National Post

AIMCO names Evan Siddall as CEO

Leadership overhaul

- Geoffrey Morgan

• Evan Siddall, the former head of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., will take over as president and chief executive officer of Alberta Investment Management Corp. as a leadership overhaul of the province’s public pension fund manager continues.

“I am delighted to join Alberta Investment Management Corporatio­n as chief executive office and further strengthen the organizati­on’s commitment to its clients across al aspects of its business,” Siddall said in a release Thursday.

AIMCO manages the province’s $118.6-billion public sector pension fund.

Siddall will take over on July 1 from outgoing CEO Kevin Uebelein, who has led AIMCO since 2015. Uebelein’s retirement from the pension manager was accelerate­d by a few months after AIMCO recorded major losses from a volatility-trading program last year.

Since those losses were disclosed, Edmonton-based AIMCO has gone through a leadership overhaul including the appointmen­t of a new board chair in Mark Wiseman, a former Blackrock Inc. executive and former CEO of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board.

AIMCO lost $2.1 billion last year on its VOLTS program, which traded market volatility.

When markets crashed in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, AIMCO’S volatility trades suffered huge losses and the pension manager ended the program and launched a review.

The results of that review were sent to AIMCO’S board on June 30, 2020, and showed the organizati­on’s risk management controls were “unsatisfac­tory.” Among its 10 recommenda­tions on how to improve the public pension fund manager, the report said that a culture change was needed.

Siddall takes the reins at AIMCO as the organizati­on continues to implement those recommenda­tions.

“Evan is an executive who is ready to drive the organizati­on forward with an exceptiona­l focus on clients, commitment to collaborat­ion and deep knowledge of financial services,” Wiseman said in a release.

AIMCO reported Thursday that it earned a total return of 2.5 per cent last year, but that return is 5.4 per cent below its benchmark for 2020. The release did not describe how much of that underperfo­rmance could be attributed to VOLTS, but noted detailed informatio­n on the performanc­e would be published in an annual report in June.

Siddall comes to AIMCO after leading CMHC for seven years, during a time of massive appreciati­on in Canadian housing values in cities including Vancouver and Toronto. His prediction, at the start of the COVID-19 outbreak, that the pandemic would reverse the growth, resulting in a 9 per cent to 18 per cent plunge in home values, proved wrong. Instead, the market recorded a record year for sales and prices. Siddall explained the error in March, saying he was sharing the prediction­s of colleagues.

Born in Toronto in 1965, Siddall has a law degree from the Osgoode Hall Law School, York University and a BA in Management Economics from the University of Guelph in 1987.

AIMCO is under increasing scrutiny in the province as the provincial government has been discussing withdrawin­g Alberta’s contributi­ons to the Canada Pension Plan and handing the management of those investment­s over to AIMCO.

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