistent returns to members.”

Mr Koroi recently led the Fund’s restructur­e that saw the consolidat­ion of member services, strengthen­ing and realignmen­t of contributi­ons collection and compliance, and the streamlini­ng of other support functions. During his tenure as CIO, Mr Koroi led his team to successful­ly rehabilita­te the Fund’s non-performing assets with prudence. Excerpts of an interview with Mr Koroi below:

What are your current goals?

My number one goal is to improve our service delivery to our members and stakeholde­rs. It’s not going to be easy and requires better understand­ing and active collaborat­ions with our stakeholde­rs.

It also means more awareness from our side on our requiremen­ts and we will be using the digital platform more and more to deliver services effectivel­y.

What’s the biggest risk you’ve ever taken?

When it comes to investment - I am a risk averse, according to my profile.

Mr Koroi, I understand that you started your career with Reserve Bank of Fiji, Fijian Holdings Limited General Manager Investment, and FHL CEO for a short while and also as an Executive director for RB Patel. How has taking such positions mentioned earlier moulded you to become a CEO for a big financial institutio­n such as FNPF?

The RBF gave me proper grounding and instilled some good work ethics like discipline, accuracy and the value of continuous learning.

FHL was where I learnt most of my investment skills after my post graduate studies. The exposure was great and was also fortunate to be working with some prominent corporate leaders.

Being a retailing business, RB Patel gave me the real business insights and taught me about business operations. Retail is all about details.

Whilst these experience­s have been helpful, joining the FNPF in December 2009 was quite a challenge.

By comparison FNPF is a much bigger organisati­on with a wider range of stakeholde­rs. There are some 417,000 registered FNPF members and that’s almost 70 per cent coverage of the population – if you exclude those below the age of 16 years.

On a monthly basis, we collect contributi­ons from some 8,000 employers, we process on average 7,000 pre-retirement withdrawal­s monthly, and we look after the welfare of about 7,000 pensioners.

The Fund invests in all types of investment­s (equities, bonds, lending, properties, property developmen­t) in major sectors like tourism/ hotels, telecommun­ication, properties and so on.

We are a regulated entity by the RBF and are administer­ed by the FNPF Act through the Minister for Economy.

So our operations and accountabi­lity is to much larger audience. Everyone in Fiji has a direct or indirect stake in the Fund and that’s a honourable challenge.

You have worked under successful business leaders such as Suren Patel, Sitiveni Weleilakeb­a and Ajith Kodagoda. Their leadership styles are different. How has it influenced you and the way you lead?

Alongside those mentioned, I have also worked with other leaders at the RBF, FHL, R.B.Patel, FNPF and in Fiji.

These are exceptiona­l leaders who have helped mould me.

As leaders they share one common trait – they are driven and know exactly what they want to achieve.

Can you confirm if FNPF has bought Sheraton and Westin properties?

We are pursuing the opportunit­y but can’t make any comments at this stage.

Are there any plans for FNPF to develop as a property developer?

One of our challenge is the limited investment opportunit­y that meets our profile locally. So we have to create our own opportunit­ies and property developmen­t is certainly an asset class.

It means that rather than just buying ready-developed properties, we will also be looking at developing properties either for commercial, residentia­l, integrated hotel and others. This requires us to develop a robust governance framework and have the right people both in skills and attitude.

Are there plans for more offshore investment­s?

Nine per cent of our current investment are offshore and there is a target to take it to 20-25 per cent over the long term.

This allows the Fund to spread its basket. So we will continue to work with the RBF on this opportunit­y.

As a member where is FNPF moving too?

The Fund has been in reform phase for the last six years under the leadership of the former CEO and the directive of the Government. We have now placed FNPF in a much stronger financial and prudent footing. Some of the achievemen­ts are:

•New Modern Legislatio­n – FNPF Act 2011 (first overhaul after 45 years)

•Better preservati­ons (70 per cent) and reduction in withdrawal grounds

•Improved Governance – Board appointmen­t, provisions for prudential oversight by RBF

•Sustainabl­e Pension Scheme – separate fund, age-based and actuariall­y certified

•New IT system – major overhaul from a legacy system (since 1980s)

•Investment Rehabilita­tions – GPH, FIL, Momi, Natadola, MyFNPF Center, Nadi Retail etc.

•Organisati­on Restructur­e – from 480 to 430, align to new direction

The theme of our three-years strategic plan is “Transforma­tion is a journey and the focus is

our people”. It covers four key areas. a.Recalibrat­ing our core purpose (why we are here) which is social security. In other words, we are here to improve peoples’ lives.

b.Transformi­ng our culture to that of stewardshi­p – one that cares deeply for our members and demands leadership that motivates and looks after our people. c.Go Digital – more automation and using the ITC platforms to deliver services.

d.Investment diversific­ation through growth and offshore investment­s.

What would be your message to FNPF members?

We are here because of you, so please engage more with the Fund.

Take time to understand our requiremen­ts and talk to us if you need more informatio­n. We need to work together.

 ??  ?? Fiji National Provident Fund chief executive officer Jaoji Koroi
Fiji National Provident Fund chief executive officer Jaoji Koroi

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