National Post (National Edition)

Caisse rebounds in second half, earns 7.7% in 2020

Significan­t real estate losses impact investor

- FRéDéRIC TOMESCO

MONTREAL • A second-half comeback allowed Quebec's biggest institutio­nal investor to finish the year in the black — while falling short of its own targets.

Following a negative firsthalf return of 2.3 per cent, the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec said Thursday it returned 7.7 per cent on average for all of 2020.

Net investment income was $24.8 billion, lifting net assets to $365.5 billion at year end. Equities accounted for the bulk of CDPQ's 2020 performanc­e, generating investment income of $20 billion — a 12.4 per cent return. Fixed income contribute­d $8.7 billion, for a return of nine per cent, while so-called “real” assets, such as malls and office towers, produced an investment loss of $5 billon, or seven per cent.

The loss in real estate was a whopping 15.6 per cent.

The results trail the 9.2 per cent average return of Canadian defined benefit pension plans, according to a January survey released by RBC Investor & Treasury Services. Returns also trailed CDPQ's own benchmark by 1.5 per cent — a situation that the pension-fund manager blamed on the struggles in real estate.

COVID-19 created “an unpreceden­ted crisis. Everything shut down at once,” CDPQ chief executive Charles Emond told reporters Thursday in Montreal.

“We're very happy with our resilience. I do not wish to see crises like this, but when they happen, it really lets us see what is solid, and what needs to be improved.”

Real estate was the biggest trouble spot for the Caisse in 2020, generating a net investment loss of $6.4 billion. Property valuations crumbled across the world as COVID-19 emptied downtowns and forced malls to close for extended periods.

Though CDPQ's Ivanhoé Cambridge property unit managed to cut its overall exposure to shopping centres, asset sales have been slow to materializ­e amid a dearth of liquidity in the market, CEO Nathalie Palladitch­eff told reporters. Only one mall was sold, on Vancouver Island.

Ivanhoé Cambridge said last February it wanted to cut its exposure to Canadian malls and would look to sell about eight shopping centres by 2023, now that shoppers are increasing­ly turning to e-commerce at the expense of brick-and-mortar stores.

Malls now account for less than 20 per cent of Ivanhoé Cambridge's $60-billion portfolio, including debt, Palladitch­eff said.

Ivanhoé Cambridge is still aiming to sell some of its 24 remaining shopping centres, though this process will likely extend until 2024, the CEO added.

Two unidentifi­ed properties are in the process of being sold, Palladitch­eff said.

“The strategy has not changed,” she said.

Ivanhoé Cambridge concluded more than 70 real-estate deals last year, including $2.8 billion of asset sales and $5.9 billion in purchases and modernizat­ions.

Most of the acquisitio­ns focused on logistics and industrial buildings.

“2021 will certainly be complicate­d, but we have in our portfolio sources of durable returns for the future,” Palladitch­eff said, citing Ivanhoé Cambridge's $10-billion logistics portfolio and its collection of office buildings for the life-sciences industry.

COVID-19, which brought air travel to a virtual standstill, also hurt returns in CDPQ's $32-billion infrastruc­ture portfolio.

Though infrastruc­ture climbed 5.1 per cent in 2020, airports trimmed the return figure by three percentage points, Emond said.

CDPQ is neverthele­ss aiming to double the size of its infrastruc­ture portfolio to about $60 billion over four years, he said.

While CDPQ is a global investor, it remains very active in its home market. Quebec assets stood at $68.3 billion at year end, including $50 billion in the private sector. At the start of the pandemic, CDPQ set aside $4 billion to help Quebec companies weather the storm. About half of the amount has already been invested, or is in the process of being allocated, CDPQ said Thursday.

Compared with its benchmark portfolio, CDPQ says it generated $1.7 billion in value added for depositors over five years. Over 10 years, the outperform­ance amounts to $9.3 billion.

IT REALLY LETS US SEE WHAT NEEDS

TO BE IMPROVED.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Charles Emond, president of Quebec's Caisse de dépôt pension fund, says COVID-19 created “an unpreceden­ted crisis” for the province's biggest institutio­nal investor.
RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS Charles Emond, president of Quebec's Caisse de dépôt pension fund, says COVID-19 created “an unpreceden­ted crisis” for the province's biggest institutio­nal investor.

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